Evening Star Newspaper, February 6, 1928, Page 26

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FEATURES.” A HEARTFUL OF HAPPINESS The d which children take in valentine parties is to be thought of in the same category as that which at- taches to Christmas and birthday fes- tivities, occasions unrivaled for vouth- ful excitement: Ot these several oppor- or merrymaking. none lends re colorful nor artistic possibilitics | for decorations and favors than the one which centers about St. Valentine. The party for which suggestions are this articie essentia people. although there is o denying the fun that might accrue should some of their elders induige i the same sports. Red paper and gilt hearts, diminutive and colorful, are displaved where wall space and Graperies permit. Most con- snicuous of all is a large. bulging heart of mvsterious nature, and full of such | articles as 1o please little peopke, For AWAITS THE LITTLE GUESTS. the kind ot things the little visitors will take delight in. Playing “Valentines” will prove a happy occupation in which all can par- ticipate. The hostess has provided a strong electric light bulb and a piece ol white cloth about 4 feet by 3. She has glued, or basted, a border of little red hearts around the edge of it and rein- forced the upper edge by making a hem and running a straight rod through it A curtain rod will do. The children groups and the object is to guess who it is that appears in silhouette behind the | white curtain and in front of the light. The hostess tells the youngsters to be | valentines. in some pose which she | demonstrates to them. In order to help in posing them. she has such available accessories as a tiny basket of flowers, |real or imitation, a silk hat, a fancy ruff for the neck. etc. are divided into two| the heart is. in reality. a grab bag made | Paper ooyl St e g o g | If there is demand for an active {game, heart-shaped bean bags can be To make this valentine treasury Of|iocced at a target made as follows: surprises is not a difficult matter. It ITWN a plece of wire into the shape of consists of two large heart-shaped.|a heart, wind with red ribbon or cloth, turkey red pieces of cloth stitched t0- | ang fasten a gathered length of red gether. It is filled and suspended from: | or white cambric to it. closed at the the two Inbes, so that the shape is al- lower end to form a bag. Rest this ways kept correct. The point of {|across the top of a metal waste basket, shculd be stuffed with paper to make|around which white or red crepe i paper has been wound. It is into this The contents have cost no great sum receptacle that the bag. tossed from any to gatner. as the trinkets are of the stipulated distance, is supposed to land. most inexpensive vari Card vaien- | The one placing most bean bags cor- tines. with whistles, balloons. toys. soap- | rectly. should be.awarded a heart- bubble pipes and wee cupid dolls arc |shaped box of candy. WHY WE DO WHAT WE DO BY M. K. THOMSON, Ph. D. 4 X i line on the average person. In other .H"d kB . . | words, we all have a tendency to think We tell hara-luck stories to be envied | hat we are misunderstood. underrated and admired. Fate is doing her best to | and mistreated. if not wantonly at- kill us off, but we are still very much ;"End by human enemies and hard . uck. alive. ! 7 Hard-luck stories ghift the blame of | , From time out of memory human be. failure. Jdt never do to admit that you are incompetent 5o you blame Fate fatlure and misfortunes, as_shown by | such ancient proverbs as “Whom the To understand this you need to stud :,’;’:’f‘;‘d_.‘."z‘“c“" ,'l"',:x;e""l’ha’;ymfl'f;,':‘o:i the psychology of fish stories, No fish | are jealous of mortals, who must be that you fail to land is ever ordinary.| kept down iest they get too prosperous The biggest fish always get away. The nd insolent. sting s great things we would do #f we only| s yo¢ nearly as important as we make could. If hard luck did not hound us | iv ol 1o be, We flatter ourselves irto s relentlessly what dizzy heights of suc- | ni %ng’ that fate has singled us out to cess would be ours! Just when we are | po the goat. The really brainy people il set for g things the Jinx comes| yh, have succeeded say that luck is long and upsets everything. { on the side of the vigilant. It favors The delusion of persecution 5 a se- | gl ‘man who 5 awake when opporti- rious form of insanity which causes the nity knocks. nt to think that everybody is his| "A great number of the successful People are aiways trying 0! comedies are bullt around this one wife and mother | theme of the individual battling against out most elaborate | jard Juck and constantly losing out schemes to foil his persecutors ery o get a Iot of real satisfaction and is merely the €X- | yonyine pleasure in being & hard-juck Psychojo- | artist, a better | 1Conyrizht 1928 The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1928.) Prefix: again Hand trenter, Jeeper Vather Hegutive Momitaln In Crete Hevernge sabylonian dejty. Tiny Faoint of & wtory. Jtapid mollon Particular manner Down, Form of address Aierican general Ditials of w President Lowwed forwird 4o, Fullowers of u BoolUsh prescher Jewish ot h Winged msmmul sae ball tenis, Notuble period Cran B HAembrunous pouch Concenled wbservers Yonth G et up Heverentia) fear, Expiate Engineering nn’r digs eb Gide’s ame, b * | ings have blamed the gods for their " THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Tuesday, February 7. Again the stars appear to smile on the planet Earth, according to astrology, which finds the dominant aspects kindly. Tomorrow is & day read as most auspicious for all sorts of entertain- ments, making for success in places of amusement. It is a lucky day for social affairs of every sort and should be most fa- vorable to ambitious plans. They who wed under this direction of the stars are supposed to be fortu- nate, since they will prosper and their marriage bonds will not break easily. Increase in the general desire to seek pleasure will be marked in this new year, the secrs prophesy. .Warning is given that crhving for novelties in the way of enjoyment is one of the most sinister signs of the time. Many new foreign problems will as- sall tha United States in 1928, it is prognosticated, and distinguished dip- lomats will be developed. There is a sinister aspect held re- sponsible for the outpouring of biogra- phies and character studies that are not reassuring regarding personalities of men and women called “great.” Manufacturers of cosmetics are warned that the latest beauty cult is to discourage whatever is artificial and to stimulate natural ways to acquire or maintain good lqoks. » Long skirts soon are to typify the long-foretold reaction toward old-time modes and customs. Persons whose birthdate it tomorrow have the augury of a year of many plea ures. Friends and relatives will be u|;ssu:\lly kind and attentive, it is fore- told. nvright 10981 MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDKEN, Picking Up Toys. 1 have invented a rather novel way to get my two-and-one-half-year-old } twins to pick up their toys. They each |take a basket and play they are going {to market Then they gather up their { toys, which are named potatoes, apples, | | bananas, et | toy boxes, | Man, . and deposit them in their h we call the fruit cellar. rovright 197 ¥ have found clever wave i hers, " which conts Cin o wtamos from HUREAU. Room 930, street” Chicago. 111 e weciire 1 the MOTHERS 440 South Dearborn | “That prissy little man of Amy's acts |50 superior he gits me riled, an’' the | next time he raises his eyebrows at me I'm goin' to squirt him with Insect powder an’ ruin him.” Fruit Punch. To the juice of four lemons and two oranges add two quarts of water and two cupfuls of sugar. Into this put a can of grated pineapple, or if preferred, & can of the shices cut into tiny dice, and one cupful of canned yellow cher- | ries. Pour this over a block of ice in a punch bowl. the last a quart of carbonated water. If this Is done, use only one quart of plain water when making the punch. This amount will serve 25 people, MENU FOR A D. BREAKFAST. Baked Apple Hominy with Cream. Ham Omele Cream Toast. Coffee, LUNCHEON, Creamed Oysters, % Tost. Caramel Custards, Bugar_Cookles Tea DINNER. Tomato Boup. FPried Liver and Bacon, Fried Onjons, Baked Potatoes, Baked Indian Pudding. Coftee. CREAM TOAST. Toust six slices of bread il erisp und brown, dip In hot, sulted water, place In dish and pour over the following gravy; One pint milk, let_come to scald- g polnt, then str in one large tablespoon four mixed with hitle cold water. BUr untl thick, add hutter size of egg. When miking cream toast for each cup milk allow one level tablespoon hutter, two level tablespoons bread flowr Melt butter, stir i flour, ndd enp of milk gradually, stireiig wll the tima, Add little salt, strain, thien dip over bread, CREAMED OYHTERS, Beald one pint oysters In one rlm lmlllnr water, then denin Pt water dn suucepan with twa tublespoons butter, 1ittle mace, two bey deaves und salt and pepper. Let come 1o holl ane tblespoon cracker o one-half pint cream. Let come boll and add oysters, then cook two minutes, Herve on tosst. BAKED INDIAN PUDDING, Boald one pint milk and sur in four tablespoons Indlan meal Cook until thick, Cool, then add one-half cup molasses, one plnt wold milk, one-halt tespoon each cinnamon and salt and two eggs well heaten with one-half cup sugar. Bake two hours. When haked haif an hour add one cup cold milk, Do not sis, It 15 nice to add at | Advocates It as “Good for What Ails You” The Miraculous 'Absent Treatment. ‘quothyDix{ Absence Is a Good Remedy for Calf Love, Nagging, Sloppy Housekeeping, Quarreling and Other “amily Ills. ‘[N what might be called the Golden Age of Patent Medicines certain nostrums used to be advertised after this fashion: “Have you that tired feeling? Are you depressed in spirits? Are you nervous and irritable? Then take So and So's Elixir of Life. It is good for whatever ails you.” And to prove how potent was the elixir there followed a picture of “Before and After Taking.” the one showing a seedy, cadaverous, ill-dressed, poverty- stricken individual and the other depicting the same person fat and prosperous and dressed in the height of fashion. Now materia medica knows no universal cure-all for diseases of the body. but there is a spiritual remedy that is so nearly a panacea for our troubles that | it _almost justifies the old patent medicine claim of being good for whatever ails vs. This remedy is absence, judiciously applied. Take the case of the A's, who are frantlc with anxiely over their young son, who has become Involved in a love affair with a most undesirablé young woman. Johnny A. is nothmg but a kid. a hobbledehoy schoolboy, but that will not keep this shrewd person. who has captured his immature fancy, from invelgling him into eloping with her and marrying her, for Father A. has much money | The A.'s have wept and prayed over Johnny: they have argued with him and entreated him and pointed out to him how unsuitable the girl is and how he would regret marrying her and how such a match would blast his future All in vain. ‘The one remedy that 1s plainly indicated in the case is the absent treatment The only thing in the world that will save Johnny will be for his parents to send him off to school and let ahsence get in its perfect work. For a few days and weeks Johnny will keep the mails and the wires hot with messages back to his beloved, and then his fever will begin to go down. 1In a little while his temperature will fall to normal and before the session s out it will become subnormal. Virtually every case of calf love could be cured. especially If taken in its | incipiency, when it ylelds readily to treatment, by a change of climate and scene. 'T"AKE the case of Mrs. B. who nags at her husband and children until she makes their ves a torment to them, and who is about as pleasant and | soothing to get along with as a fretful porcunine. Her temper is hung on a hair trigger and everybody about the place walks tiptoe for fear of exploding it. | But no precautions avail. Whatever they do o don't do is sure to be wrong and | precipitate a scene * ! In reality Mrs. B. has nothing of which to complain. She has a good home. | a good husband. good children, but she is alwavs bewailing her lot because there | is so much work to do about her house. and because husbands are aggravating | and because children are a lot of trouble and bother. And so she is miserable herself and is alicnating her husband and children from her and driving them away from home. i But all that Mrs. B. needs to cure her is a dose of absence. If she could be sent away from home for two months, she would be completely restored to | mental health. Perhaps one or two weeks weuld turn the trick. She has done | the same work over and over again until its monotony has got on her nerves. | She has.lived-so close to her family that she can see only their defects. She needs to gpt away from them in order to get a perspective on their virtues, N ) ‘Bia you ever notice women at Summer resorts? The first week they spend | in exulting over not having to plan meals, or think about the house, or know what they are going to eat. and they recount their trouble with servants, or pity themselves for being tied to a gas range. But by the end of the sccond week they have begun to brag about their honies and look forward to getting back to them. The one sure cure for sloppy housekeeping and poor meals is jo send the | housekeeper away for a short time. And absence is the one and only cure for nagging. Women nag because they have so few interests that they make mountains out of molehills. & . MOREOVER. even the most hen-minded woman, when she is away from her family, must have an illuminating moment in which she sees how trivial are the faults of which she complains in her husband and children and how much they are overweighed by their goodness to her, and when she thinks. how desolate it would be if there were no little Jchuny to tramp in mud, no husband to spill cigarette ashes on the floor, no home to be taken o@re of. And there are the C's, who are on the verge of divoree. Nothing really wrong with either one except that they have got on each others nerves and that they quarrel over every trifle. When Mrs. C. looks at Mr. C. she sees a tubby man, growing bald, who is fussy about his food and who goes to sleen in his chair after dinner and is so vain he lets flappers make a fool of him. When Mr. C. looks at Mrs. C. he sees a fat, ~ommonplace woman who has lost her A novel bracelet is made of a sheer silk square, miniature offspring of the | popular Deauville kerchief, which is used with such charming diversity as scarf, girdle or headband. With a formal evening gown, the| wristband matches or contrasts—pastel | with pastel or a vivid shade of red, green or blue with white. With a sleeveless sports frock of fine linen or pique, the kerchief is usually a bril- liant color to match the shoulder scarf. NANCY PAGE Young School Girle Adore These Sweaters LORENCE LA GANKE. Every year and every season the sweaters grow more alluring. Nancy and her mother were downtown shop- ping and had all they could do to pass by the gdisplay. When one contrasted the cumbersome, heavy, knitted affair of 10 years back with these gav. | | ! when Reddy BEDTIME STORIES Idle Gossip. hoef grine and slyly winks gonsip el more than it thinks Oid Mother Nature. ke Reddy Fox was anxlous to know how | often and just when Jerry Muskrat | visited the spring-hole in the swamp where the Laughing Brook leaves the Green Forest to enter the Smiling Pool. | But Reddy didn't want to be seen over | there. He didn't want Jerry to becom suspicious. He knew that if Jerry pected him of hanging around that open spring-hole Jerry would at once change his ways. He would not know- | ingly take a chance of being caughl. | “I'll do a little gossiping.” thought | Reddy. “One can find out aimost any- | thing through gossip. Yes, sir, a gossip | is usually a telitale without knowing it Now I wonder who there is that 1 likely to be around that spring-hole more_or less. Of course, Sammy Jay | and Blacky the Crow probably could tell | me fust what I want to know. nefther would knowingly. Those fel- lows always delight in making trouble for me instead of in helping me. 1 guess I'll have to get it out of one of n{wm vithout his knowing what I't afte | Now, Reddy long ago learned that | (7| S © “OH,” SAID SAMMY, “YOU NEEDN'T | WORRY ABOUT JERRY.” the surest way of attracting aitention | is to do something unusual. Arouse | curiosity and you will have all the at- desire. So it was that heard the rather harsh voice of Sammy Jay not far away Reddy got in an open place and began to chase his tail. Around and around he spun, chasing his tail. It wasn't any time at all before Sammy Jay was sit- ting in a tree right above Reddy. so tention_ you | interested that he actually had forgot- ten to scream. Presently Reddy stopped for breath. affairs one wondered at the ingenuity | looks and her figure and whose conversational repertoire never gets beyond the nursery and the butcher shop and what the people next door are doing. And both of them wonder what made them ever think they were in love with each other and what the fool-killer was doing the day they got married that they escaped with their lives, The sovereign remedy for their sickness of each other is absence. you would make them realize that they could not live without each other. them. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1028.) LS A particular show that appeared In Washington last week was a complete “sell-out.” Its premlere, many months | ago, was s le. Since that time it | has made a fortune | for its principals. A group of the- atrical men was discussing what in- gredients were used that would cause the public to crowd the box office. At the end nobody was the wiser, An executive of an imporfant busi- | forth a story concerning a certain man ness department in Washington, while | we are rather fond of. At the conclu- dining with the writer a few nights | slon of the yarn he again admonished ago, said that he was perturbed about | us to “keep it under our hat.” the' disposition of | By a coincidence, we returned to the one of his clerks. . | lobby several hours later and saw the “What is the | ((MEER UP.THE. lapel-puller whispering earnestly ‘to a matter with him?” | | woRsT 15 Y& | friend. When the gossip-monger left he was asked. {10 _cove | the friend sald to us, “I have just been “Enough 18 the =y | told by so-and-so to keep something matter with him.” | under my hat.” "He then told us what was the reply. “to i we had already heard. Both of us annoy everybody in | knew better. These “keep it under the place.” | vour hat" persons are full of dangerous “Just one of those potentialities and often leave wreckage grouches pr | in thelr wake. " we sug- | d. ! o the con- said the ex- trary,” ecutive. “He happens to be a ‘Cheerful Charlie’ or ‘Sunny Jim’ I'd say he | 18 a_he-Pollyanna.* | “"This fellow is a eapable worker, but | there {sn’t one of my clerks he doesn't directly or indirectly affect, The work of many of them is impaired because of hig presence in the office. His mfluence has even reached me. WE 1S NOW COLLELTING ROVALINES Part | them for six months and you would not only restore the romance of their youth, What & pity more people don't try the absent treatment for what ails | { of dress designers or of knitting ma- chines. “Imagine a sweater of fine wool with dots all over the surface. We have to send one of those to Peter's niece in that California school.” They ended by buying two, one with graded stripes go- ing horizontally and the doited one which was.Nancy’s first love. But their enchantment with the sweaters was as nothing when they A very skilful fl | try Butt-R-Naise. It makes even the plest lettuce and sliced tomato take on made of specially prepared fresh yolks, lemon juice, vegetable oils spices, whipped with pure creamery reached the costume department. Nancy saw a costume which was suit- able for an informal afternoon tea, as luncheon In a tearoom or hotel. The skirt was of heavy satin in beige. The sweater blouse was of Angora with bands of the satin closely stitched in the geometrical pattern which has been so well received this past year, Nancy wanted Lois to have a frock like this. . . . which MELLO-GLO repro- duces, does not wear off so quickly,” s beautiful Laura Lacatllade, of Some producers are “sure fire,” oth- ers less 50, In its most favorable as- pect, the producs tlon of a show is v hazardaus busi- ness, requiring a lary element of gameness and luck Fifteen years ago & Young newspaper ATUAL (NewspAper nrtists please copy) sat at an old ouk desk at home and be- ean to “monkey” with rhymes and lines About 1 or 2 o'clock In the morning he would go to the pantry and pour him- sell a glass of milk and make a sand- wich to sustain him for a few hours I His wife complained bitterly he had no t | "I one of the yoing women or young fmen in the establishment exiybits de- | pression or fliness, ‘Cheerful Chinrlle’ 18 always ready with ‘Cheer up, the worst 15 vet to come or ‘It won't be long now. He sometimes varies the line same in 100 years.' have never in all the years he has been with s seen him come to the office In the morning without a smile or & wise crack about something of a cheerful nature. Very few folks who oceasfonnlly suffer from a blue mood want floods of joy tossed nll over them like buckets of ¢ Hympan- thetlc stlence 18 more efMcaclous than rollicking phrases which s to muke, light of our troubles. “An example of this man's lgnorance or lack of tact was demonstrated not long ago when of the finest ghils we have was given a shower, ~ 8hy (3 engaged u local boy und was very happy ¥or veasons best known to the two the engagement was severed. It was ot long before the fact percolated through the office. Good sense pre- valled and the affalr was treated by the young Indy's mssoctutes . silence have recovered nt “Enter ‘Sunny Jim’ In less than & minute atter hearing the news he rush- ed o the young we ped her tenderly on the sh remarked with a lnugh that “There wre ws good N’y I the sea as have ever heen eht' - Me abio ndded with a chuckle ‘that every cloud has a silver Mning* : “Ihe girl roke down from embar- vassment. Personully § felt nolined | o punch him And yet had T even spoken 0 him he would hiave bheen justined I telllng me thiat - he was merely eheering the lady up, “1 wonld Jike o et rid of that pest B phonehien wre fae preferablo sonw Himes o one of these cheor dis- Ao ne to take her out ning. Besk he fonred that dissipntton of his energy would in- terfere with next day's work. But he kept on In his peregrinations about town he met an aspliing young -song wiiter, who i turn contrived to terest w produce Prinety were enyg s Y Wi constructed and w th An usual the crities and - “fiest-nighters” attended In force. AL the end of the week the principals were sitting around vt offices and the scenery sent to w storehouse After monthy of labor and golden drenms, our friend returned o his tink bottle. His vife, a really splendid - AN, WK y plensed and hopetul (hat he w tend to hiy professton The sweek followlng the “flop™ the YOUBK Chinp wan onee ugnin at his desk, With n glass of milk i one hand and A penell i e other, grinding out yy 1w, Another produ wan soughit Once agaln the show was elosed after W twosweek rane Many of the artists friends, including the wilter, told hin that e foullsh o buek the Pt he kept o Tlires mare ahine follawed, and. sat of them sutfered (e fate of 1ts predos CeRROTA, The sIXth one was a “wow” Ho wias the “aeventh Phe sixth one Was pro I Uhe movies after 1 stuge 1 our fend s still eolleoting royaliles from the mechinnteal vights of his songs thin tale of “fame and fortune, might be added (hat he conthnies (o draw plet every day for his news paper. What fotlonist could elaborate On el wostony i L) The other day, while wattlng in the lobhy of & downtown hotel, "w man wham we know but sllghtly appronched your correspondent After murmuring hello,” e seleed (e wrlter by the tuped of his cout wid wttemplod Lo draw Wim: amlde. Chronlo apel-pullers are not populer with most men, Nelther are men who speak from n corner of the mouth w auging, white, un-' Nghted clgnre 226 W. 55th 8t, New York C in pratse of this new, wonderful French process face powder. “MELLO-GLO does not leave the skin dry or clog the pores. It keeps the ugly shine away and spreads so smoothly that not a single pore is visible " —Ad- vertisement. To B—Ilal:e Pi;e-Cough Syrg; at Home Has no equdl for prompt results. a moment to make, Pive v used in nearly all\) prexeriptions aud remdies for coughs, The that pine has w remark “t i ooth \ g wud membranes of the thront awd chest \ Pine cough ayedps are mnde pine aud o syrup” s 1l Ny pioe cough L put 2y ounces of Pinex in it bottle, wud 611 up with home made sugar sy el or claritiod hooey, Sl mahes w full pint wore thion Aou can buy vendy made for three Hwes the money, /1 s pure, ol tantew gl You can’ e of & cough nenis D ey of {1 take vight hokd cold noa way that The cough iy e il Gl or iy b towse o the £ e thix 14 will on fewn, N asthing o i * O Bex b lighly camponml of and palatnble guntncol, wad s tan o e Wkl aver for i proipt | Aot upon conghi i Hownre of wibstitutes. Ask o dviggine for Pinex™ - with Gunrantend to giv AutisTebion o Buded. Tl vl Sy sty wlil, w N tor bronchial voncentrated T Here | well as being perfectly all right for | ter. It tastes de you because of the vitamines in i the fineness for health that's in fresh v BY THORNTON W. BURGESS “What under the sun are you doing, Reddy Fox?” demanded Sammy Jay. Reddy looked up and grinned. “Gete ting a little exercise,” said he. “T find that exercise is the best thing in the world for digestion.” “Huh!" exclaimed Sammy. think you would get all the e need in just running around.” “I do get a lot of ¢ replied Reddy. “but are when I have to lie still so long t need some livhly exercice, and o 1 get it ing my tail. It is rather fun, “1 should here “jhave never chased my ta Reddy chuckled good “That would be to do. Brother Jay.” Iot of diffe orld No my tail i Jerry Muskrat 15 and’ rubbery h 3 him sine [ it_would be terribl yzen in 2l Winter long. 1 hink he would want to get ou get a breath of fresh alr once in & while.” “Oh.” worry about Jerr needs. “Quit your the Ice, did I said 3 every day down th Red Jay,” | stand. out from under the e him every day “You know that spring- the swamp?” a morning just after sun-up Je: rat co out of that and si bank.” | Hot Ham Sandwich. Put through a food chopper one- a pound of cold boiled ham and moist it to spreadinz con i and prepared mustard to s Spread the mixture on half quired number of slices of oread. them on the tops «f the sandwiches jand press firmly together. Beat two | eggs slighty, dilute them with three- | fourths of a cupful of milk and beat lagain Dip sandwiches in the mixture and saute first on one side and fon the other. in the frying pan, both sides are a golden brown. avor for a salad IFEVER you wish for new tastes in a salad, sime- new | flavor. Butt-R-Naise is a light, flufly cream, €RR- and but- ous, andis good for All ege- tables, ezgs and lemons. Delivered fresh at your dealer’s three times a week 30c glass jars. Try Bust-R-Naise on s wiches, too, in place of butter. And The Gelfand Mfg. Co., Baltimore. Washington, D. C “Rond Rread is wonde G, Rutherford, of 4004 Md, whose danghiter June to their hes four children, That's why ‘g\ L Bond Bread e caretnl mothy, haked theit own bread. They want ed 1o he suve ot its purity and wholesomeness It these was fo that hakers of Bond Bread appeal for advice when they songht the secret of a t home ke Toat, They told Bowd Riead hakers that on the purest and finest wared ents must be wsed it Was to he appetiin pearance, ftm and olo Wi texture and home v honsewives bread AR Kuit " when they made the st loal of Bowd Bread the Y Uhe Home Prioen reallsed Nwift & l‘um‘uln walon ulcaras W st b 1§ i ek etling Aupiindar, Pehiigv ) e aus angle, wiggles with esch movement af (e iips “Keep (s under your. it he o oh Whisherod, Aid Liob Oioseered 40 DuuE - ib. TG Yo' C LR T ©an . In and- also Gelfand’s Peppy-Nut Sandwich Spread. Distributors. THE CARPEL COMPANY GELFAND’S BUTT-R-NAISE ful for tfor ¢ New I Ith and Keeps th Ihey say they love it and 1t st of have seen that pry A¢ Adwavs MISEW e Wa ity Kept. T can Bread's pur ! thave Hy r Neighborhood Grocer Can Supp!y You Daily ] Like

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