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WOMAN'S PAGE. Trim Uniform for the Maid BY MARY To the seasoned housewife lqupsllrm of what a maid can do usual v What she is willing to wear. HAIR WORN WITH A CRE ORGANDIE APRON, CAP, r LAR AND CUFFS EDGED WITH CREAM LACE. A BROWN RIB- BON BAND HOLDS THE CAP IN PLACE AND FASTE) AT THE BACK IN A FLAT BOW. fncidental where there is only a sin- £le maid. daughter of the family uniforms seem vastly important. 1 have been reading a novel which the 20-year-old girl goes to dine BEAUTY CHATS A Démure Style. I yvou are rather pretty and young. of any way sufficiently youngish, you may he able to adopt the demure stvle of hairdressing. Not many people can, so If it is pos- sible you will find yourself probably the only girl in the room to atrempt this style. It is simply parting the hair in, or near’ the middle and hrush- ing it back behind the ears, hut there are many variations on the hoh. It 1= a charming stvle for full cheeks, pointed chin and bright eyes. The combination of demureness and piquancy should he irresistible. If the hair is straight make the parting just in the center, brush the hair smoothly hack behind the ears and have it cut %0 there’s not too much left and so that the ends brush down hehind the ®ars, or curl just round them. If you are not young or as pretty as you'd like to be, it would be an excellent idea to have the very front part of the hair slightly waved. You can have it dome.:'‘permanently” with- out much expense, for you enly want The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1927.) Acro: art of Africa. . Shallow vessels New Ei 1 State (abbr,). . Moharimedan leader. Free from. Crash Rise and fall of the sea. Nickname. 7. Founcation. Male deer . Comparative suffix. Period . City in Ilinois, Sign . Poniard. . Artemis. Humer. . Veight (abbr.). Close to 9. Tenth of a cent. . 3.1476. . Story. Floor covering. . Corpulent. . Portico. Conjunction. " Not d:fficult . Singers. Down. . Damsel. . Conjunction. Ourselves. . Rub out Those who keep time. Brings as clear profit, tion (abbr.). . Fstablished eases. State ot being normal. . Sun god. ip. . Article of food. Help. Southern State (abbr.). Rerent. Part of 2 pint. . Seize. . Indefinite article, Solution of Today's Word Golf Problems. BONE, BOND, BEND, BEAD, HEAD—four strokes, TENT, CENT, CANT, CANE, CAME, CAMP—five strokes. counts for a good deal more than The Ruestion of uniforms is more or less But to the young woman | in | MARSHALL., the | at a home in New York and sees “the | footman in wine-colored livery who opened the door for her, the butler in | evening dress hovering by—the ex- quisiiely appointed bedroom in which | @ maid. smart in her gray taffeta and {crisp white apron, assisted her with her primping—all of which awed her h their perfection.” And then The dinner was a shimmering light. with its table softly flowers and candles and easy talk in which she Joinec 1s the others, the laughter soap bhubbles. As in a back past three liveried otmen, the supper table at the with a fizure in sloppy dre: down heels slamming the dishes oh the table and leaving the family to | wait on themselves.” | “Perhaps it would have been out of |the q fon to expect the hard- | worked woman to appear other than {she did, but there is no reason in most families why the maid of work cannot wear a trim And if ther re 20-vear-old da in the family this bit of formali appears extremely important. | ‘odav’s skotch shows the afternoon uriform chosen by one well informed woman for her one only maid. The mohair gown is of brown, hut black | or dark gray, dark green. dark blue or mulberry might be chosen instead. | iwh frocks may be bousht ready | made at a surprisingly low price or | mizht be made at home for even less The skirt is fairly long, showing an attractive marzin below the s smart little apron. the deftly light 23 Just two months now hefore Chr mas evel Time to think of Christmas presents in earnest. Of course vou intend to make some of them, and to | help you out in this pleasant task we have made sram-pattern with irections making a number of tive handbags. If you are in- | terested in making one or two of these { for Christmas, send a stamped, self | for 1t wddressed envelope and 1 will send | them to vou at once. Or if vou are a spug you might like to make one for | vourself. BBt i i e Chicken-Nut Sandwiches. For a rather unusual filling put through the food chopper one cupful iwrl. of eold covked ham and chicken, 12 small green pepper, one table- spoonful of chives, one-nalf a cupful of nut meats and a few sprigs of | parsley. Add enough noiled dressing | | to hind the ingredients tozether with erisp lettuce leaves hetween thin | stices o BY EDNA KENT FORBES | one or two spools on either side. wavy part is then brushed hack over the ght part and the effect is not | {at all unnatural. This gives a soft | |line around the face, and while o little of the hai aved it cannot do | it any harm. Or, if you don’t want to do this, you can dampen these front | bits and tivist them around kid curlers {for a few hours, even overnight, or| | You can moisten the front part and Slide in “setting combs,” then stand a fire till the damp hair dries. | | Even the straightest hair acquires a | certain amount of wave this w. If the hair is naturally wavy the oblem is_much easier. since curly | [ hair_can always be made attractive. | Have the hair cut to.look as fluffy as | | possible. Tf it is mot wavy have it cropped quite short in the hack, boy | | fashion, and brush it as smooth.and sleek as possible. i | Mrs. H. B. McV.—As a simple and also a very effective exercise for round shoulders, place fingers on the | tips of the shoulders, and rotate the arms, using all the shoulder muscles | | An idei. 23 . crown. |37 38 nal shrub. ieutenant (abbr.)/ 41. Go Iy i. Distart. neering degree (alibr.). de- | with | | Thrice, plea THE kVENING SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. | | . i | | My cousin, Sair-Loo, comin’ to our house on a bisit—muvver finks play wif a ‘ittle girl goin’ to hab a berry resignin’ “fluence on me. (Conyrizht Halloween Good Time for Announcement Party. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. When Lois went to the office on a Monday morning she sensed an air of | excitement ahout Martha, who worked at the desk next to hers. Al would to Lois was “Wait until w= o to lunch.” | Or the way to the cafeteria she started to talk about things she had she say | always at her very hest. ! done over the week end, but she broke | debutante. off with | “What's the use of heating about the hush? Lester asked me ' marry | him " | me of Loi Roger v over her friend colored her voice as | . isn’t that gorzeous? TLet | ty—an annsuncement to the li plans fo invitati That evening Lois went trary and worked out net Hilloween party. The | she watches out. | | were written on orange letter paper. First, she put a sheet of carbon paper | face up on the table. Over that she | placed the orange paper. face down. | She took scratch paper, put it over | the orange paper, and on the scratch | paper wrote her jingle. It appeared ! in reverse writing on the face of orange paper. Holding it to a mirror, she read the mystic script: or Hailoween, at 8 a'clock, ‘ . upon our portals knock. The house vou easily car. see, For at the door strange cats will be.” | Left-over Corn. | Take some left-over corn on the cob and slash the rows with a sharp knife; then with the back of the knife press out the pulp. Add to a cupful of this one egg, half a cupful of milk and a finely minced red or green pepper. | Season lightly and bhake either in one | dish or in two or three ramekins just | long enough to set the egg. A few | brewned bread crumds may be| sorinklad over the top lefore haking. | This dish may be prepared with | canned corn and canned sweet Pl | | | | | | entirely to bone. STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C. WORD GOLF—Everybody’s Playing It BY JOHN KNOX. Rule 1. The object of this game is to change one word to another word by a_series of “strokes.’” Rule Only one letter can bhe changed in each “Stroke.” Rule 3. Each “stroke” must result in a new word which can be found in a current dictionary, or in another tense or the plu of a dictionar If you can beat *‘par’ one stroke you score a “bir If you are unusually g00d and knock two strokes off Old Man Par, credit yourself with an “eagle.” yme wise word-golfer may some day crack out three strokes less than par. This is the word-golfer's heaven and he hands himself—‘“pterodactyl”—the rarest of all birds. A word-golfer who can score a_‘“pterodactyl” is entitled to start his mouth going and let it rave for days while the gallery applauds. Get out your pencils, word golfers, and assault Old Man Par. The Great Outdoors. E to HEAD. We know a lot of heads that run Par on this is four strokes. Go from TENT to CAMP. Did you ever try to set one up in the rain? We will allow five for a par score. PRINT your ‘strokes” here: Go from BOM almost RONE. TENT. (Coprright 1027 ‘Doroth yDix “Really the High Summer of Life When a Woman Is in Full Bloom,” She Declares. The Crime Discusses Absurd Fetish of Youth. of Being Middle-aged. is it popularly considered a crime for a woman to be middle-aged? en knows it is an offense against society to which no woman is willingly particeps criminis. No woman would be middle-aged if she could prevent it. On the contrary, so frantically anxious are women to ward off the awful reproach of heing middle-azed that they subject themselves to voluntary starvation and spend fortunes and undergo tortures in heauty shaps in order to offer a convincing alibi that will prove they are not guilty. THY N H To the young woman we offer almost slavish adulation. Just hy reason of her youth she is a queen who can do no wrong, although she slaps Mr: Grundy in the face and is a Dumb Dora besides. To the old woman we give reverence and respect, and the sentimental and romantic admiration that we hestow upon the antique. We regard andmothers as we dn early American maple—as something precious, even never had any beauty or grac: about them. though they 1t is only middle age that is tahoo. Frequently she is better looking than she was as a Invariably she is more interesting, because no woman, however dull, vears without acquiring a fund of experiences that make her better worth listening to than the meaningless chatter of a Rir can live 4, conversation And if a woman has any mind and soul, the passing of the years educates her and broadens and deepens and ripens her, Nor Is middle age a blight upon men. Tt is no reflection on a man's er for him to he middle-aged or for him to lose his boyish figure and acquire a few wrinkles and have his hair beat a retreat off his forehead. Indecd, middle age is considered an asset rather than a total loss to a man. At middle age he generally reaches the peak of efficiency in business. And on the stage, when they want to portray a real heart-smashe- and home-wrecker, he always makes up as a sophisticated man of the world, with a little patch of gray on the temples. . . [T is only the women on whom the curse of middle age is laid, and none may escape it except by dying young. It is the ghost that haunts the boudoir of the bheauty, for she knows it is bound to get her no matter how carefully It iz what makes the coming of the first white hair a tragedy. It is what makes women shed barrels of tears and use pounds of massage creams over every wrinkle. It is what turns every honeyed compliment into a drop of poison, because full well the recipient knows that soon they will he saying behind her back that she is getting middle-aged. And she can't help it, poor thing. cha In &ll good truth, the average middle-aged woman is just as good-looking and attractive as the average middle-aged man. have lost her waistline than he has hi pep and go to her. The plight of the woman who is married and who realizes that she is in danger ot losing her hushand because she is middle-aged is bad enough, but that of the woman of middle age who must support herself is worse still, because men carry the absurd worship of youth even into business and every door is virtually barred to a woman after she passes out of her 20s. K This does not apply to the woman wno has held down a good joh for many years and has proved exceptionally competent. She has made herself indispensable to her employers and can carry on, but let even such a woman lose her situation and have to seek another position and she finds it almost . impossible to find one. WH\' men prefer a girl who can't spell or add up a eolumn of figures correctly to a middle-aged woman who is letter perfect nobody know: Certainly not all husiness men are Lotharios. But the fact remains that an hobbed-haired, painted-up little flapper has a hundred times hetter chance to get a job than a gray-haired, quietly dressed, middle-aged woman, “ e Yet it is a ten-to-one shot that the middle-aged woman will prove the hetter employe, hr‘(‘_a!lsb she is hound to make good at her job, while, with | the young girl, it is just marking time until she can catch a husband to | support her. But isn't it a pity and isn't it silly, all this prejudice and diserimination | against middle age, which, after all, is just the high Summer of life when a | woman is really in full bloom? (Copyright. 1 YOUR MIND And How to Keep It Fit DOROTHY DIX. BY PROF. JOSEPH JASTROW. How Melting Pot Scalded One| was worth more dead than alive. Mind | pains in his legs were maddening. 'ive pairs of stockings eouldn’t keep et yeais ngo. Herman Blionson | Him warm, He grumbled at all that 9 ix | was done for him, resisted the treat- :‘!'"]Rnsnla, leaving his wite, SIX| ment. But after’ three years, with aughters and his wife's aged parents, | the doctors more patient than their for the land of opportunity. For 10| Datient, he got well despite himself. vears he worked as a clothes presser in a steam-filled atmosphere. He sent Nervous troubles run their course. His lodge collected money to set his earnings back to support his tam- 5 him up in the coal business. He He was a hard worker, a man of | &rumbled at this; they should have good character and education. But| given him the money; just wanted to 10 years at clothes press is a wearing e. especially with a family in feel superior and charitable. He Russia growing restless and their lot- didn’t want to work—too much pain in the legs. Went from one job to an- ters full of hard feeling for the delay in sending for them, other. - Took a jch as porter, though felt it beneath him, and ran the coal Then came the collapse—severe | agency hesides. He remains peculiar pains in the legs, making work im- possible A round a clinics and no and set in his ways. Yet he is active henefit. His mind was a_confusion of and in fair spirits. He will be turned out as one more of the million castings hopeless misery. He felt that he should end it all and let his family from the melting pot. have the life insurance money—he | der worry and a feeling of failure will MOVIE OF A MAN LOOKING FOR A MATCH. break a man who isn't blood and iron but flesh and nerves. There are writ- er's cramp and auctioneer's spasm; why not clothes presser's legs? An occupational disorder means an over- strain of some part of the nerve and muscle machinery that carries on the job. Those excruciating and disabling pains are not made hy thinking about therg; nor are they cntirely an escape into iliness from an intolerable situa- tion. Yet there is something of both in them, and that's what makes the mind doctor's job so difffcult and so interesting. They are the pain side of a worried and exhausted nervous system. It takes some confidence in his diagnosis for the doctor to stick at it for three years and stand the grum- hling and dejection of his patient. But so long as his nerves held out the patient stuck at_clothes pressing for 10 years. Then his mind got scalded by his job. Since the strain of the job, standing all day, was upon his legs, that became the magnet attracting the pain. The neurosis or nervous trouble went to his legs, but it went to his head also. Pain misery added to mind misery. How these mixed troubles of body and mind select nerve areas for pain is one of the many mysteri that the mind doctors are studying. It may not be closely tied up with occupation. It is more commonly some weak point in the norvous sys- tem, where, owing to a former trouble, perhaps connected with operation, pain has been centered. A manager in an office may have those leg pains, and the clothes presser might have sereve pains in his hea ‘When trouble comes the weak spots show. Earning your living in a strange land away from home life is itself a strain——all the hardships and a few of the compensations of life. The Her- man Simonsons who are not built to stand it may fall victims to the neuro- 8is of the melting pot. Too much of a monotonous job un- —By BRIGGS. Yet at middle age a woman is nearly | She is no more likely to | and she generally has a lot more | The | MONDAY, OCTOBER 24, 192 AUNT HET BY ROBERT QU but it doesn't | whiskers is “Uncle Ben is care matter so much. ravy color.” (Copvright, 102 SUB ROSA || BY ) ) L Taking Woman for Granted. Now that's what the men have been | doing ever since the Glacial period, or | year of the big hlizzard. But they needn’t think that they can continue to bluff along that same old line. 1| hate to keep hoosting the Flaming Flappers of this exciting era, but I've ot to say something or I'll get a pain under my bob. The trick of taking woman for | cranted was put into German words by Goethe, or some other zel | bending poet of that | He called her “The Eternal Femi- nine,” and he had at of them himself. Now where did he get that stuff? like to know. His idea of taking a woman for | granted must have been derived from | one who was too fat to move, too lazy to reduce. He saw a few of them, and then wrote the line about the | everlasting female who is always in | the way when a man attempts to run out or sneak in. But it doesn't take a poet to work out the idea that woman is the same every day, in every It's man's et notion of his mate. He parks her {out, and then thinks no one else will want her bad enough to steal her. He doesn't carry insurance on her, when he has it on almost everything eise he |owns. He takes her for granted and thinks she'll sti | Now all that's old stuff. The up-to- | date woman is not so likely to find | and keep her place in the home, sweet | | home. No, she's pulled up her stakes, | | and loosened up her guy ropes. She | has donned her frock, which toolk | her 18 seconds. and is now in the | big parade. 1t vou take her for granted, vou'll have another take coming your way. Woman may have heen asleep all | | these but she has done a lot of | dreaming just the same. Now that | she's awake, she’s going to make those dreams come true. That's what you | | cee in her anties today. Can you blame her? You kept her in the stable so long that when she feels the air she's more | than likely to kick up her heels. I'll admit that some of woman's new wayvs | re not excessively conventional. hut | vou must give her time to settle down, | and get her sea-legs on. At any rate, this business of think- | inz that a woman will always be in | the hall to welcome you is played out. You can count on her and you can't. Sure vou ean count on her to hold fast to essential ideals, but vou must | let her learn some new tricks. You can’t pin her down the way vou used to, for she's like a kite that wants to Ay, Shell fiy all_right, if you can hold the string. But don't take her | for granted. (Copvright, 1027.) | mi will he glad to answer ans inauiries directed to this paper. provided a stamped. addressed envelopa 18 inclosed Good English. f The use of the Engziish language marks the well educated child. T mean that a child who has graduated from grammar and high school or only | the grammar school should be able to talk gond English and ought to do so. | It is not funny to talk a dialect and | try to twist good English speech into | what is thought to e picturesque | language. 1 can understand that now | and then a mongrel word fits the situ- | ation and is excusable for its force and brevity. But a vocabulary entire- | Iy composed of slang phrases is out of the question. It is poor taste and worse judgment. | “How’s the girl? | “Fine and dandy “Thata hoy! “Slick outfit you got. Let's mosey?" | “Go to it! Say, vou sling a wicked hoof, T hear. I'm not so hot myself." “Wha're vou spoofin’? You're try- ing to kid me, aren’t you?" | So's your old man! This is on the level. You've got one fine map, and | your peepers aren’t so slouchy, either. | tep on the old hoat and see how much is in her. Thata boy, baby!" | what is that? ~ Maybe it| sounds funny; T haven't the apprecia- | tion for it that the youngsters seem | to have. I have an idea that the day | will come when those two children will wish with all their hearts and minds that they could utter a decent English sentence. As it is, one would choke them if they tried it just now. “The classroom English isn’'t Ameri- | cas speech,” said one little miss whose English was something beyond my | comprehension. “What is the use of trying to talk a language nobody un- | derstands? The schools ought to try | to keep up to date.” T agree that schools ought to try to| keep up to date, but some of the things the youngsters want incor-! could not | a wooden frame. | always | utes. OUR CH[LDR]‘_,N By Angelo Patri | date | pepil who LADY BEAUTIFUL BY_LOIS LEEDS. i put in and the ends of hair all curl Bobbed and Long Coiffures. !up\\:nd The hair on each side is The transition stage between the|cyrled in a similar way-with the ends bobbed and the long-hair coiffure | yolled up. The ha is curled rather seems to be with us. The hairdresser | tightly <o that it clings to the skull. is called upon to create styles for | The back hair may be left straight both types. The result is that many | and shingled or worn longer and hobbed-hair coiffures resemble long- | waved. hair arrangements and the latter re-| Third. A long-hair coiffure with a tain the close-fitting lines of the boh. | thick, fluffy bang is becoming to the From a front view it is often impos-| ta]l girl with rather large feature: sible to tell whether one is l0oking | The bang is slightly waved. The re at long or short tresses. | of the hair is brushed straight back Among the coiffures I am describ- | and waved from side to side. A deep ing today there are two for long hair | and two for bobbed. First. A simple bobbed coiffure for fine, dark hair may be dressed with a center part and a long, thin fringe bang. One wide, flat wave may be | put across the bang and the ends should curl under a little. A single | lock of hair may be brought down | 1n front of each ear and waved a little | 0 that it curls forward on the cheek- bones and the ends curl backward | under the lobe of the ear. The rest of the hair is brushed back smoothly, | exposing the ears in the back and side views. The back hair should be long enough to be finger-waved in several hias bands. 1f the back of the head | has a graceful. rounded contour, the hair may he worn sleek over it. In| this case it would, of course, be cut horter. A coiffure of this type is becoming to girls with slender faces and rather high foreheads. Second. Another bobbed coiffure for | (.o ig drawn over each ear to con a girl with a long face gives the ef-| ..ol ji. The back hair is given fect of a bang, but does not really | twist and then is folded horizontalis have one. The hair is parted on one | % #16 JHGT e A side. The hair on top of the head is| ninned securely curled separately from the rest of the | ®youen " Anather coiffure the hair. It is brushed diagonally forward | o111’ with' prominent features may I s the brow. two deep waves are | gressed without bangs. The hair | parted on one side. The top hair waved and drawn far down on the brow almost to the eyebrows. The side hair waves softly ahout the | temples and cheeks, permitting only | the lobe of each ear to peep out. The | back hair is wound into two small - coils at the nape of the neck. A Wind Harp. | (Copsrizht, 19 MI MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. ‘Teco Pancake Flour gives pancakes a de- i licious, different flavor. | Add only cold water | TECO, Cortland, N. Y. One mother says: Don made a simple wind harp by stretching his old violin strings across On one end they are | nailed to the frame. On the other end they are twisted onto screws with | which they might be tightened, as on| a violin. 'Set upright in his window, this harp announces the winds in the south with a soft humming which delights Don and his little friends. Fried Omelet. Let one cupful of milk come to a boil. pour it over one cupful of bread | crumbs and let stand for a few min- | Break six egzs into a bowl, stir. | but do not beat, until well mixed; then | add the milk and bread, mix, ®eason | with salt and pepper, and pour into a hot frying pan in which a large table- =poonful of butter has heen melted. Fry slowly, eut in squares, turn, and fry a delicate brown. Serve at once on hot plates. The Best Cough Syrup Is Home-made Here's an easy way to save $2, yet have best cough medicine you ever tried. You've probably heard of this home-made cough syrup. But have you ever used it? Thou- sands of families feel that the; could hardly keep house without it. || It's simple and cheap, but the way || it takes hold of a cough will soon ||| earn it a permanent place in your home. Into a pint bottle, pour 214 ounces of Pinex; then add plain ranulated sugar ‘ssrup or clarified oney, to fill up the pint. It tastes good, never spoils and gives you a full ‘pint of better cough remedy than you could buy ready-made for porated into the curriculum have no They are unborn notions of self-development and self-expression. They are the expression of half-formed desires, urges, yearnings, growing pains. The only thing to dc with them | is to prune them vigorously and do | one’s very hest to inspire the children | with a wish to speak good English. | This question has its funny side, | ton. One of the teachers was right- | sously indignant about the speech of | her classes. The slang of the pla ground and the matinee were creeping | into the compositions and the recita- | tions. She intended to check it if it | e humanly possible. [ will not accept anv composition | in which there is a single slang expres- | slon. T will hand such a paper back | and demand that it be rewritten and | ed to me the day upon which it | was received. 1 intend to mark any | ses a slang expression in my hearing zers.” | She waited a momen® for the full | import of this terrible threat to sink into the minds of the gasping pupil Then she leaned forward, her eye teady and solemn, her face set in firm lines, and said, with stunning effect | “And T don't mean mayhe!" Perhaps it cannot be helped. I'm for tryin Iy this home-made remedy conquers a cough—usually in 24 hours or less. It seems to penetrate through every air passage, loosens a drv, hoarse or tight cough, lifts the phlegm, heals the membranes, and gives almost immediate relief. Splendid for throat tickle, hoarse- || ness, bronchitis and bronchial asth- ma. Pinex is a_highly .concentrated compound of Norway pine extract and palatable guaiacol, which been used for genernious/f has w for throat and chest ailments. appointment ask your druggist for “215 ounces of Pinex” with directions. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction or funded. The I’ Ft. Wayne, Ind. TINT for Coughs, To avoid Why Children Need Breakfasts that “Stand By” 80% of the Day's Impor- tant School Work Falls in 4 Morning Hours, Noted “ Educator Reveals Still, | | | | Angel Cake Filling. Mix an angel cake hatter, usin vour favorite recipe; bake in layer then put together iwith this fillin Whip one pint of thick sweet cream stiff and add one cupful of powdered sugar and vanilla to flavor. Have ready one pound of almonds blanched and chopped. Add to the eream and | spread the mixture thickly between the layers of angel cake. Ice with a | white ‘icing RE you letting listless mornings, brought on largely by wrong breakfasts, handicap your child’s school work? Recent investigations, conducted in over 2,000 American schools and colleges, reveal 80% of the so-called “hard” studies as falling in the be guarded more jealously in a locked casket than the exquisite flavor confined by three containers in morning. This percentage is con- firmed by Prof. Willard, of North- western University, and other lead- ing educators. Thus Quaker Oats breakfasts, providing the excellent food balance carbohydrates, vitamines and the “bulk” to make laxatives seldom needed are being urged as a duty of parents in protecting their children's most important working hours. No other cereal grown com- pares in food balance. Serve every morning. Their rich Quaker flavor makes them savory and enticing ... delicious breakfasts that yet “stand by” one. Get either Quick Quaker, which cooks in 214 to 5 minutes, or regular Quaker Oats today at your grocer's, Quaker Qats