Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
The French dressmakers and silk- furkers seem to be bent on maintain- ing the fashion for plaids. Perhaps this is just a polite way they have of expressing the French fondness for | the Scotch—for no matter how remote @ plaid may be from any of the au-| thentic tartans of Scotland it is still to a Frenchman ‘“ecossais.” The milllners are making use of the plaid idea in many ways for Spring. There will be hats made of | THE LOWER FROCK IS OF PLAID, GREE: AND BROWN, ON A BEIGE FOUNDATION, AND THE UPPER PART IS OF PLAIN BEIGE FLAN- NEL TO MATCH THE GROUND < COLOR OF THE plaid silks, and hats trimmed with plaid fibbon. Plain-colored silk hats Are shown with plaid designs effected by rows of colored stitching in plaid design. One of the most unusual ways of using plaid silk is to make it into flowers which are used to trim hats or for buttonhole or shoulder adornment. The Parisian milliner Retoux has been showing neat little straw hats for Spring trimmed with flat choux made of plaid silk or ribbon. There are many PART OF THIS BEDTIME STORIE /Another Sign Fails. hun or shadow, either way. t means the same on Ground How day. —Old Mother Nature. As I told you yesterday, Peter Rab- bit does not believe In signs. What I mean is that Peter does not believe in foolish signs.. Of course, when he sees green leaves breaking in the Spring he knows that §8 a sign Summer is not far awdy. But when he sees Johnny Chuck out in Winter he doesn’t believe that that is a sign of anything except that Johnny has been restless and has waked up. You know, @ great many people call February 2 Ground Hog day. They believe that Johnny Chuck comes out on that day and that if it is bright and sunny so that he sees his shadow he knows that there will be six weeks more of ‘Winter and goes back to -sleep ac- cordingly. If he does not see his “WHY, JOHNNY CHUCK!” HE ED. —that is, if the day is cloudy- they believe it is a sign that Winter is nearly over. , It happened that Johnny Chuck did come up on Ground Hog day this year and Peter saw him. Peter happened 10 be over that way and he could hardly believe his eyes when he saw somebody sitting up on Johnny Chuck’s doorstep. You should have seen Peter's long heels twinkle as he scampered over there. “Why, Johnny Chuck,” he cried, “what under the sun are you doing out this time of year?” Johnny yawned sleepily. “I woke up and I just thought 1'd have a look ! ling made from bias cuttings of the {give the desirable touch of color to | seen, here and there, handbags of gay | suits of year. cast a shadow on the snow. you see it, Johuny Chuck?" crossly. i plaid taffeta frocks among the new things for Spring, and although it | may take some courage to wear a | frock of this sort you will at least have the satisfaction of knowing you | are in fashion if you da. Frocks of plaid cloth seem less strik- | ing than those of silk. Perhaps this | is because the soft texture of the | cloth tends to tone down the vivid | outline of the plaid. One of the most | satisfactory ways of using plaid is to | combine it with cloth-of a color match- Ing one tone of the plaid, preferably the ground tone. The bodice may be of plaid with a plain skirt, though the | usual way is to follow the traditional Scoteh method and make the kilt of | the plaid with the bodice of a plain | tone. | Some. of the new plaid silks may be used with excellent effect to provide trimming to dark-colored frocks. Pip- silk, facings and strappings of plaid navy blue or black for Spring. At | Southern resorts there have been | plaid. providing the only touch of color | in an otherwise dark or neutral cos- tume. To wear with the new dark-colored or “tallored frocks there are | scarfs of wide plaid ribbon, and these | are sometimes finished with fringe made from the raveled ends of the ribbon knotted at regular intervals. | When the ribbon is heavy the fringe is quite effective. (Covyrisht. 1 MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Baked Apple Sauce Cereal with Cream French Toast Doughnuts Coffee D: LUNCHEON Poached Eggs on Toast Parker House Rolls Spanish Cream Wafers DIN Cream of Pea Soup Veal Cutlets Riced Potatoes Baked Squash Cabbage Salad Lemon Meringue Ple Coffee Tea, DOUGHNUTS One egg, two cups flour, three- quarters cup sugar, one and one- half teaspoons baking powder, 1 cup milk, tablespoon butter (melted), one-half teaspoon salt. Have fat smoking hot. CABBAGE SALAD Shred finely half head firm white cabbage, add two-thirds cup broken walnut meats and one finely cut sweet red pepper, toss together lightly and molsten with French or boiled dressing. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS around and see if it was time to get up,” said ke. “I see it isn’t, so I'll go back to bed. My, this sun feels rather good. It is'a long time since I felt any sun.” 2 Now, it happened that it was a warm day. Jolly, round, bright Mr. Sun was doing his best; he was doing the very best he could for that time Johnny Chuck, sitting up, “Do you see it?” cried Peter. “Do “Do I see what?”” demanded Johnny, “Your shadow!” cried Peter. “I sup- pose that means that we are gong to have a lot of Winter yet and that you’ll go back to sleep until it is all over.” “Is that s0?" retorted Johnny. “You | seem to know a lot about it. You know a lot more than I do. We may be going to have a lot- more Winter or Winter may be almost over, so far as I know. It doesn’t make any dif- ference to me. I'm going back to bed again and I hope I'll be able to sleep until Winter is over, whether it is a long time or a short time.” “You mean you won't come out again until Winter is almost over or qujte over?” asked Peter. “Not if 1 can help yourself,” an- swered Johnny. And with a last look aroynd Le disappeared down inside his home, “He saw his shadow,” muttered Peter. ‘"He saw his shadow, and that means that we've got a lot of Winter ahead of us yet and we won't see Johnny Chuck again until Winter is over.”” You see, at that time Peter did not believe in some signs. It was just a week later that Peter happened along that way. Once again he was surprised, very much sur- ise]. There sat Johnny Chuck on his doorstep, just as he had been sit- ting the week before on Ground Hog v. “What are you doing up here?” cried Peter Rabbit. “Looking around and minding my own business,” retorted Johnny. “But_you have no business to be,” cried Peter. *“I mean you have no business to be up here looking arcund. You saw the shadow the other day and you should be down inside your house asleep now.” “‘Huh!" retorted Johnny. “T guessI shall do just as T feel like doing. I was awake and I wanted {o lmve a look around, and here I am. I have an fdea that we are going to have an early Spring, but I don’t know any- thing about it and I'm not going to worry about it. I don't believe in signs, anyway. “Neither do 1,” replied Peter. (Copyright. 1927.) THE 'EVENING SUB ROSA" BY MIML. Giving Him Try-out. We have spoken often of the cruelty | which seems to form a part of many girls' make-up. Cruelty is an unpleasant word—it isn't plea to think that so many girls possess it, yet we are constantly running across it in new forms, mas querading under various names Recently we have seen an example of crue calling itself “judicious thought.” The fair her form « oung thing who practiced brutality assured me in | all seriousness that she was but giv- ing a certain matter “judicious thought,” and if, In the doing thereof, she hurt some one terribly—well, that was too bad, but it couldn't be helped. Her name is Frances and she prides herself on being a most reasonable and fair-minded young person. She is so fairminded she stops at nothing in her endeavor to reach the truth of things. She wanted to know the truth about her feelings for Donald. Frankly she had often told me she didn't give a rap about him—he bored her, left her cold, utterly failed to interest her. But Donald’s dogged devotion did not lessen, Rather it increased. And when he finally asked her to marry him Frances hesitated. Now she told me afterward she hesi- tated hecause she wanted to be fair and to give the mater judicious thought. She assured me that her intentions were of the best. But I can hardly credit that story. T am just enough of a cynic to be- lieve that Frances was having rather a dull season—that her invitations were few and far between, her pro- posals non-existent, and her g(’n(‘!‘all social program very dull. And 1 suppose she hated to see Donald go forever. She hated to turn him away with a final refusal. So she gave him what she calmly called a ‘try-out.” She told him that | she would be engaged to him—and added that if everything went well during their engagement, wedding bells would be in order. Can you imagine Donald's state of mind? "He was dlotically radiant, for. of course, she told him nothing about the try-out idea. . Tt would have endangered the whole plan, she assured me gravely, to have let him know that he was only on probation. She wanted to try him out—see just how he acted as an engaged man—a happy engaged man | —before she let him know just where | he_stood. And for six months that miserable boy was happy—while Frances, know- ing full well all the time that she could never love him, pretended to be the sweet, adoring, young fiancee. At the end of that time his suffering was. too keen to be described, and Frances' bland complacence as she gave him the alr was too utterly con- temptible to be dealt. with in printable language. There is no cruelty like that of trying out some unfortunate boy who loves you and who trusts vou when vou sa es”—vou will marry him. There is no justification for such cruelty, and there is nothing strong enough to be said against it. Mimi will be glad to answer any inquiries directed to this paper, provided a stamped. nidressed envelope is inclosed. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was smoking and thinking and ma was imbroldering imbroidery, say- ing,r I went to Maddam Seero about that ring I lost, Willyum. ‘Wat, the fortune teller? pop sed. Yes, in fact I went to her 3 dif- ferent times about it, becausé 3 is her mistic number, and sure enuff the 3rd time she went in a trance and came out of it successfill, ma sed. ‘Wat, you dont mean to say she told you ware you lost your ring? pop sed. Absilutely, now do you bleeve in fortune tellers? ma sed. But ware, ware was it, ware js it now? pop sed. Meening the ring, Thats jest the point. ‘Warever that is, pop sed, and ma sed, You awt to know a fortune teller duzzent tell you a thing rite out point blank in so meny cut and dry werds, they tell you in a misterious way or elts they wouldent be fortune tellers. ‘Well for Peet sake wat did she tell you, come across with it, pop sed, and ma sed, Well heers wat she sed, she sed, Seek, seek, seek and yee shall find, the outside is the inside's rind. Now’ wat would you sippose that ment, Willyum? ma’ sed. It proberly meens the ring dropped off your finger wile you were making lemminade, and some day you will be pealing the rind off an orange, and low and. behold, out will pop your ring, pop sed, and ma sed, Now, it duzzent, either, your rong, Willyuim, it ment my ring was in my 8rd bewro draw under a lot of things, and thats the ferst place I looked for it wen I got home, and there it was and heer it is on my little finger. But yee gods, how could you dope that out? pop sed, and ma #ed, It was a mixture of pure inspiration and in- tuition and heers the ring to prove it. ‘Well 1 got to go out and get some air, and heer I go to prove it, pop sed. ‘Which he did. Dutch Salad Dressing. Dissolve one tablespoonful of sugar in one-half a cupful of cream either sweet or sour, mix With two table- spoonfuls of goose fat or butter, one- half a cupful of very hot vinegar, one teaspoonful of dry mustard, one tea- spoonful of salt, a little pepper and on-half an_onion cut fine. While the idressing is hot, mix it with any chopped vegetable and serye the salad slightly warm. and ma sed, HOW TO START THE DAY WRONG. " Gee' WHAT A SuELL DAv- 1 THINK TLL STAY Home AmD PUTTER ARDUND -- | LL JUST AL Hi OP ANMD 7 MINGA* van! SOLEEKA BO DAHNKA UNGA BINGA-" | FARAHKA - YAH-| PMINGA { (1 WANT To speax To THe BosS- LEFT FoR Tue DAY —By BRIGGS. PARAMKA SOWKA SOBINGA HOOKA AND S0 THE DAY WAS, To SAY THE LEAST, UTTERLY RUINED SHOULD TALK e~ \mmcuaz STAR, WASHINGTON, D. TUESDAY, ) by Fashionable Folk Julia Boyd I ! | | | | | EEEREs cmE gl d S0 ABNE Across. 1. Shallow vessels. 5. In time past. 8. Be in debt. 11. Medicinal shrub. 12. Shaped. 13. Stand still. 16. Sound additional to that of respira- tion, Advertisement. Uncovered. Ridges of glacial sand and rock. Exclamation. Conjunction. Book of the Bible. Theological degree. Like. Impresses. Proposed international language. Afternoon (abbr.). Facts. Baking place. Amon. Forebode. Box. Permits. Opera. Nevertheless. Meshwork. Man entertaining guests. Down. Dance step. 2. Places of sacrifice 3. Negative. 4. Compass point. Exist. 6. Depart. . Water jar. | River in Europe At of Icelandi literature. . Mineral rocks. . Nuisance. Revolve. rhi 18. 19. 20. 21. 22; 23. 26. 28, 29, 30. 31. 33. 85. 36. 37. 38. 40. 43. 45. 46. 47, 1. For perspiration odors, underarm odors—or any body odor—simply bathe with remarkable Chex soap. Within a few seconds—every trace of odor is GONE!—removed for at least 36 hours! —a _super-toflet soap, extmordinary vegetable extract it remarkable power. The creamy abun- dant_lather penetrates to the Very bottom of the tiny skin pores, and dissolves every article of the decomposed body moisture. Bafei—Chex 16 free of dangerous chem. iculs, Tt does not close the "pores, do not_irritate the skin, does. not hide ado; with perfume—or leave any odor of own. The Chex just as you would other toilet soaps—for - f{ace, bath, shampoo. It improves = the skin ' textire, _softening, whitening and healing, You'll decide Chex the finest soap you've ever used! Chex sold and recommended by all Peoples Drug’ Stores and all good drug and toliet counters. contains an which gives The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1927.) I 19. Snake, . Serfes of heroic events. Please reply (abbr.). | Fears. i . Put on. | . Entreat. . Man. . . Stupid person. . Ra. | . Rodent. . Ourselves. . Street (abbr.). . Exclamation. . Maiden loved by Zeus. ‘ 248 Gmocchi. One cup grated cheese, one-half tea- spoon salt, one-quarter cup flour, one pint milk, one-quarter cup cornstarch, one-quarter cup butter. Melt the but- ter; stir in the cornstarch, flour, salt |and milk. Let come to a boil and | cook five minutes, stirring all the { time. Add the cheese, the beaten eggs |and salt and cook for two or three| | minutes longer. Pour into a shallow | greased pan and let cool. Shape with {a biscuit cutter and place the cakes |in a flat baking dish. Sprinkle with | cheese and brown in a very hot oven. ' DID YOU EVER THINK YOU'D - SMACK YOUR LIPS OVER COD LIVER OIL? Everyone is a-tingle over this new and delightful means of building health! Nothing in all Nature is so good for you as pure cod liver oil. Buthereitisin a form you'll enjoy taking. Cod liver ol that everybody likea. Full ate-. dlovs the blosdred dening, body-building prop- ies of real cod liver oil ‘oday, ’°';j‘fi'd°"?‘;’§ e Children to take it "For in tha form called cococod, it has only a full, rich chocolate flavor that tempts one to take more! except the tem The Cod Liver Oil that FEBRUARY 8, |y | every day to stop in at a flor | forget-me-not. | ilies, the compo: oi/—with nothing but the taste taken out, And nothing added ol .:?.'.nL supply every 1927, WINTER BY D. C. PEATTIE. Cinerarias. Of all the newcomers in the florists’ windows, the most resplendent Win- ter flower is the cineraria, which has | | been popularly and most appropriate- dubbed South African daisy, for | from that opulent cape, that gave us | the gladiolus, came these marvelous blue and white and pink pot plants 1t is the very deep blue varieties that | have caused thousands of people | s shop | and ‘ask the name of that marvelous flower. Blue, a clear biue, free of red | and violet, is rather rare in the flower world, and when it occurs it is generally in the very pale blue shades of the Borage family—as in | A clear blue of deep | tone is rarer still, but the cinerarias have it. The name cineraria means ashen, and refers to the beautiful neutral background of the gray foliage. In one of those seismic shake-ups which occur in botany every so often, the name cineraria, as a generic term, was discovered to apply only to a certain limited group of plants—which did not _include the florist's and our cin- eraria at all, which turns out to_be technically a species of senecio, that gigantic and resplendent genus, larg- est of all the genera of the largest and most gorgeous of all plant fam te or daisy family. So it is no disgrace to this wonder ful pot plant to be transferred into the regal company of the senecios: but the name cineraria will probably “stick,” both popularly and in the trade. Cinerarias often go to seed in house. And when they do, it seems but ural to save the seed, espe- cially as the potted plants are expen sive. But the experiment is seldom fruitful, since the florists’ plants are | largely unstable hybrids which, in the second and third gencrations, hegin to revert to the more weedy and blousy types of the wild parents of the fine greenhouse hybrids. In any case it is a severe struggle to pull the seedlings through their fin- icky infancy, and all in all, cinerarias are like automobiles; it is cheaper to buy a new one than struggle with an old one which is deterforating the Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. E. F. J. writes: “I happened to see your articles about pyloric stenosis and now I am sure that it what was the matter with my small baby who could hold no food upon his shomach until he was past a month old and then was started on farina and thrived well. He is now 4 years old. Could you tell me what causes this trouble and if it is' followed by con- stipation? My boy is now taking plain agar, which does not upset him. “I have a lot of trouble getting him to eat vegetables and his appetite gen- erally is none too good. Can you sug- gest something? 1 have just started to give him cod liver oil. Answer.—Pyloric stenosis is a con- genital malformation of the pylorus which makes it difficult for food to pass easily from the stomach into the small intestine, because the pylorus is too small. Instead of going into the intestine it churns around and around and the constant irritation to the stomach and the stomach muscles finally ends in vomiting, which tends to become explosive. The child actu- ally starves to death though his abil- ity to digest the food he eats may be all right. Enlarging the pylorus by an operation or by forcing a larger opening by the continued use of thick foods, which are not so easily vom- ited, also brings about a cure. It is very possible that the pylorus is still smaller than it should be, though the child's poor appetite and indigestion of insufficient food is more than likely the cause of the constipa- tion. I should stimulate the appetite by fruit juices and cod liver oil and try and force more food at each meal than he is accustomed to taking, until the condition is cured. In the mean- time, the agar offers bulk that is heip- ful in combating the trouble. Mrs. M. P.—It would be better if your 1 onth-old baby would take a nap during the day and I would man- age some way to keep him quiet for an hour or so even if he will not sleep. - Later on he may get back into the nap habit again. It is wise to give all babies cod liver oil, especially in the Winter. Since your baby is still not walking it would be ever more necessary for him. We have a new feeding leaflet that Wwe are anxious our mothers shall prof- it by. It covers feeding from 6 weeks to 6 years and. of course, offers all information about weaning, cod liver oil, orange juice, cereals, vegetables, soups and formulas. We think it just perfect. It may be had for merely a self-addressed and stamped envelope and the asking. Other leaflets moth- ers may have deal with the subjects of constipation, prenatal care and diet for the nursing mother, outfits for the new baby, eczema, forcible feeding, sleeping, walking, teething. thumb-sucking, training in cleanly habits, periods of nursing, hives, orange juice, cod liver oil, vomiting, and refractory children. Before asking 3 personal question about these subjects it is wise to find out if the leaflet will answer it for you. — Under new regulations issued by the Soviet government, persons em- ploying laborers in towns or villages | n such a scale as to carry their economic activities beyond the limits | of the toilers’ economy,”’ are disen- tranchised. | Tookinginto this new and great gift of science. the whole household in your own hands, cod will paint the cheeks of any human, the energies of any man ot woman or child: love tl “Remember, is pure cod liver that Tick the spoon!” W have tried the city, 00 iaquirs todayr. o 0 te Tastes Liquid or Tablet Fi | had at home, FEATURES. LIFTED BY HAZ “WHAT TO DEN WOULD YOU LIKE DEYO BATCHELOR. MASK DO LY. TODAY?" HE ASKED SUD Mark Burton returns from abroad because of a_letter received from Maude Maynard, the aunt his ward, Jessica Bertlett. Jessica is about to inherit the principal of her father's estate and Maude is afraid that a fortune hunter mamed Ray-| mond Townley is preying on her af- fections. Although he is interested | in another woman, Mark drops his | affairs to attend to Jessica’s. He dis- covers that Ray Townléy is a thor- ough rotter, and after Jessica has announced her engagement, tries to reason with her. They quarrel. Then | Aunt Maude comes to the fore and suggests that he carry Jessica off. | At first Mark ridicules the idea, but | finally accepts it. He makes plans to | take her to his hunting shack in the Shawangunk Mountas An older woman named Mrs. Morse is to act | as chaperon and housckeeper. Jessica | walks into the trap by suggesting | that Mark show her his place. He | drives her up there, and the truth comes out. Jessica is furious, of course, but the mext morning decides to make the best of it. CHAPTER XXXIIL Mark Makes a Suggestion. Breakfast consisted of very good | coffee made by Mrs. Morse, baking powder biscuits, light and feathery, and bacon. There was butter, but Jessica tasted it. and decided she didn’t_like the flavor. It had come out of a can. Her coffee she drank black, as there was only condensed milk to put in it. She sighed when she thought of the thick cream she but she did not com- of plain. During the meal neither of them said very much, although Mark was | 4 quietly observing her. She looked s different this morning. Like a straight, slim boy with her sleek little head still damp from her bath. The simple nut»i | fit was very be¢oming to her, too..He wondered vaguely what was going on in her mind and how she intended to behave. He had an jdea that she might not make a bad companion un less she chose to be perverse. After a” Second cup of coffee he leaned back in his chair and lighted his pipe. Jessica watched him smoke. She was dying for a cigarette, but she | had none of her own and hated to ask | him for one. After a while, however, | she couldn’t resist any longe 1 “Have you any cigarettes | Instantly he sprang to his feet. “Why, yes, of course. 1 bought a couple of tins of them on the way up. What kind do you usually smoke? I'm afraid these are not very good.” He brought her the round tin box and lighted her cigarette. Jessica, like most youngsters of the present period, despised good cigarettes. Of course, she had her own brand of the cheaper | ones, but she could smoke with enjoy- | ment any cigarette of the cheaper| | =1 | Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle. [z]> ][] [oRl=m[o[>[m] 13 m[m| oMl [»/>] [>[c] ]o]> 1z 0o m 3> = ]> ] S | [o[=[>]z] [@[=]mlo]>] | The only real | fur | though Mark had | rankled. | ereatest | the | were scarcely in She drew in a long Lreath and tantly felt good humored 1 Mark fell to watch She was very slim, but the fine sinewy quality to her looked like the type of woman who was mever ill. Last night he had breathed a sigh of relief after he had caught her raiding the pienic basket He was glad that she had not made up her mind to starve herself. That would have worried h! What would you like tc ¥7" he asked suddenly She turned her mousy full upon him. “It isn't necessary to amuse mey you know. Aft I. 'm not up he for pleasure. T'm being disciplinedy nusement that I ex pect to get from my sojourn into the wilderness is the knowledge that I'm keeping vou from your own plans. - T don't imagine you like that part of it any too well. After all, it isn't as if you could afford to wait, but a few months out of my life makes very little difference one way or_another.” Last night she had made a scorn- reference to his age, and, al< tried to look at her words had He was only 40 and he felt young and vigorous and alive. Jes~ sica made him feel like an old man: He dldn't like *He was about her. | > was a She o do tos gray eyes the matter lightly, to retort, when sud: denly the germ of an idea flashed across his mind. If Jessica had made up her mind to be persistently dis- agreeable, he might as well get some pleasure out of this plan of Maude's. Why not ask Irene up for a short visit? If he did, he and Jessica would not be thrown together sol much as they would otherwise. He was_sure, too, that the two women Wol like each other. It was cer- tainly an idea, and one that was | fairly practical. | He could give up his room and sleep on the couch in the living room: Of course it wouldn't be as conven- jent for him, but Irene presence { would more than make up for that’ “T have a plan in mind,” he said suddenly, “but I wanted to consult | you ahout it before 1 went ahead with }t‘"“v was fHifking of asking Irene t6'¢ome up Here for a time. She would love it. T thought it might be nice, too, for you to have another woman to chum around with, and Mrs. Morse wlill, of course, lay peron to all of us. What do you think of the idea, Bunny? I hope vou approve because I'm keen about it.” . (Copyright. 1927.) (Continued in tomorrow's Star.) Lessons in English Don't say " When Words often misused: “there is no one else but her. “but” is used omit “else.” Often mispronounced: “Irremedi- able. Pronounce both i's as in “it,’ both e’s as in * accent the “me. Often misspelled: Chloroform Synonyms: Solitude, seclusion, tirement, privacy Word study: “Use times and it is your crease our vocabulary one word each day. Rigid: not pliant; stiff. himself rigidly erect word three Let us in mastering word drew by ‘oda. le It is an odd fact that two of the statesmen in cotemporary history, Gladstone, the “Grand Old Man" of Great Britain, and Bismarck, Iron Chancellor of Germany, known to each other. What’s your score at breakfast? DON'T do your eggs in four (spoonfuls). Your coffee in three (gulps). .try to take a few more fast score. Instead, mal A newspaper. Frui And every morning strokes off your break- ke each meal a pleasure. t. Cereal. Eggs and crisp bacon. Thin slices of toast. And then— here’s the secret of su, and, of course, coffee! Sanborn’s Seal Brand. highest, not the lowest, ccess. The sport page Good coffee! Chase & Par for breakfast is the , score. Chase&Sanborn's \ & AL BRAND COFFEE