Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WOMAN’S PAGE, Garters Again Are in Popular Use BY MARY MARSHALL. Desplte the shortness of skirts there seems to be place for the garter. The reason some women discarded the garter when skirts became more and nore abhreviated w that there was danger that it n; how! But after all, 1s there any reason why a gal ter shouldn’t show? Onee, of course, ason for such a prejudice against showing he garter. It was not that the garter showed but that the leg encased thereby should show. RED SATIN GARTERS TO MATCH RED SATIN PUMPS. GOLD INITIALS GIVE THE PERSONAL TOUCH. FI'™R GARTERS TO MATCH THE FUR COAT ARE ALSO SHOWN AND GARTERS FOR EVE- NI WEAR MADE OF SATIN TG MATCH THE GOWN AND RHINE- STONE EMBROIDERY AND LACE TO MATCH THE ORNAMENTA- TION OF THE GEORGETTE HAND- KERCHIEF. Strange that we should have retained this prejudice against the garter when we have so vallantly outgrown any prejudice against showing our kne You may take it on good authority that garters are again in fashion Some of the clever French dres makers have made garters to go with their gowns-——made to match and sometimes of the same material as the frock. Some of these new garters are wide enough to cover the entire knee. Furriers have not overlooked their chance for profit in this regard and #0 we have fur-covered garters to be bought with the new fur coat One who has made a careful study of the garter tells us that it is pre- eminently Directoire fashion. ‘Women had, of course, worn some sort of garter as a matter of neces- sity ever since they took to wearing stockings, but it was in the days of the Directoire fashions in France over a century ago that garters became most important. To be sure frocks were not short as they are today, but they were frequently transparent enough to show the garter beneath, or they were slashed up the side so that a glimpse of the garter was given when a woman walked. BEDTIME STORIE His Cousins. Relationship ore can't deny: t's waste of 1ime to even tiy. —-0ld Mother Nature. Most of us are born with relations. It isn't a mater of whether or not we ‘want them. They may be good, they may be bad, they may be just no ac- count, but they are ours just the same. Trader the Wood Rat, who is ®0 honest that he cannot take a thing without leaving something in ex- change, hates to think that he is re- lated to Robber the Brown Rat, but he is and there is nothing he can do about it. Some relationships can be recognized at once. Others are not 80 easily recognized. Perhaps vou recall that Peter Rab- bit had run across Piny the Pine Grosbeak getting a meal from sumac seeds. Piny was a handsome fellow. He certainly was. His breast was rose red, and against the white of the enow he looked very lovely. He had come down from the North, because up there food was scarce. For a long time Peter sat watch- ing Piny 'and his friends, for there were mafly of them, feasting on ] ‘DO _THE " EVER GET 'DOWN i Y7 IN od PETER. those sumac seeds. They were so busy that they had no time to talk. When at last Piny showed signs of being through eating for the time being, Peter ventured to ask a ques- ton or two. “Have you any relatives down this way now, Piny?” said he. topped to swallow a seed - “crushing it in his stout bill. t know,” he replied. “You ought to know. You are around everywhere. I'm told that the Gros- beak family was represented in the Old Orchard last year “I presume you mean the Rose- breasted beak,” said Peter. Rosebreast and Mrs. Rosebreast There must be something distinc- tive about the present-day garter. The commonplace garter made of colored ribbon_pulled over the elastic band beneath is not enough. Usually the really smart garter lacks the little ruffied edging at the sides. And since there is no longer any difficulty in seeing the garter it must be not too obvious. With a black evening frock one wears a garter covered with black lace or silk with a tiny rosette of the lace or a buckle of small imitation pearls or rhinestones. With the white evening frock you may wear a white satin garter trinimed with rhinestone embroidery to match the embroidery on the white gorgette handkerchief which is carried at the same time. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Apricots Dry Cereal with Cream Corned Beef Hash, Chile Sauce Corn Meal Gems Coffee. LUNCHEON. Salmon Croquettes Green Peas Lettuce Salad Prune Whip Cookles Tea. DINNER. Cream of Onion Soup Breaded Veal Chops, Tomato Sauce Lyonnaise Potatoes Stewed Tomatoes Hearts of Lettuce, French Dressing Fig Pudding, Custard Sauce Coffee. CORNED BEEF HASH. Remove skin and gristle and most of fat from cooked corned beef. Chop meat and add equal quantity cold boiled, chopped potatoes. Season with salt and pepper, put into hot, buttered frying pan, moisten with milk or cream, stir until well mixed, spread evenly, then place on part of range where it may slowly brown underneath. Turn and fold on hot plater. Garnish with sprigs of parsley. PRUNE WHIR. One pound best prunes soaked overnight. * Boil until soft. Re- move stones and chop finely. Add one cup sugar and whites four eggs beaten stiff. Bake from 20 to 30 minutes. Serve with cream. Custards may be made of yolks of eggs, or gold cake, to be eaten with the prune whip. R LYONNAISE POTATOES. Six bolled potatoes, two ta- blespoons butter, one onion chopped fine, one teaspoon salt, one-eighth teaspoon pepper, one teaspoon minced parsley, one- fourth teaspoon lemon juice. Cook butter and onfons in om- elet pan; add potatoes and sea- soning; mix well and saute a nice brown. Just before serving add parsley and lemon juice. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS were very fmportant meinbers of the 0Old Orchard Colony. I don't know how we should get along without them in the summer. I hadn't thought of them as being relatives of yours.” “Well they are,” replied Piny. “While they occasionally come up where I live in Summer, I seldom see them. In the first place, Mrs, Piny and I are all through nesting by the time they arrive. Then, too, we like the deep woods. So I've only seen Rosebreast once or twice. But I have other relatives that Iseeoften.” “Who are they?” asked Peter bluntly. “Mr. and Mrs. Evening Grosbeak,” replied Piny. “They love the deep woods of the North just as I do.” “Do they ever get down this way?” inquired Peter. “They are down here now,” replied Piny. At least I understand they are. I haven't seen them, but I've run across signs of them.” Peter became quite excited. ‘“Real- " he cried. “What would they look like?” he demanded. “Should I know them if I should see them?” Piny stopped to gather up a few more seeds. Then he flew over to a young mouhtain ash to try a few berries from that. Peter chased right along alter him. Peter was getting curious. He was getting more curious every minute. He knew he never would rest until that curiousity was satisfied. So he chased along after Piny and Mrs. Piny and the rest of the flock of Pine Grosbeaks, and patiently wait- ed untll Piny was through with the ash berries. “Then once more he begged Piny to tell him what the Evening Grosbeak wasg' like. “Like, like—well, like a (rosbeak replied Piny somewhat impatiently. “It seems to me anybody ought to know a Grosbeak @hen he sees it. Mr. Evening Grosbeak looks like me, only different. I mean he's a Gros- beak and I'm & Grosbeak. What's the good of having family looks if people can’t tell them when they see you?" Peter shook his head. “I don't know,” sald he. “I suppose there isn’t much us (Cobyright. 1926.) Curried Ox Tails. Cut the talls in sections at the joints. Fry in_a pan until a light brown, then add a small amount of dried onlon. Let these fry until a light brown, then add flour and curry, shaking together. Moisten with stock and allow to simmer until tender, adding grated green apple and the juice of a Jemon. Add salt and pep per to taste. When the joints are tender, serve with a border of fried noodes. THE DUMBUNNIES—Just Kids. MA, 1 WISH You' GIVE DAD A LOT oF ToYS NEXT CHRISTMAS 0 Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. at Grandma's be- it is necessary to even if it is bed- “I like to cause she know finish a chapter time.” THE DIARY OF A NEW FATHER BY ROBERT E. DICKSON. ’ Monday Night. I do not know yet whether the boss is going to send me out on the road as a traveling salesman or let me stay at home the way the Lord intended a man to do. I asked him this morning as soon | as he arrived at thoe office, and ho | No, T haven't decided, but we {of a p | own furniture about must have companionship, take in siranger: are short one salesman, and one of the boys in the office will have to | go out, and you are next in line.” | And I said: “It" would be terrible to| have to stay away from my wife and { baby all week long, and my wife| writes me that the baby can laugh | already, too, and he was only 10 weeks old yesterday. Would you be- Heve it?” { He looked awfully surprised, and | he said: “Let’s see; that must he first baby, isn't it?” And 1 said: “Yes, sir; and it is only my first wife, too. And what is the use of having a home and a wife and a baby and a lot of nice furniture if I can't be there to enjoy them?” And he said: “I told you the other day you probably would make more money, with commis- sions.” And I said: “Yes, sir; but money isn't everything. And he said; “That's a very beautiful thought, in- deed.” So I guess 1 made kind of a hit with him. But here 1 am. He said he couldn’t decide until Friday, and in the mean- time I do not know whether I am a traveling salesman or a full-time hus- band. “Puzzlicks” Puzzle-Limericks A dentist extracted a —1— For a nervous young patient named She cried, He said, Which, we'll . 1. What a dentist would be ex- pected:to extract. Feminine' name, a biblical hero- ou're one ve to admit, was the ine. 3. Merciless. 4. Last word of first line; fewer (two words). 6. That which is true. a ‘Puzzlick’ for the profession,” writes Dr. A. C. R., of Northampton, Mass.,, in forwarding this limerick. Why not send along your favorite verse for the amuse- ment of other “Puzzlick” fans Yesterday’s “Puzzlick.’ There was a dear lady of Edin Who, on apples, was quite fond of feedin’; So she gave one to Adam Who said, “Thank you, madam.” | And they both got thrown out of Eden. ‘Here | dry etarch and water. TUESDAY, DECEMBER Should a Lonely Widow With an Independent Income Live With Her Married Daughters? Too- Willing Girl Who Needs More Independence. * IR MISS DIX: T am a widow in middle life, have a good home with a ymfortable income, but I am alone, and feel T cannot endure living by elf. to live with one of them? What shall I have two marrifed daughters. Shall I break up my home and go I do? A LONELY MOTHER. Answer: Don't break up your home. Don't go to live with your children if you value your happiness or their well-helng. 18 the one consolation prize that is left to a woman who loses her That Preserve your independence. husband and whose children have left the home nest and have gone about for you a themselves, lonely the business of life independence becaus companionship. if you sacrifice your a bankrupting price for Believe me you will pay Don't decefve yourself by thinking that you will be happy and satisfled when you go to live in another woman’s home, even if that other woman 1s your own daughter. of it, not you. Her ways will not interference and scorn your advice. No woman who has run her own house for 25 or 30 yea She misses the authori ng to do and think about, and she becomes peevish ybody about he h her children love her, they would love her utside of her own home he misses having somet| and fretful, and a pest to e And no matter how mu: 1t will be her house, not yours. She will be the mistress be your ways. She will resent your is ever happy She misses the work. 10 times better if she kept her own home and was an occasional guest, instead rmanent fixtur. in their houses. For there are always the in-laws to consider, and no man craves having a mother-in-law wish herseif upon him. stick to your »u and cook th So. my dear lady heart-breaking affair don’t you mar gain you quarrel. Widows w »wn home, where you can have your e things you like to eat. And if you with whom it {s not such a vou are only middle aged, why fat and 40 and who have a nice or, if e fair, income of their own are matrimoniz1 prizes. And, anyway interests. Join clubs. homeless child and mother it. time to be lonely Travel. You needn’t be lonely in a world that is full of a million Go in for phianthropies. X Take_in some poor little Keep yourself so busy yBu won't have But don't give up your own home, and don't go and lve with your children, . * DOROTHY DIX. PDEAR DOROTHY DIX: I am a girl of 20, and T have been going with a young man for a y cares for me, but I think he does. make a date Answe urely. That sort of a him up. and if you have enough spun with me any time he wants to. show him that I can be independent, too? During this time he has never mentioned that he is very independent and thinks he can Don’t you think I had better DOT. chap needs a good hard jolt to wake k to refuse to be at his beck and call you will make him sit up and begin to take notice. Men take girls at their own valuation, and when one holds herself cheap, boys rate her at a bar; and thank you, too,” ever: are not the ones who have dates. man'’s interest in her. There 1s no pep in the too-willing gir girl who i8 chasing him. It is the girl can get along perfectly well without them, the dates that are ha in counter worth also. rd toget that keep a man on the telephone, The girls who always ; [in;v 25 asks them to go anywhere, Just the knowledge that a girl is sitting at home walting for him to ask her to go somewhere with him destro v ’s every There is no thrill in pursuing a who doesn’t ca e, who flouts men, who that piques their interest. It is There is no policy, that pays a girl so well in dealing with men as Independence. s for thinking that a man mentioned it, you are kidding and at great length. that never run down. There are no dumb-lovers, Is in love with you when he has mever ) yourself, m ‘When a man really falls in love with dear. There's nothing to it. u, he will tell you about it often They are all phonographs DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1926.) — BEAUTY CHATS Bleaching the Arms. No matter how dusky a brunette a woman may be she has one ideal in mind—white arms. She may be proud of her dark skin and use the deepest shade of powder she can buy, and ac- centuate the olive tints by dark red rouge, and bring her black hair well over her face—nevertheless, when she goes with sleeveless dresses, she’ll want her arms as white as possible. Well, here's one way to achieve that. After the arms have been well scrubbed with soap and warm water and rinsed, cover them with a paste made of laun- This dries on, and it should be let on as long as possible—half an hour at least. While drying it should be rubbed into the skin with the hands. It isn't a convenient treatment— though, of course, you can cold cream your face, or manicure your nails, or tidy up your room, or do odd jobs of the sort while the starch is drying, vou ¢ ally, sleeves would rub off the starch. But it's a valuable one, for starch is bleaching and refining. It's particu- larly good if the arms are covered with little red or white marks—goose flesh, my correspondent calls the: blemishes. They are a sort of pimpls they are waste matter hardened into the pores. Rubbing the starch in, which will bring out this matter as is washed off, or scrubbing the arms very thoroughly every day with hot an go with bare arms—natur- | BY EDNA KENT FORBES. water and a mild soap, will alse nen D also get rid If the starch dries out the skin too |much, rub with an almond oil emul- sion or any good hand lotion. Cold cream is too greasy for the arms; it would stain the clothing. But some quick-drying, nourishing hand lotion is exactly what you want. This starch treatment can be given every other day. Tt is particularly effective in the Summer time to bleach off tan and freckles. And it can’t be called an expensive treatment. A pound of laundry starch will last you all the Winter. Elsie ¥. H.—Outstanding ears may be cured at any age by a very simple operation which your doctor could per- form for you. You might be able to overcome this vourself by binding the ears against the head with a bandage and wearing this every night. Martha J. K.—A girl 22 age, 5 feet 5 inches in height, should weigh about 125 pounds. You are very much underwelght at 100 pounds. Try takihg cod liver ofl over the cold weather month: e o years of In old Bagdad, Turkish Arabia, most of the streets are so narrow that two small donkeys cannot pass. If two donkeys meet in a street, one must back out, then scurry ahead before some donkeys enter from the far end of the street. OH, MAN! —By BRIGGS. H\S_TELEPHONE NUMBER 15 HANNIBAL 7210 NONo! NoT 7120 SEVEN- O - Gwe meE HANNIBAL SEVEN - ONE - On- TWoO COME HERE AND |'LL SHOW You ! ] HAVEN'T HAD A CHANCE To PLAY WITH MINE ONCE. ! IS Tris HANNIBAL SEVEN ONE - on - Two T wee | WANT To SPEAK To MR, CRAWFISH: - NO-(RAWFISH)| THERE ISN'T ANY SUCH SAY. YOU'VE PLAYED WITH THAT OLD &qna ENouaH GH , HIRAM fLL REMEMBER THAT NUMBER SURE ~ HANNIBAL 7012-7012-7012 70-’./ OF ALL TnE ROTTEN SERVIGE !! Thev Give You ANY OLD NUMBER THsY WANT To- BY ALBERTINE RANDALL ENGNE UTCH ! HERE LEV'S TRY THESE REINS, QIPDPAP ! P “ 1926. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. I has to ride my 'losipeed outdoors, ‘cause baby keeps gettin’ in my way in the house; and her screams pitty loud when her gets run over. "HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. A living room which has a floor level even a few steps lower than the en- ys seems 80 much more cosy for some reason. One has the sensation of going down into a place that is sheltered and far removed from the hustle and bustle of ordinary household activitie: This little staircase, leading down into the living room from the entrance hall, is an attractive feature in & house of the Spanish type. The woodwork and floor of this room are all of oak, stained almost black, which gives an effect of richnéss and great age. The side walls are rough plaster tinted a soft gray-green. The floor is partially covered with a thick- napped rug of dark red velvet, and drapes of silky red velvet hang at the windows. . Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. G. D. M'D. write: ‘My baby is 10 months oid "and is the picture of health, but my friends criticize some of the things 1 do and 1 am coming to you for advice. First, I use rubber pants on the baby. Second, he scratches his face, even though I keep his nails short, and so the doctor said to tie his bands with ribbon to each side of his coach, which T did. When he is in his coach he kicks the covers off, so I ran a strap around his feet, and now he can't kick them off. 1 also use a safety strap when he is in his coach or high-chair. Don’t think he is strapped up all the time, as he gets plenty of exercise on my Yy pen. a bottle-fed baby, T give Isn’t this better than a nipple b Also I use a veil over his face. Answer.—Dear lady, 1 am sure you are doing what you think best for the baby, but I also find much to erit- fcize in your program. Rubber panties should be used only on state occasions. They should not be used continuously, because they are too heating. There must be some reason why the baby scratches his face, since he is too old to be doing it because he has no idea what his hands are do- Ing, as is the case with tiny babies. I would use some cold cream on his face and be sure he hasn't a touch of eczema Which makes his face itchy. I should prefer putting small bags over the child’s hands to tying them up. It would be better, too, to fasten the covers so that the baby could move his feet freely without kicking the covers off. Use your straps to hold the covers, rather than his feet. It is all right to use x safety strap for the high-chair, but don't overdo it. I am sure you are not. No baby needs either a pacifier or a nipple. " One is as bad as the other. They both encourage adenoids and ill- shaped teeth, as the constant sucking is unnatural. Why should he need soothing? If he is hungry he should have food, not a barren nipple. Do not use a veil. A baby is able to stand the cold air without a cover- Ing, which is kard on his eyes and which becomes wet and cold from his breath. You see, in this case “they” ‘were right. Mrs. H. S. D.—A baby of 9 months requires one quart of milk dafly. Your baby weights more than the av- erage vear-old child. He should have four bottles of eight ounces each. In no other way can he get the right nourishment. 3 P Scrambled Eggs With Kidney. Prepare three cooked kidneys by chopping into fine pieces. Heat in an omelette pan with a tablespoonful of butter. Prepare the scrambled eggs in the usual w: scrambling with the kidneys. Serve on buttered toast. FEATURES. EVERYDAY QUESTIONS Answered by DR. S. PARKES CADMAN stions from readers arc answared dally | already hinted at in this column that S, Parl president of the 1" Council. of Churches of Christ in & Dr. Cadman secks to_apswer in ‘that_appear to be representative of \; nds of thought in the many letters which he receives. es Cadma: WASHINGTON, D. C. Prof. G. Stanley Hall, the noted psychologist, did not believe that any person had a personal conscious ex istence after death, as you probably know from reading his books. Joh Milton in his “Christian Doctrir which was not discovered until 1 and which Macaulay refers to in h “Essay on Milton,” stated it as his belief that every person who has lived on this earth, both before Christ and since, is dead and has no existence anywhere; but he belleved that they would all come to lief again at som future time when there occurs what | the theologians call the resurrection | of the body. Do you believe that every human being who has lived on the earth has & personal, conscious existence some- where, or that he ever will have? Answer.—As a Christian minister T not only believe in human immortali- ty, but regard it as a rational reality My theology is Christo-centric. It de- pends upon Him who said: “Because I live ve shall live also,” and upon His teaching that God is the Father of all spirits. Surely He does not create them to be the sport of bodily death. For me their existence beyond the grave is the logical sequence of | His Fatherhood. Tennyson had this idea in mind when he wrote of man: “Ha thinks he was not made to die. And Thou hast made him. Thou art Just.” But the essence of your question is in its demand for detalils, such as the conscious personal immortality of every human being who has existed, from aboriginal man to the Bushman | of Africa, the Moslem of India, the | Buddhist,” the Confucianist and the | Christian. T know of no such sweep | of knowledge and judgment in men | and women as v.ould enable them to | understand the fate of these count- less tribes and nations. or 18 the revelation of Christ given particulars concerning the exact nature of the future life. It is prone to negatives rather than positives. No hight, no sin, no pain, no sorrow, no paration; these are its conspicuous attributes. The rest is left to the wi dom and mercy of the Supreme Ar- biter. In fact, there is a necessary | agnosticism in the Bible about the after life. Necessary, I repeat, be. “eye hath mnot seen, nor ear , neither hath it entered into the of man to conceive the things which God has prepared for them that love Him." For me this native inability to understand what awaits us s infinite- Iy preferable to alleged statements made by the discarnate about the fu- ture life, After reading them I feel that for once ignorance has more dig- nity than “knowledge.” The whole question is highly con- troversial, especially when you insist on more than one life at a time, and seek for particulars in a realm far beyond mortal quest. The one solvent for your difficulties is faith in the Fatherhood of God. The suggestion to cen't own life; can only live it. cant own love; You can only give it. You aant own truth; ruth would die, vnheard, I think that “own™ Is a foolish ALF a century ago % William Carroll’s residence, at the corner of 18th and F, witnessed a continuous scene of hospitality. Mrs. Carroll was never happier than when’ en- tertaining . . . In her drawing room hung many portraits of family ancestors arrayed in the antique dress of olden times . . . Often at her “teas” those attired in bustles and furbelows would laughingly discuss at length the oddity of earlier modes . . . To- R g fmmortality, which in the New Testa- ment sense means life plus blessed. ness, is a prize to be won from fts Lord by human behavior here, is per- haps worthy of your attention. MANCHESTER, N. H Would not Gireat Britain be relleved of her excessive financial burden if she cut down her drink bill? How can Americans be expected to sympath with that nation while she continues | such a needless and injurio8s extrava gance Answer.—It is not always wise for an outsider to criticize the sumptuary habits of a nation, especially when those of his own people are under fire. Yet, as an economic proposition ars directly on the world's situation. the reduction of Britain's traffic in intoxicants de serves the serious attention of her well wishers In 1925 she spent $1.260,000.000 in drink and invested $112,000,000 over seas. The expenditure represents sven from the standpoint of the non prohibitionist, an {nealculable amount of meedless waste and suffering. The investment aids the development of an empire upon whose industrial wel fare Britain's commercial prosperity depends as it never did before. Thera are far too many distilleries and breweries in Great Britaln and Ireland for the success of other and less hazardous industries. If the ex ceedingly remunerative trade in in toxicants were cut in two, the released capital could be used. to greater ad vantage in more legitimate business /, brains, labor, equipment and materfals, to say nothing of social moral conditions, are under the domi- nation of this evil. It is on the wane however, and vigorous measures aro being taken for its future limitation by many British and Irish authorities in economics, who are convinced that drink must diminish in their countries if these are to hold their own in inter- national competition for manufacture and trade. fi Cauliflower au Gratin. Cook the cauliffower in a very little water. Drain off the water, Mash the larger pieces of caulifiowes and add a little cream, some bread rumbs and a pinch of salt. Butter lightly the bottom of a casserols and put the cauliffower into it. Powder well with cheese and bread crumbs. _Toast for 20 minutes. Makes Women— “Alluring—Every Hour in 24" To be always dainty—check of- fensive perspiration body-odors, in a simple, convenient, thorough way. Try this! Wash or bathe with exquisite Chex Soap. Instantly— every trace of body odor i gone. Alluring charm follows for 24 hours. The most cleanly may offend—be- cause the skin pores help rid the sys- tem of waste; more so, when other eliminative organs are sluggish. —And the insidious thing is, we may never suspect it and our dear- est friend won't tell us. Chex contains s lasting. odorless de- odorant, not found in any other sosp: which, ' in_the creamy abundant lather. penetrates to_the skin _pore, dissolving. nting’_decomposition of skin moisture. .000,000° cakes used in the. first ne delighted. . it's the wonder soap of the ng. Ts "Sold " and_recommended by all Pegnles Drug Stores and all good drug and toilet counters. day a picture of Mrs. Carroll attired in the height of fashion’ of her day would be considered at least—quaint! How styles of clothing change! ... Andhow how necessary it is that laundering methods are constantly improved to care for them properly. At Elite the ultimate in modern facilities are maintained to recondi~ ' tion your washables , . . And Elite service is thorough, efficient and o economical , . . Tryitl Elite Laundry 2117-2119 Fourteenth St. N.W. . - Potomac 40—41—42—43