Evening Star Newspaper, February 11, 1928, Page 21

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w5« \WOMA Tiexs of Pleating in Overskirts BY MARY MARSHALL. Overskirts of two or more tiers of fine pleating are to be seen here and there among the new frocks. of Worth's most interesting new models fs of figured foulard with an overskirt effect of five raised iIFFON GIVES A NG FINISH OF BLACK SATIN. | FINELY PLEAT SMART THIS GO elbow, drawn | ow cufl at the| e sketch is of of finely and cight A N'S PAGE i THE TVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. €. SATURDAY. o .rows of the fine pleating on the slceves. Though the frock from which the sketch was made one of the smart new m for late Winter and Spring, it stri he idea was an excellent one to one sees is very ndled in such a slightly along number of new of sunburst sot into a voke of o avold any suggestion about the hips. cresting to note th skirt has been revived h and other Southern re- combined frequently with slip-on_ knitted sweaters that are for a revival. this pleatiny even when done in the woolen matert cly flat with rather shallow | 1 of our reades attern a home dre: have asked for this 's lit- aker's help we have am-pattern of the sort ed women are wearing. the directions you can t the slip out to fit your figure If you will send me a stamped. d ervelope 1 will send you -pattern, directions and tle 1098) :T RECIPE 1 cup tabicspoon, (extra), 1 table- HALF POUND. 7 and scrape young tender car- Cut in thin strips length wise. Dissolve the one cup sugar in boiling + er, add lemon juice. Add carrots. Simmer them slowly in sirup (220 de- the | | white or neutral color Tie STYLE POST is the marker on the road to being smart. Petticoat Bag. A peasant_petticoat, hitherto making part of a colorful costume on the con- has been made into an ac- popular in the European and ¢ to & simple Sports costume in and its shell or tortoise) blends The pouch is a roomy o carry all the necessary beach cosmetics and perhaps the ubiquitous deck of cards. (Convrizht. 1 NANCY PAGE frame (amber ) Lemon Meringue Pie Finishes a Perfect Meal BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. ces) until tender (about 35 minutes). | e with_the tablespoonful | . Place strips well | dry i a very | Turn two or | apart slow over three t on a_boar 150 degre i DIET NOTICE. | Reeipe could be given in moderation to childr T8 and could be eaten by crage or under weight Ca . iron, viatmis PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE Everybody Has a Little Gingivitis. >4 happily for| ut the aid of a round to the prac- My ing time in nearly tanding my ust visit . the doctor od rep: to tvc 2s ond the rebufld- of a beautiful gold the days when T quite religiously. pretend! bridge I won te noticeable e gum. th That's the w was mine 1 s do as the ed d 2 about it, read | i | BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. and a more or less fanciful condition 100 weill known to certain misguided valetudinarians as “autointoxication.” | The analogy 1 discover is not in refer- ence 1o the pathology of the two condi- | tions but only the great plasticity or| ! of the two conceptions—I§ cather ihat you can stretch or twist| cither concepiion &s much as may be exigencies of your and the beauty of | it is that you don’t have to worry a' 2l about the scientific limitations, for are none that need embarras retly 1 had prided myself that gums and tecth were fairly sound for a poor cf d fellow. Thereforc it shocked me 1o hear the dentist ex- | patiating on those little reddened arear | mv gums that spelled incipient | gingivitis. | A few days afterward, when I haé | recovered f ©of the repair serutinized Y y teeth—that is, o go out shopping soon anc | find e toothbrush having | bristles not over one-fourth inch lone | in a brush not over one Inch | hot is, the bristle part). ! d a few good looks | gin in the mouth .: 1 50w P fnothbriush ever. polih a teoth verv thorouehlv en hones, and this reems to me a much more effective mofhod than our rite 15 | 1 | Dows Fhouyht out beforebiand Winsi ul ias {ury notes {5« 1ot of gold dust worth more than £4.000. | Answer 1o Yerterday's Pusle, SIUIAL ML | {and grew so enthusiastic they decided | schooner and covered the schooner, | o Lin the Jower river, a hoat containing {11 white and § colored men, who were | vere a business partner were talking over the kind of food they liked. Nancy overhead them. “I'll tell | vou what I'll do,” she said, “you plan a regular he-man meal and I'll see that | vou get it.” They fell in with the plan | Peter and | complex. ‘DE | that the girl is wholly to blame in the ma DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER Warning to Young Man Engaged to Selfish Gold- Digger—How Can Mother of Successful Married Man Save Him? I;&" ])FAR MISS DIX: 1am engaged to a girl who is utterly selfish and thoughtless. -” Not, once during our acquaintance has she done a single thing to please me 1f it would inconvenience herself. She always wants to go out and Is never willing to stay at home of an evening, and when we do go out she insists on going to the most expensive places. She is rtainly a gold-digger, and she never constders my taste or pleasures. She has no domestic taste T have gone with girls who were good little pals and who did not have this take-all-and-give- nothing attitude. Yet I did not care nearly as much for them as I do for this selfish girl, so I don't know what to do. L. P. Answer: There 15 only one thing to do, I. P. 8. if you value your own happiness, and that s to make a quick getaway while the going is good. For if you marry this selfish girl you haven't a chance on earth of happiness with her. You wfll‘bn a slave to her and she will keep your nose on the grindstone as long as you live. She will never see you as a lover or a husband. You will be merely a drudge to toil for her and to provide her with the luxuries she craves, and no matter how hard you work for her, nor how much you sacrifice for her she will not even say “thank you.” She will reproach you for not making more. You will have to work all day and take care of the children at night. You will have to stay at home in the Summer in the heat, while she goes to the mountains. Parls confection, If she is ailing, she will expect you to wait on her hand and foot, but if you are sick she won't let it interfere with her bridge game. She will keep you poor with her extravagance and then twit you with not getting along better. No woman in the world is such a slave driver as a selfish woman. No other human creature is so merciless, and no man is so unfortunate as he who gets one for a wife, The man is to be pitied who unwittingly marries a selfish woman, but the one who deliberately marries one with his eyes wide open to her fauits is such i a fool that he deserves only our contempt, and he deserves all that he gets, for | he nas been warned. The girl has, at Jeast, been honest with him and shown him her true self, and if he chose to run the risk his fate is on his own head. The man who marries a selfish, grasping, greedy woman deludes hlmsrl{l into thinking that love will work a miracle in her character, but it never does, for the very good reason that that s of weman never really loves anybody but herself, She is so self-centered that she does not even know she s selfish, because she cannot imagine anybody having any rights that interfere with her own, or that anybody else’s pleasure or convenience can be as important as hers. If she wants a thing, she belicves that she should have it, no matter how much it deprives other people. If anything is unpleasant to do. she simply stands aside and lets somebody else do it. If anybody is to be sacrificed, she offers up the other individual as the goat. You would think that any man with a grain of sense in his head would flee such a girl as he wouid from the pestilence, but he doesn't. He goes along and marries her and becomes a poor, pitiful, henpecked husband who is nothing but a cash register in his family. Often, curlously enough, the men who marry these selfish women often seem to love them better and cherish them mcre than husbands do sweet, gentle, unselfish wives. But it is a risky thing for any man to do who hasn't a strong martyr DOROTHY DIX. « o AR DOROTHY DIX: My son has provided for his wife and his widowed mother, built up a fine business and is highly respected by every one. Recently he has become infatuated with a young girl. I feel justified in saying ter. vet my son’s wife knows nothing of this affair and, fearing for the ovicome for ail cerned. 1 ask vour advice on what I can do to prevent the catastrophe, JUST A MOTHER. Answer: The only thing that you can do is to go to v quiet talk with him and try to arouse him to a sense of what a wicked and ! foolish thing he is doing. she should give them that meal on Lin. coln’s birthday. “He was a real man." | they said, “and would have liked this sort of meal” So this became a Lin- coln’s birthday dinner: Porterhouse Steak. French Fried Potatoes Canned Lima Beans. Perfection Salad. Corn Sticks. Lemon Ple. Coffee, Nancy made her lemon ple accord- ing to this rule. She used hot water | pie crust for the shell and baked it first. The filing called for these in- dients: One cupful sugar, one-half cupful flour, one-eighth teaspoonful salt, one cup hot water, one lemon, juice and grated rind, two egg yolks, one table- “poonful butter. Use egg whites and three tablespoonfuls sugar for me- ringue. Mix first three ingredients, add hot water, cook for 15 minutes, Add butter, iemon Juice and rind, Beat in | exg yolks. Pour In baked shell, cover with” meringue, Allow 20 minutes for meringue to brown in slow oven, Tow atont 1 e Pert, 1 teaflet . Inelonty o " - 0 N I Today in shington History BY DONALD A, CRAIG, SN February 11, 1863.—The gunboat | Jacoh Bell arrived this morning from the lower Potomac River, bringing a a number of prisoners who were taken Monday last by the Coeur de Lion and the mortar schooner Racer, Two of the Ruacer's boats dis- whose name s Emily Murray, Capt James Smith of Baltimore, near Ragl d Point, Va,, where he had Janded a part of her cargo. Bhe was waterlogged and the Racer's men ook eharge of her, removing the eyew which conststed of John Fick, a Wiy, and Robinson, & colored man, ‘Two . men escaped i # boat. The in- Votees showed the goods were being chipped o Richmond. She appeared e Joaded with lumber, but her hold was found o be flled with a miscelln- neous cargo, including dry goods, boots hovs, worth # large sum of money the eney’s ey bouts of the Kucer on the same night captured near Blaklstone Inland coming from the Virginin shore, ‘Ihe white men were flush with money and euldently traders reluming Faltimore from the Southern capital One msn had $11.904 10 gold and ‘T'rens- Another had two nuggets “The total sum of money in the Jeassion of tie party was 822,417 and carly il was i gold A meeting was held st Willard's thi Cening of publishers wnd - newspaper men who are Interested i the reduc- ton of the tariff tax on paper. The g mareed o urge the ways snd s commitlee 1o take steps o Nt e burden without further delay, 1 as explatned Wit Lhe bmporters of Lraper and e mannfacturers o thi countyy udd the wmount of the tarf Lkt Ui cot of e prper purchised Ly the punlishers, . Veal and Nut Salad, ‘ 1t e pound of cooked veul Dirongh i foud Chopper with two stilke of celery i et ane-tourth pound of ehopped Poalout meats. Beason with salt and pepper wnd pour over the followlag arcestog Melt four tablespoonfuls of Dbt st in one tablenpoontul of fouy e o handt a euptul of comie o w bl il G one Aablespomtul of oy, o st of mustard, one-half w o [0 af vhiewar, wid sl wnd pepper 1o tuste B allogether, Jet come 1o thie bolling point, wnd sel away o coal, | i He must know that vou are actuated by no motive except your unselfish ove for him, and he must listen to you uniess he i3 so far gone in his folly that e is beyond reason. But my experience is that nothing that you can say married man who is in love with a young girl has any effect upon him, bec: he has alrcady said it to himself a thousand times. He hasn't forgotten the contempt that he felt for some other man when he | : saw him fall for the crude wiles of a flapper. some man of his acquaintance made of hitisclf over some He knows what a contemptible cur he feels when he lies to his wife and deceives her. He knows what a wrong he is doing his chiidren in breaking up their home and abandoning them. He knows that he is ruiring himself in his carcer because neither banks nor business men have any f{a‘th in the judgment or the honor of the man who is unfaithful to his wife and has no sense of responsibility to | his family. He has seen a hundred men whose prosperity began to wane with their first llicit love affair. The married man who has a love affair with another woman knows all the | dangers he runs and the price he must fnevitably pay, and if he persists in it it is because he is sunk so many fathoms decp in infatuation that no voice of | mother's prayers conscience or reason can reach him. He is beyond even b ¢ him and tears, and so there is not much chance that you can But be falr enough to realize that he ls, at least, as much at fault as the | girl. Of course, there are many predatory young women who find it easfer to work men than they do to work a typewriter or a sewing machine, but no woman in the world is vamp enough, or clever enough, or beautiful enough, or attractive | enough to catch a man unless he wants to be caught. He has always to be a willing victim. to fall. business but who can outwit any woman. No man who is used to looking for | catches in contracts and taking precautions against possibilities that may arise in_the future in trades but who knows what a girl 15 up to when she begins roliing her eyes at him and jollying him. is the time to flee temptation and get rid of the girl He knows that Instead of which he only It he means to walk strdight and keep himselr safe. 100 often takes her out to dinner. wholly on the girl. ]DEAR MISS DIX: I am a bachelor aud am fn love with a fine young woman, but we do not know whether it would be right for us to marry or not for this reason: We both have black sheep among our ancestors, Some. of them were dishonest: others sot drunkards; others natural-born crooks, and we fear that If we had children we might pass those traits on to them, for the Bible s “The fathers have eaten sour grapes and the children's teeth are set on edg 1 had rather live single all of my life than be the father of one drunkard or crook, for the world has already too mucn of that kind of material. What would you suggest? W. H. 8. DOROTHY DIX. PRI Answer: Sctence has never yet dectded just how far physical or mental traits are passed on, 50 I do not think thut v because you have had some black sheep in the family. Environment is°the potent force in molding our lives, and th jot much chane of wise and consclentions parents golng wrong DOROTHY DIX, (Copyright. 1908 Fashionable Folk . by c]y_lig Boyd‘ ij’/‘/fz‘(;/;a/dy, Brana. (M:gfi:d ""‘&“fif gowned. molifs, m in Aleal oA hat’ of salin. and el am‘l a. anfs an A c’tyuut .{a:" Acard: are ,Muan, Mo {aught Hyndint You will do without a new hat so that she can have her tenth ! ir son and have a | He hasn't forgotten what an ass | little gold-digger. | He falls for her because he wants | No man who has intelligence enovgh to build up and carry on a| 1 need refrain from marrying | 3. e of the children | EBERUARY 11, 1928 | SONNYSAYINGS RY FANNY Y. CORY. If T turns 'iss fing, it goin’ to let out a squall ob ‘attic; but if I don't turn ft, | how kin I tell 15 it or ain't it? | AND THEIR CHILDR i “Miss Greedy.” | | Marion, although only a little past | 12 vears of age. insisted on filling her | spoon to overflowing. I found that by { miving her one of her doll spoons, whose { bowl is about half the size of her other spoon. she takes bites more according to | her size. A child this age who does not | yet have doll silverware may be given an after-dinner coffee spoon. (Conyright. 1028.) AUNT HET BY RORERT OUILLEN, to see prople b sanitary. but {1 have many light hairs among the | color? { some blonde or MILADY B BY LOIS Streaked Hair. Dear Miss Leeds—(1) My hair s} very dark brown, almost black, but These look gray, but they are an 1 make my hair all one BELLESVILLE. Answer—(1) T could advise you bet- | ter if you had told your age, the state | of your health and how long you have | been noticing the light hairs. It is | natural for some brunettes fo auburn hairs mi with the dark hair. There i3 no way of darkening these fair hairs unless | you regort, to a dye. If, however, the | light hairs you mention have begun to | appear recently they are probably faded | and_indicate that your scalp is not in | good condition. In this case I advise | others, not. How daily scalp massage to stimulate the | circulation, and also the use of a goad hair tonic twice a week. Before each | shampoo give your fcalp a warm oil treatment with olive ofl. Build up your general health. 1 shall be glad to send vou a copy of my leaflet on “Care of the Hair,” which gives special instruc- tions for the care of fading and pre- maturely graying hair. 1,01S LEEDS. “Dishwater” Blondes. Dear Miss Leeds—We are two girls 15 years old, and we would like your wonderful advice along the following questions: (1) We are both “di water” blondes and we want to know a good recipe to give our hair a golden tint. (2) We have small blackheads on our noses, and would like to know hot to get rid of them. (3) Will you name a good astringent for the face? (4 Girls of our age. Miss Leeds, do vou | think cosmeties will ruin our skin?| ¢ EAUTIFUL LEEDS. acid; two tablespoonfuls peroxide, one tablespoonful ammonia, two quarts water. This will bring out the golden tints in your hair. Leave the rinse on { for 10 minutes before washing it off in tepid water. (2) Lather your face well with tincture of green soap at night. Rinse in clean, warm water, then In cold. If you use powder be sure your powder puff is immaculately clean. In morning wash your face in cold ater and dry well. (3) T do not re mmend any proprietary products to my readers. You mav use witchhazel | a= an astringent or a few drops of the neture of benzoin in a basinful of ur face. (4 Yonu cosmetics regular- withers and coar » Rub a little en ay the scaly effect. | lv. Their da oung sk ! cream on to take a Flora, Answer—You should net us<e ream a5 a powder base on (5) What is good for a rcaly nose? “TILLIE AND BUBBLES Answer—(1) When shampooing vour hair use only pure white coap. ~ Afte washing out the soap carefully give your hair a final rinse made of the following: Two tablespoonfuls strained lemon juice, one teaspoonful tartaric BEDTIME STORIES Peter Almost Gives Up. Thouzh srim desp Suil ciinz o hope Peter was in despair. He had reason to be. He was in the middie of the | spring-hole in the swamp where the Laughing Brook leaves the Green For- est to enter the Smiling Pool. He was wet and he was cold and he was the worst scarced rabbit that ever was. What was Peter doing in the spring- hole? He was trying to get out. You see, he had broken through the ice. He had started to cross on the ice and had seen Jerry Muskrat swimming be- neath the ice. He ha dthought it would be a great joke to thump on the ice and give Jerry Muskrat a scare. He had tried it and had thumped himself right through into the water. Now, as you know, Peter isn't fond of the water at any tmie of the year. He isn't a good swimmer, although he can swim. 1If it had been merely a matter of just swimming across to the other side. Peter wouldn't have minded so much. Certainly. he wouldn't have bren in despair. that he could get there. But this ice made all the difference in the world. You cawnot swim through ice. on the ice. He would get his fore- ws up there and try to pull himself out. Then the ice would break again and in Peter would go. His teeth chat- tered with the cold. He swallowed a lot of cold water and some of it cnoked him. He knew his strength couldn't hold long in such cold ¥ kept on struggling, kicking p: 't 1o sense in Pa takin' a bath ever' night when he am't got but three | suits of heavy underwear.” 1Canyrikht. 1028 ) And then Lis wife and mother lay the resuits | EATTIE. Many are the kin of the erow, though we have with us no other relatives but the jays. Yet in Europe I met the | clamoring, gregarious rook, and in the | Southwest the gorgeous blue pinyon | “jay," which is really a crow, looks like and behaves like a blackbird . too, I learned to know raven, wha has a hundred i his vocabulary, or so naturalist cludmed. His Indlan 15 very like his speech, Awqukquk.” ‘To pronou Ah!" the way you do when the tor puts a spoon on your tongue. ien make two spasmodic strangling clubks, as_though you had swallowed vinegar, What could be simpler? And the thicving, quarrelsome magnie, too, is blood brother to the crow, with his rattling ery, his darkly handsome plumage. But_give me the crow himself, bird | not of il omen but of Winter woods, | flelds left fallow, sunny clearings. In | “The Arabian Nights™ the crow is made to sing: hat, dressed in black, with harsh tm- portunate cry, trouble all delight as 1 go by That, circling shadowwise the camps of pring. 1 prophesy their bittes That. when I see a lov i | Or, flocking some bright palace with n | kloom, Foretell the speedy tutning of it These and more somber habits I admit.” one Tt culled say THE DAILY HOROSCOPE S Sunday, February 12. Repefic aspects tule tomorrow aecord- [mg Yo natrology, which veads o the | wtirs kindly promise for the next 4 hours Under this planetary rule the ele should benefit sinee 1 Indicates & ve newed futerest i spiritual matters Young ns well ay old will awaken to W perception of the finer things of life 1L as forecust, for world everts will enconrage thought Lurge hoquests and generous gifts are foretold for hospltals and other fnstitu- tions founded for human welare, Meotherly love should be eultivated tn year us never before, the seers because events will (et eavilt- ning = not an ansplelons time A serious faues. for Neptune s Mo place that encourages doceit wd even hypocrlay The lunatton of this month, on the Hat o ds vead an one of the most impors | tant lunations of the year and 5 the Precisor af sevious trouble far Qreat Huttaln, according o astrologers. Crent winds it heavy storms may beexpected i the United States next month - when earthquakes and - tidal wives also are foretold . The commercial ontlook for Amertoa ndicates amneting prosperity and great Merense of forelgn (rade Persons wWhose bivth date ft 15 have the augury of w falily good year iy Which they benefit through bustness enterprise Children born on that day probably WL ba quick in mind and ablo to wake | 1 the best s of apportunities, W . | e (o s of developty Pt for Tndtan woods, e Tadian | Luovernment 1y sending w Gade commis - Al fo many ports of e waild, toreluny THEN HOW HE PULLED AND KICKED AND SCRAMBLED. big hind feet and pawing at the fee with his front feet. “I wish I hadn't tried to play a joke on Jerry Muskrat!” sobbed Peter. “1 wish I had never left the dear Old Briar-patch. Mrs, Peter will never know what happened to me. I neyer an pull myself out on that slippfry fce, even if it doesn’t break, Oh, dear! 1 would almost rather be caught by Reddy Fox than to be drowned. I hate water! Yes, I do: I hate water! I wish 1 could swim like Jerry Muskrat. 1 wish somebody would come along and pull me out. Oh, dear! 1 know Ican't get out myself.” But all the time Peter was Kkicking and scrambling and continually bre: tng the ice in front of him and movin: a little nearer shore, although he didn't realize this. But he was growing more and more tired. It was getting where 1t seemed to htm he just couldn't strug any longer. Despatr gripped him He was almost veady to give up. Yet all the time down inside there was hope. He wouldn't have admitted that he had any hope, but it was there just the same. It was this wee bit of hope that kept him Kicking and struggling. But the shore was a long way oft. Really, It was a very short distance, as distanee goes—only a few feet—but {t was a long way for one strugaling in water “1 just ean't try any more!™ sobbed Peter. And just then one of his Kiek- ing hind feet touched something bard He thrust down his other hind toot 1 also touched something hard and fivm, Peter found that he could stand on it with his front feet out on the e 1t was an old sunken log that Pe was on. He had found tC just tn the niek of thme, It gave him a chance 10 vest A bit. 1€ gave him a chance to get his breath, 1t gave him a chance 1o look about and see just where he was Just off to one side a little wav was a good-steed stk froeen W the tee Peter could just touch it with his tore paws. 10 only he conld Nie fo PAWS Over It he might be ab) |THE CHEERFUL CHERUB I find that woe s never quite As final as | fenred. Thus s [ Flounder throvgh my life 1 f;\ee\ a ll!t\{e B q ered. a He would have known | Peter kept trying to climb | Instead use an astri Here is one: One-half ater. one teaspoonful borate lof soda, twenty drops | quillaya. twenty d | dez. "one teaspoont P> | | pint_ 1o Con BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Perhaps, now that his g on that old log, He drew a 1 himself out. | hind feet W he could long breath It was m forw aws pulled and kicked and rambied! In a minute he was out. He was out where the ice was thick enough to hold him any one move more quic did in getting off that ice onio the bank. rd enough for mm ver that stick. (Cooyr 1098 Winter Salad. An appetizing salad. especially suited for luncheon or supper. is made as ¢ lows: Mix together cold boiled rice and half the quantity of cooked canned peas. Moisten thoroughly with any good boiled salad dressing, in which a sprinkling of granulated sugar is added. Heap the mixture over lettuce leaves if lettuce is at hand, or else garnish with pimento olives cut in halves. g Banana Custard Pie. Pare and then rub through a fine sieve cnough bananas to measure one cupful. Place in a mixing bowl and add one- half a cupful of sugar, one-fourth tea- spoonful of grated lemon rind and the juice of one lemon. Stir to mix and then add slowly, beating to mix one cup- ful of milk, the yolk of one egg. one whole egg and one-fourth teaspoonful of nutmeg. Beat to and then pour {into a plate lined with plain pastry. BRake in a slow oven for 25 minutes and then cool. Use the white of ihe egg land half a glassful of jelly to make & meringue. Date Pudding. | Dissolve one and one-half cupfuls of | brown sugar in one and cne-half cup- { fuls of warm water. Set this to one | side and make the following batter: Sift | together one cupful of flour. one scant | cupful of white sugar. one teaspoonful { of baking powder and a pinch of salt {ful of chopped dates. one ha up {of nuts and one teaspoonful of vanilia. Pour this batter in and-water | strup, but do not s {sorve with whipy { | cream. ““I Like to See a Man Proud of His Home and so live in it that his home will be prowd of him.” —LINCOLN. Pride of home bespeaks good citizenship=and othes able qualitics—tound in abundance in Washiaton, and expressed in many cases through the paints and var- the Butler lesive nishes sold by Flyan Co. Emancipate tloars, walls, woodwork, ete., trom the ravages of wear, by using these rejuvenators: 1 JOR VA “ol™ FIL RNISH ROGERS BRUSHING LACQUER Far ¥ . *NO LUSTER® WALL FINISH For Dateoan Walis INTERION Fih GLOSS For K¢ Plenty of Pasking Space Butler-Flynn Paint Co. W dalosale and Retail 609 C Street Frawklin 181

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