Evening Star Newspaper, August 9, 1927, Page 24

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WOMAN'S PAG Cool Cellar Required in Summer BY LYDIA LE B One of the secrets of good house- keeping lies in doing things in the right time for them. This does not mean at the time when they seem hardest, but, to the contr: usually BROOM MAKES AN CLE R FOR CELLAR WALLS denotes the time when the them seems most congenial, This may be applied to unattractive a task as the cleaning of a cellar, It is even true that the doing of even so ARON WALKER. most comfortable place in the house on a day when the thermometer is running a high temperature. To go to the cellar on some errand is to experience a moment of relief from the torrid atmosphere above stairs. 1t is evidence of good housekeeping sense to take advantage of this fact in a practical way. The dreaded task—for usually such it is—is then to be looked upon with a certain amount of favor. Once begun in this mood it is well on the way to com- pletion. A tidy cellar with walls white- washed and floors swept clean and the contents of the whole well sys- tematized is a part of the house in which a homemaker may take a justifiable pride. White-washing, be- sides making the cellar lighter and cleaner tooking, is a sanitary meas- ure advisable to take, especially it the cellar has had a musty smell Charcoal is very efficacious in its purifying effect. ~ This should be put around the cellar in pans and left there. The cellar windows should be TH VENING SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. opened so that the fresh air can | circulate. | The walls, before being white- washed, should be at least moderate- | Iy clean. A cloth tied around a broom | makes it a very good cleaner . for | walls. If you intend whitewashing | them yourself, be sure to tie some- | thing over your head before starting | operations. Summer Is the season in which any | needed repairs should be made on the | furnace or piping. It will be most uncomfortable for the entire house- hold it such repairs are left until the | Fall or Winter, when there is im- mediate need of a furnace fire. | 12 vegetables are stored in the cel- | lar, the dryest portion of it should | be sought for this purpose. Also | the vegetables should be inspected | occasionally in the following months | 10 see that those which threaten de- | cay are removed and prevented from | contaminating the rest | Soap for the laundry or bath should | be bought in quantity and allowed to hecome hard before using. A shelf | in the cellar can be delegated to this coolness of the cellar makes it the [ BEDTIME STORIES . Jimmy's Cleverness. | Who uses wit a way, will find | To do the thing he has in mind { Jimmy Skunk. | | Peter Rabbit still doubted if Jimmy Skunk would eat such a hairy fellow | as Woolly Bear, the most hairy of all | the hairy caterpillars. In fact, Woolly | Bear is so very hairy that he fairly | bristles. Peter simply couldn't imag- | ine anybody eating Woolly Bear. Yet | Jimmy Skunk had said he would eat | him if he were hungry. Peter's cu riosity was greatly aroused. Jimmy Skunk had said that if he were to eat | Woolly Bear, there wouldn't be any hair on him when he ate him. Peter feased and teasqd Jimmy to tell him how he would get rid of that hair. But Jimmy wouldn't. | So it was that whenever Peter hap- | | SVOOLLY BEAR NEVER SEEMED | TO BE AFRAID. pened 1o run across one of the Woolly r family he would remember what, immy Sunk had said and wish that e could find out how Jimmy would et rid of all those prickly hairs. Woolly Bear never seemed to be fraid. You see, among caterpillars Fe is very much what Prickly Porky s among animals. But even Prickly Porky isn't safe always. There is one #nimal who has learned how to kill a Porcupine. despite the thousand little | #pears with which Prickly Porky is | prmed. It iz the same with AVoolly Bear. His bristly ccat pro- tects him from most of his enemies, but there is one who has found out PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Prevention of Ivy Poisoning. Poison ivy has three leaves on a gtem, the leaves appear waXxy or shiny underneath. Two of the leaves wre short stalked, but the middle leaf Is long-stalked. Many persons mis- take woodbine for poison ivy. Wood- birvie, howe has five leaves on a sten. The berries of poison ivy are greenish at first and later turn yel- lowish or ivory, whereas the berries of woodbine are blue. As both of these vines often follow fences or trail over the ground of neglected places or climb over other bushes or trees, it is well to remember these Bistinguishing features, ivy having three letters and three leaves, shiny underneath. The poison may be carried in the fumes or smoke from burning ivy. A susceptible person may be poisoned by passing near the growing plant, particiular] e in the Summer when the plant is pollinating. Ordi- parily actual contact is necessary to produce the acteristic skin inflam- mation. The best treatment is applied be- fore you get poisoned. If you know ou are going to be exposed, apply o the exposed surfaces of skin ordi- ary soap lather and let it dry on Fhen repeatedly wash the exposed purfaces with soapy water immecdi- dely after exposure. Wear rubber loves if you must handle poison ivy. Vash the gloves as carefully as you tash your hands, with several fresh rinsings of soapy water. Always lake pains to keep the wash water | trom further contact with normal | skin, as it s the poison and produc of the Wh ivy is| ly exposed skin ma be anointed with cup| e or petrolatum or any kind of e or stead of soap lather which does not in long, and the grease as carefully washed away when the necessary work is fin for it, too, contains the irritant prin- piple. Likewise, clothing that has; tome in contact with the ivy or with the washings or dressings or exudate rom the inflamed or blistered skin | must be carefully washed or burned | »_prevent further poisoning. Persons who are very susceptible o ivy poisoning may acquire a suf- ;ml(—m degre immunity to protect | them through a season by taking Internally, early in the season or be- | fore the season, minute homeopathic foses of tincture of poison ivy-leaf tox) and daily increasing the A formula for such prophy- contai inflammation re contact with hecessa prolonged the m skin. flose lactic is not necessary if one can ob- | good homeopathic tincture ake one drop in a glassful tain | called | of canned corn. purpose. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS how to get rid of that bristly coat, and | that one is Jimmy Skunk.. But he | wouldn't tell Peter how he did it. | It was in the Fall that Peter finally discovered how the trick w Woolly Bears were traveling in & rections, seeking places to spend the Winter. Grasshoppers were no longer | plentiful. It wasn't so easy for Jimmy Skunk to keep fat. He had to roam about = little more for a living. | Occasionally Peter met him. Finally ore day Peter started down the Lone Little Path, and half-way down he met Jimmy SKunk coming up the Lone Little Path. ood_morn- ing, Jimmy,” said Peter. “How is| the world using you? “Pretty well, pretty ied Jimmy. “You look it.” said Peter were any fatter, I am afraid your would burst.” “No danger,” replied Jimmy. “Asa matter of fact, I could eat a little more without any discomfort. This cool weather has put an end to a lot | of grasshoppers. When grasshoppers:| are plentiful, it is easy to keep fat.” Suadenly Jimmy’s eyes brightened. | A look of eagerness came into them. | He was gazing past Peter up the Lone | Little Path. “As I live,” exclaimed Jimmy, “I believe there goes one now!"” “Do_you mean a grasshopper?” asked Peter, turning to look. “I do mot.” replied Jimmy. “I mean a Woolly Bear. There is one | thing about Woolly Bears that I ap-| preciate.” “Meaning what?” inquired Peter. “They cannot jump like a grass- hopper,” replied Jimmy. ccuse me, T must get that Woolly Bear | he has a_chance to hide.” Peter stepped aside, and Skunk actually hurried, Anyway it hurrying. Peter followed. | When Jimmy reached the Woolly | Bear, the Woolly Bear curled up, as | is the way of Woolly Bears. Jimmy reached out a little black paw and pulled the Woolly Bear to him. Then, with those little black paws of his, he began to roll him. He rolled that Woolly Bear, and he rolled that Woolly Bear back and forth, and he rubbed him this way, and he rubbed him that way, and when he got through, that Woolly Bear was no | longer a hairy caterpillar.. All the hair had been rolled and rubbed off, but nowhere had the skin been broken. | Peter left Jimmy Skunk to eat that | Woolly Bear at his leisure. “Now 1| know how he does it!" cried Peter. | “Jimmy is clever. Yes, sir, Jimmy is clever.” well, Peter, so on, three does daily until you | reach a dose of 30 drops, then con- tinue for two weeks taking one dally dose of 30 drops, and then once a week a single does of 30 drops, al- ways in a glasstul of water, through- out the season. These doses, remem- ber, are for the homeopathic tincture, not for a regular tincture. It a good homeopathic tincture from a reliable homeopathic pharmacy is not avail- able, this formula may be used for the immunization course: Tincture (10 per cent strength) rhus toxicodendron, 15 drops. . Glycerin, 2 drams. Sirup of orange, enough to make three ounces. ke one drop of this in a glassful of water after each meal, and in- crease by one drop each successive dose until you take 21 drops in a dose; thereafter take one teaspoon- ful in a glassful of water after eat- ing, but only once daily throughout the season. This immunization process is not absolutely protective in all cases, but it certainly provects in many cases. (Copyright. 1927.) .- Corn and Clam Dumplings. | Chop fine one cupful of fresh corn cut from the cob, or the same amount Add one cupful of chopped clams, two unbeaten eggs | and a dusting of salt and paprika. Dredge in one-quarter of a cupful of flour sifted with one-quarter of a tea- spoonful of baking powder. Beat briskly and drop by spoonfuls into clear soup, which must be at the sim- | mering point only. Cover closely and | let the dumplings cook slowly for 20 Tomato Aspic. Mix together a one-pound can of to- matoes, one tablespoonful of chopped onion, one-fourth cupful of vinegar, one teaspoonful of salt, two tavlespoonfuls of suj and let boil for two minutes. Strain and add two tablespoonfuls of gelatin soaked in one cupful of water. Return to the fire and boil for two minutes. Pour into ¥:ns and set on jce to cool GOOD POSITIONS AND FINE INCOMES Tearooms, Restaurants, Cateterias, Motor Inns, Candy. Gift and Food Shoos trained men and 00 10 $5.000 now forming. e { Earn § Classer wa after each meal the first , two drops the second day, and 5 * 7 LEWIS HOTEL TRA Peunsylvania Ave. A SCHOOL 3rd Sk { The, | one may | need, | husband, | health Add the sugar, lemon Juice finely | | I'm jest showin' my baby sister how a cunnin’ ittle water-fall slides down over th' roc (Copyright. 1027.) HOME NOTES BY JE WRE Balconies spell romance alway Romeo and Juliet are partly responsi- ble for this feeling about them. At any rate they are a very fine form of architectural enrichment and have been employed as such for many cen- turies. Nothing could be simpler than this balcony of thin iron bars and quadrant braces, vet it is very effective as a point of exterior interest. But halconies are not wholly decora- tive; they serve a very real purpose. enlarge the scope of a window by offering a vantage point from which obtain a better view of the | world. They also make possible, by | affording the protection such windows the fulllength window in the ories of a house. | And fi a balcony, when viewed through such windows, increases the picturesque charm and sense of spa- clousness of the room itself. (Copyright. 1027.) Your Baby and Mine upper BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. T. J. H. writes: “I am in a| quandary and am coming to you for | help, for it seems to me that your answers are always so sane and prac- tical. What can a young mother’do when she wants to train her baby in one way and she has to fight her her husband’s mother and her own mother because of it? If my husband’s mother comes over to the house and finds the baby crying she ags me because I let him alone. When I know he is comfortable and he cries in a hearty, lusty way and | calms down the moment I take him up and begins to look around with in- | terest, 1 can't feel that he is being abused or hurt in any W But a crying baby like a red rag to the| whole family and I come in for noth- ing but condemnation. It seems to| me a young mdther has a hard enough | time following out orderly rmmneni with babies when babies themselves are pretty much of a puzzle, without | having the whole family against one. | What is the right thin& to do?” | Answer—Even the most model haby cries, because crying is part of his dayis job, and when it is so ciearly ap parent, as in your case, that there is nothing serious and the b is 1p, there is no rea annoyed or frightened by his crying. Let him get over with it and hell calm down without being held. Most grandmothers long for an excuse to hold babies in their arms and com- fort them, and when they are denied this privilege they are certain to think the baby is being abused. The present mother, who will some day be a grandmother, will have had such | diffierent ideas of what constitutes| the proper way of rearing babies that | she will be horrified if her daughter or daughter-in-law should run to pick up a baby every time it cries. So don’t be hard on your mother adn mother-in- law. They can't change their view- points any more easily than you will be able to change your: It is all in habits of thought. Choose & book or an authority or a doctor which you trust. Use your own good common sense in an emer- gency when the baby deviates from all the rules that are laid down for him, and otherwise follow your schedule un- | moved by what other people say. One | can't follow every guidepost even | though each of them points toward a good road. One must follow but one, and, as most authorities in the care of babies differ only in unessentials, you can choose any one and be certain that vou won't be led far astray. It is trying to satisfy every one by fol- Jowing advice in this and that partic- ular that distracts a young mother and makes her doubtful that any one knows what he or she is talking about. ¢ _Pench Pudding. One-half granulated tapioca or sago. “Three-fourths cup boiling water. Rind of one-fourth lemon. Two cups peaches, fresh or canned. | One-half cup sugar. | One tablespoon lemon juice. One-fourth teaspoon salt. Cook the tapioca or sago in the boil jng water until partly transparent. and rind t to the tapioca, pour into a| ches A mix- until | > with nd s buttersd baking dish. Slice pe and carefully add to the tapio ture. B: in a covered dish vioca is clear and wet, Ser’ m_or ¢ ere | | | sit and wait for dates to be handed Yo her on a silver salver. | that she has created. |is the titbits she takes with the meal STAR, WASHINGTO DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Daughter Who Gives Up Pleasures of Youth for Her Old Mother—Old-Fashioned Father Whose Daughter Must Sit at Home. EAR MISS DIX: For the last 10 years I have devoted my entire lite to my mother and father, not having any company or entertainment of any kind. My father has recently died and now my mother absorbs all of my time. There are other children in the family, all grown and married, and they make no effort whatsoever to entertain my mother. *They don't even take her out in their cars, Sundays and holidays I am supposed to plan for my mother’s entertainment and never make an engagement with young people. It isn't that I don't want to shoulder my share of the burden, but I think that the others should help. It isn't a question of money whatever, but just entertainment. At the rate I am going I will hecome a withered old mald without ever having had any of the pleasures of life or any chance to marry and establish myself. What should I do? G Answer: The first thing you should do is to call a family council and put your problem squarely before your sisters and brothers. Remind them | that their duty to your mother is just as great as yours, and tell them that vou have decided not to be the victim any longer of their selfishness, and that in the future they will have to take turns in taking care of mother. Perhaps they have never realized what an unjust deal they are giving you, or that they are cutting you off from all the pleasures of youth and all the opportunities it offers, by tying you to an old woman's side. It may be that they need only be roused to a sense of their duty to do it. But 1 doubt this, because in nearly every family most of the children dodge their responsibility to their parents and leave the care of them to some one member. By what process the family goat is elected for the sacrifice no one ever s, but John gets married and sets up his own home, and Jim goes to a city seeking his fortune, and Mary takes unto herself a husband, and Sally espouses a career that takes her to distant places, and poor George is left at home to support mother and father, and Jane waits on them through weary years And it doesn't occur to John and Jim that they should chip in for the old couple’s support, nor to Sally and Mary that they should take father and mother into their homes for long visits and thus lighten George's and Jane's burden and keep it from crushing them. For the load that is divided out between many shoulders is light on them all. Ot course children owe a great duty to their parents, but they do not owe the sacrifice of their entire lives to them, and I think there is no problem to which we bring more mawkish sentimentality than we do to the treatment of old people. 1 know of nothing more pitiful than the thousands of good and conscientious women like yourself who have made martyrs of themselves uselessly, simply to gratify the whims of selfish parents. I ask you in the name of common sense why you should deny yourself all the pleasures of youth and make a slave of yourself just to entertain your mother? Why is it more important that she should be amused than that you should be amused? Why is it worse for her to be left alone sometimes than for you to be kept away from the partles and dances that you would like to go to? She is old. You are young. She has lived her life. You have yours yet to live. If she keeps you tied to her apron string she cuts you off from marriage or from following some career, and that is a cruel thing to do and a high price to pay for the pleasure of your soclety. 0ld people are almost invariably selfish and self-centered and tyrannical. They will take all that they can exact from their children, and the children have to defend themselve: ainst them or else be crushed. Old people get childish and they have to be treated like spoiled children and controlled when their demands are unreasonable. rents demands that we love and cherish them, that we show them affection and try to make them happy and contented, but it does not demand that we needl ly sacrifice ourselves for them and let them deprive us of ail pleasures and happiness. There is reason in all things. Iven in being a devoted daughter. ‘What you need, Miss G. M. C., is more backbone in dealing with your sisters and brothers and with your mother. DOROTHY DIX. * se . EAR DOROTHY DIX: How in the world can a father be changed who thinks his daughter should s v at home and wait until some Sir Galahad comes along? That's the way my father thinks. He thinks a girl should ‘Where would we all be if we sat and ted for things to happen, I ask you? MYRA. Answer: It is pretty hard to educate father in modern ways and customs, Myra, because he still belongs to the shrinking-violet school of thought which prevailed in his day when. girls we never supposed to cast an eye at a man until he popped the question, whereupon she blushed and simpered, f'()h. this is €0 sudden. You must give me time to search my heart,” even if she had spent six vears toiling like a coal heaver to get him to the proposing point. But you are right in thinking that those good old days, when men did all the chasing, are gone, and that the girl who sits at home now and waits for some man to come along and discover her has a mighty poor show of ever being found out A girl who wants dates in these times has to keep herself in the spotlight where her charms are clearly discernible and hit the passer-by in the eye. For men are spoiled and lazy, and they expect girls to meet them haltway Perhaps Jf you will call your father's attention to the fact that the girls who sit and t continue to hold down the anxious bench year after year, while lho_u]:-nml-dnlng ones make the altar, he will see the correctness of your position It is the go-getters, hustling age. . . DEAR DOROTHY DIX: 1 am engaged to a yvoung man of 26, who lives with his mother alone, and who says that he is too comfortable at home to get married. His mother waits on him hand and foot I love him very , but T don’t think he loves me or he would be a little more n'unshler;\t‘e of my feelings, TILDA. Answer: That young man is capable of only one supreme passion. and that is for himself: He will never love you or a: n one-millionth part as much as he does himself, and he will o any woman who comes his way to his ego. H You will find no happiness you break off your engagement. here is no other man in the whole wide world who makes as bad a husband as mamma’s darling. No wife can possibly compete with a mother in spoiling and petting and pampering a man. she leaves mother the undisputed possession of the monstrosity of selfishne: Our duty to our male and female, who inherit the earth in this DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1927.) BEAUTY CHATS Fattening Titbits. It's not so much the staple parts of | a meal that put flesh on the woman | tenden: to get fat as it BY EDNA KENT FORBES they're full of fat! So half a dozen | little olives, consumed thoughles before you cven get into the meal, are probably another 75 calories. Almonds alorie lists give them 10 calori ch in fat value—when they are fried in butter and salted, they're more, Think of the number of almonds you can eat during a meal! Peanuts are less, they are smaller, but as you gen- erally eat more of them, avoid them just as carefully. | " Candy—a medium sized chocolate cream is about 100 calories—those de- licious chocolate-covered mints you love are to be given up—even the tiny thin mints are best avoided. who has a and the little things she’s apt to nibble at in-between times. For instance, you want to reduce, vyou really try hard to diet, but for some reason. you just go on gradually acquiring flesh and you are rather dis couraged about the whole business of getting slim. You may eat much less im food than you ordinarily do—you may have learned your calories and how to choose non-fattening foods— but what about the little extras? Let's| Bobby J.—Cocoa butter comes in | in marriage with him, so you will he wise if | She would always run a bad second, and if she is wise, | DOROTHY DIX., | ly | double boiler. | these to the honey and water. la small | mins A and B. | don’t take the calorie value of some of the titbits. Nice tables have littlo dishes of olives and salted nuts and atter-dinner candles. These are fatal to the wom- an who wants to get thin! They look nourishing, they’ro such tiny trifles, something to nibble on while talking and waiting for the next course—really something to do with vour hands rather than something to eat. Well, every one of those innocent- looking little olives adds up 10 to 15 calories on your daily allowance. Poor 80 fattening, but expensive olives cake form which may be softened enough to use as a massage by heat- ing the surface slightly over an elec- tric bulb. Humiliated Jane.—Scrub your feet every night in very warm water with a bathbrush, using some antiseptic soap. Dust the skin afterward with a salicylic powder before you put your shoes on again. A refreshing and help- ful treatment for the condition is to massage the soles of your feet after vou have bathed them and then rub as much withch-hazel into the pores as will be absorbed. Try this before re- tiring at night, and use the salicylic nowder at other times. D. ©, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1997. Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “I wouldn't have had no fight with that new boy, but he fooled me. I didn’t know a boy that looks clean all the time could be a good fighter.” DIARY OF A NEW FATHER BY BOB DICKSON. Monday Night. Joan's family were all at my fam- | ily's house this afternoon to see us |arrive with the baby and Joan's | brother Bill, on our vacation trip, and we rolled in at 5 o'clock. I stopped the car and Bill said, | “Well, here we are,” and Joan stuck | her head out and called, “Here we are!” and the whole gang came run- ning down to the street and they yelled, “Well, here you are!” | The baby said, “Bah,” and T said, | “The smartest comment of the after- noon, and my boy made it.” All the womenfolks said, ““Oh, the baby! The little Dar-ling!” and they hauled him out and began passing him around, and all the men said, “Well, Joan, you're looking prettier than ever,” and she got out of the car and they crowded around her, and so I blew the horn a couple of times and Bill said, “What's that for?” and I said, “I'm just letting vou and | me in on the welcome, that's all.” My mother said, “We're all going | to have dinner here tonight, and make a two-family reunion out of it,” and so we did. After dinner Bill beat it to the dance he was so anxious to get here [for, and the rest of us sat around alking. and everybody asked every- body else how were they and how had | they been, and after an hour of that | the conversation got a little thin, and Joan's father said, “Well, we ought | to have a little celebration. Are yeu | and Bob too tired after your trip to | do anything, Joan" and I said, “I| think T'm too tired to sleep, but I'm | | willing to try it. Five hundred miles in two days_is——" and Joan said, “Why, no. We're not tired. What would everybody like to do?" My father said, “It's too late to go | anywhere special, but we can find | something to do if you're sure yvou’ [not too tire and I said, "It % too late to go to bed. Five hundred miles in two da. is—" and Joan said, “Oh, now, really, we're not tired,” and my sister said, “I know what let's do. Joan and Bob haven't been home for so long, let's take them on a long drive.” DAILY DIET RECIPE Honey Salad Dressing. Water, three-quarters cup; honey, three-quarters cup: mustard, one tea- spoon; salt, one-half teaspoon: paprika, | one-half teaspoon: vinegar, one-quarter cup; flour, one tablespoon; egg volks, two. 10 OR 12 PORTIO} the honey and water Mix the dr Blend in the vinegar and Heat ent Pour | amount of the hot mixture | over the beaten cgg-yolks, gradually | stirring in the whole amount, and re- | turn to the double boiler. Cook all together until clear. Cool and use. | DIET NOTE. Recipe contains lime, iron and vita- Can be eaten by nor- to mal-weight adult or one wishing gain weight. FEATURES. ICED "SALADA" TEA \ Ideal after Tennis and all outdoor sports Tor iced SALADA Tea: cMake tea as usual. “Pour into glass containers and th hly chill. Jlavor to taste. Revives and Stiniulates Without Reaction When a million sheep won’t put you to sleep ++ Shake Up Health. just before retiring and you'll sleep soundly. For the diastase in the malt will take care of digestion. Make this single test. Get a tin of Loft Chocolate Fla- vor Sweetened Malted Milk at your grocer’s. Then shake up health!—ten minutes be- fore bedtime. Notice how much sounder you sleep and how much more refreshed you are in the morning. THE prime cause of restless- ness at night is slow diges- tion of a heavy dinner. There is in malt a precious element known as diastase. It is the greatest of all pre- digestives. It turns to liquid the slowly digesting starches in the stomach. Shake up—and drink hot —Loft Chocolate Flavor Sweetened Malted Milk INC. 400 Broome Street GEORGE W. LOFT Made of Pure Malted Milk—Not Skimmed Milk Guaranteed free of Potash For Sale at All Leading § Grocery and - Drug Stores Please your family with this delightful table drink to-night & an enjoyable change serve Horlick's Malted Milk ice,cold for dinner. Not only is it a delicious summer beverage, but it is rich in easily digested nour- ishment. Thousands now serve it regularly at meal time. they welcome it as a change from ordinary cow’s milk. Physicians have recognized the purity and wholesome- nessof “Horlick’s”—the orig- Children especially love it. They get from it all the food values of full-cream cow’s milk plus the valuable ele- inal and genuine—for over a ments of malted grains. And third of a century. HORLICK'S MacreoMiix THE ORIGCINAL Natural or Chocolate Flavor in Powder or Tablet Form Pa Buzz will get something soon UITOES—destroyers of home comfort! Kill them at once, with Flit. Flit spray clears the house in a few minutes of disease - bearing flies, mosquitoes, bed bugs, roaches, antsand fleas. It searches out the cracks where insects hide and breed, destroying their eggs. Flit kills moths and their larvae which eat holes. It will save your clothing, furs and rugs. Clean and easy to use. Will not stain. Flit is the result of exhaustive laboratory research. It has re- placed old ineffective methods. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Recommended by Health Officials. Buy Flit and Flit sprayer today. For sale every- Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches © ruar snassase o os. (. 0)

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