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WOM Wide ; BY MARY The gray chiffon frock for informal evening wear is regarded with decided favor at present, and since gray and Fellow have come into such fashion of iate these gray chiffon frocks provide THIS IS ONE OF THE FROCKS WORN IN THE SOUTH. FLANNEL IS THE FABRIC OF THE ! SUIT. CHECKED SILK THE FABRIC OF THE BLOUSE. an excellent background for topaz, Jewelry. An answer to the question, “Is gray | becoming to me?" is difficult, because of the wide range of grays to be chosen from and the different effects these grays produce. There are grays that, whether you realize it or not, possess " & tinge of yellow about them. There | are blue grays and pink grays and pure | grays—ihat is, tones that are produced | merely by the blending of white and | black without any actual color admix- !l! all. Foolish is the man who quarrels ture whatever. "usually looks best in one of the yellow- | ish grays. Fair-skinned women with BEAUTY CHATS Tisste Builders. ] A lot of women grow old bgeause | they starve their skins. If the“body | e proper amount of fat, and if it thy circulation of blood, the vill be supplied automatically | with everything is needs to repair waste, | and nothing need be done about it ex- cept 1 keen the pores clean so they can carry out their function of el tion. | But if the circulation is poor, or the | bio.d is aenamic, or the body has not t the skin will literally be | shed. A “dry "skin means s and pallor, therefore, if your | ¥ not feeding the skin as well as uld be fed you will have to feed f by the use of cold creams re tissue builders. | ue builders consist of animal fats | or vegetable oils. Mineral oil is no good | exzept as a cleanser, and for that pur-! is marvelous. I find the| tiscue building cold cream is v taking my ordinary cold cream | b and substituting almond or ! clive oil or a mixture of both for the | mineral ol of the other formula. IN repezt it in case you haven't got it. White wax, 1 ounce; spermacetl 1 formu The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyrigbt. 1928.) il Ay d il will Wil E of win “41 West Indian witchorafl Frepation JoAt, tary sviavor kname ree-umd sloth e Gl Uie woale, i siowly Gorats Colivgiste aegive (ah ) Mount b ) Trivutary of the Amswm 1oward Vg machine Anzwer 1o Yesterday's Puszle, GRAY | Bishops, statesmen, learned pm!e&tors.| The woman of olive or sallow skin |thing opposed to morals. as a graft that | two AN'S PAGE Range of Grays Offered MARSHALL. A clear tone of gray hair can frequently wear the pinky grays extremely well But it is hard to lay down rules. The best way is to try the effect of the ma- terial against your skin. Gray is supposed to prefer blondes— {and the pinker and whiter the blonde the better. There is a general feeling— or at least has been—that “les belles anglaises” across the English Channel can carry off this tone better than the daughters of France. Beige for French women and gray for English women— and with Americans the question is often settled by observing whether they incline to the typical Latin coloring or the more florid, fairer type. But just as a matter of variety several of the French dressmakers have been push- |ing gray for several seasons now—and | they have discovered the fact of the almost universal becomingness of gray. This week's home dressmaker's help consists of directions and diagram for making tassels. Now that tassels are being used again to trim the new frocks you ought to find this quite helpful. ‘There is a big difference between the cost of the tassels in the shops and the | silk needed to make them. If you are interested please send me a stamped; self-addressed envelope and I will send | the little “help” to you | «Covvright. 1 { Williom Milweits | It is said of that young killer who so ! shocked the public mind. that he liked |to read a thriller of the blood and thunder kind. Tales of crime he found | alluring, and he reveled in such book: and he got a kick alluring from the yamns of sleuths and crooks. So the| moralists are saying that such stories | should be banned: young folk read | them. then go slaying. leaving tombs on every hand. But the great and good are reading just such stories all the time: ; famous lawyers, when not pleading. are | refreshed by tales of crime. Presidents of this great Nation. men whose prestige | must prevail, have expressed their ad- | miration for the Sherlock type of tale. | find the sleuth-hound yarn a friend, and they are the chronic guessers as to how that yam will end. “Who in| thunder was the killer?” great men ask, with puzzled frown, while the sleuths, from post to pillar. chase the suspects up and down. One thing's sure in all| these stories. punishment will follow crime: and they will exalt the glories of Dame Justice all the time. If the moron reads of sinners in the hot detective tale. he must learn they're never win- ners, but will surely land in jail. He must learn that crime is futile and the criminal must fall. if his mind, that's dark and brutal. can but grasp a truth with the book that pictures sin as a cannot win. WALT MASON. (Convright. 1928 1 BY EDNA KENT FORBES ]"\;EA\'IA\'(‘- STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17. 1928. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Reistered U. S. Patent Ofice. ‘Wnen the fellow with the trained bear entertained the children on the streets of the National Capital? NANCY PAGE Expose a Child to Table Manners. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. When Joan'’s mother was home, she commented upon her young daughter's delightful table manners. delighted. “You know, Sis,” she said, “we did it more through example than through talking or nagging. Children do get o tired of being nagged. Finally they shut their ears and never listen But Peter and I talk things over and then we try very hard to do things the way they should be done. It's hard on Peter and me sometimes, but we think | the plan has worked. agreed Joan's mother. Little 3-year old Joan knew that her napkin should be only partial'y unfold- ed when <he put it on her lap. She “It surely has,” knew that she should wipe her mouth | before she tock a sip of milk. Her ounce: olive cil or almond oil or the combined, enough to make 5 | ounces; rose water, 1i; ounces; borax, ! 30 grains; perfumed oil, 15 drops. An even more nourishing cream is made with lanoline, which is a greasy substance extracted from sheep's wool. Personally, I hardly ever recommend | this, though it can be used in mflsj formuia, for if there is any tendency | toward a growth of hair on the face, ' lanoline will encourage it. | this formula as given will grow hair, | yet the cold cream can be massaged | well into the pores, and it will build | ud the tissues and make the skin look | younger and firmer. As you know it| should be applied after the face hui been washed with hot water and soup. | L S—If you feel that you must ulei the halr off your lip in a mass, instead | of using tweezers for separate hairs, | you will find a depilatory expensive | and more easily handled than a wax. 1 suppose you understand that remov- ing all the hair in a mass means that the fine hair that does not show now, will get the courser after a time. Even though it is more trouble to use the tweezers, it is to be preferred, as the growth of hair is not encouraged. i ol SE S kil ol =g + W il e Bird of Hawall Within Carrion parrot. Vensel. Docvor (ab.). Blate (ab). Play upon words. Ontained Note of Guido's scale. Magnificent Market place, Down. Interlaced Metric unit Negative Printer's measure. Jupanese coin Portuguese colony. Hebrew month, Note of the scale Bebylonlan deity Lesn over Mountain in Crete Piend Capable of cultivation, Mouth of & voleano Letver & 551 (Jwman) Kew England Blate (sh ), . Concerning Bite Eternity Fequest. Note of scale 1100 (Romsn) Annoy. Fien BlxAd vessel Conjunction Mohsimmedan dignitary Form of address (ab ) Futher Negative prefix Uncle Peter had quoted Chaucer's de- | scription of a well bred lady. “Hir over- | lipps wyped sh> so clen~ that in hir coppe was no ferthing scene of grece when she dronken hadde hir draughte.” Joan loved that bit of poetry. Joan knew, too, that she should fold her nap- kin when she was through with it. If she ate at Grandma’s, she never folded it, because she was just visiting. Table etiquets Nancy beiieved paper. inclomaz Yelope. a Write to he amped selt- for her deafiet care of this n table et THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Saturday, February 18. Until late, in the day the planetary government is rather threatening, ac- cording to mstrology, but the evening should be fortunate There is an especially good sign for whatever has to do with music or en- tertainment of any sort. ‘Theaters should benefit through un- usual and unexpected chanuels which presage return o better dramas. As the day advances the tide of ro- mance will rise, the seers forecast It should be a fairly fortunate wed- ding day, for it indicates the persistence | of love, even though wealth may be slow in coming ‘The effects of the conjunction of Ju- piter and Uranus in late January may now be noticeable. Women should cultivate intellectual charm at this time, when the stars are supposed to enable men to discover all the superficlalities of the opposite sex Decline of the vogue of the merely pretty girl s foretold, and all who would be belles will be wise o eschew many modern habits that betoken the vacant mind, astrologers declare Under this rule of the stars diseases of the mouth may be numerous and the teeth may cause trouble All through this month and March exceptional weather may be expected Persons whose birth dale it 15 have the sugury of & year of travel and reul pleasure. The young will Nigure in ro- mance, CConyrient 107K Kiug of Bashsn Toward Chusldean city, Nancy was | was one of the things | Addressed en. | FORTY-THREE YEARS WAS HINGTONS FAVORITE WOrienta Bra Coffee WASHINGTON, D. C, FEATURES. P o i Praises Methods of Modern Fathers and Mothers. Parents— 1928 Style. DorothyDix Work Harder Than Those of Previous Generations { to Understand and Help—Applying | 1840 Ideas to 1928. i ; { I)ROBABLY there is no other class that comes in nowadays for such wholesale | lambasting as parents. Every tie father and mother show their heads | the reformers and the preachers and the judges of the courts and the general | public heave a brick at them. i We have it continually dinned in our ears that parents are responsible for | about all that goes wrong in the world; that they are to blame for the excesses 1 of the younger generation; that the modern mother is too busy playing bridge and going to clubs, and the father too absorbed in his business, to look after their | children: that nobody seems to have the backbone to compel obedience by unruly | youngsters, and that parents nowadays are a poor, weak, shiftless lot who lie | down on their jobs, and who are in nowise to be compared with the wise and noble and splendid parents of the past. I wonder how much of this is true? I wonder if parenthood has really slumped. and if the fathers and mothers of today are really doing their duty ni less well by their children than their own fathers and mothers did by them? I think not. I belleve that there has ncver been any time in the world's | history when men and women realized so deeply their responsibility as parents as they do now. I do not believe there ever was a day when fathers and mothers | devoted so much time and thought as they do now to trying to understand their | | children, and steer them into the right path. This is the first age in which the child ever was a problem. Before that | it was an accident. If it was healthy and strong, and well formed and well favored, and had a normal mind, well and good. The parents rejoiced at their good fortune. But if the child was sickly and died, or if it was deformed, or a moron, the | parents simply wondered why they had been so mysteriously afflicted. They ‘:il(‘\'c;olnok any blame to themselves, or felt that there was anything they could | o about it. But that is not the way with modern parents. They feel that they must move heaven and earth to give their children a fair break in life, and they make any sacrifice to do so. All of i.s know poor fathers and mothers who are working. | overtime and skimping on food and going shabby and doing without every luxury they crave in order to have Tommy's adenoids out, or Jimmy's bowlegs corrected. | or Mary’s teeth straightened, or little Jenny sent to some school where experts | wili fan the feeble flame of her intellect into a light that will enable her to | stumble through life. OF course, you may say that the parents of the past could not have done these | things for their children, that it is only modern science and surgery that | have enabled us to outwit Nature and correct her mistakes, but our grandparents | wouldn't have wasted any money in any case on merely beautifying their children They considered that looks were unimportant, and they would never have taken the trouble to consider the importance that a pleasing personal appearance has | on one’s success in life. Particularly a woman's. Those of us who are mi ddle-aged can pear testimony to our parents’ casual attitude toward us. We were looked upon as merely little animals to be fed and | kept clean and played with when we were gcod and amusing, and spanked to | bed when we were bad and tiresome. Nobody made any effort to understand | s or to find out if we had any aptitude or talent that should be developed. | But now a baby s psychoanalyzed from the time it is born, and its anxious | { parents, b‘:nc}!]ng over dm;i crib, study themselves blue in the face trying to | pret its howls and decide whether they are a ¥ | | counter or have some occult s: 7 4 e o THttment When o boy arrived at the time when he had to choose his lifew | old-fashioned parents cou e him no suggestions absut what he showd g 1 r‘z‘A:‘lhlh&lmodrré\‘ parents are right thore with the dope when they ate confronted v S problem. They have all of Junior's strong points and we ints | neatly card indexed and Teady for his use. H T | The modern mother is castigated cause she doesn’t enslave herself to her | children. ~ You often hear a woman say self-righteously: “T don't know what the world is coming to, the way mothers do rcw. When I had little children T never left them. night or day. to go anywhere, and I always rocked my babies 1o slecp, and held my children's hands after tliey went to bed until they dozed off: but now the mothers just put the poor little things in their beds and turn | down the lights and go to the movies.” _And these mothers, who immolated thcmselves on the altar of their | children. simply snort wiih disgust when you teii them that it is bad for a baby 1o rock it. and that it makes a child wakeful to excite it with bedtime stories, and that the modern mother who goes about to places of entertalnment and keeps her place in society {5 & better mother than she was because she fits herself to be her children’s companion instead of degenerating into merely a nursemaid, For it doesn't t friend and counselor | respect who have ke children long to get to the place where they need a d guide, and only those mothers compel their ch! 4 1p with things and who have not suffered thems s to s. Children will Usten to parents who are up to date, but | are a generation behind the times. | PERHAPS there are few parents now who eiiforce obedience on their children in the old. heavy parent style: “Do as I say, or I shall turn you out of doors!” But, after all. is slavish obedience such a virtue? Its effect on the weak-willed was to kill every particle of initiative in them and to foredoom them to failure in life. And even on the strong-willed it could only be enforced as long as the child was physically afraid of its parents. After that they had no hold upon him. § | It seems to me that the modern parents who reason with their children and 0 get their point of view are far better fathers and mothers than the old | tyrants who forced their wiils on a helpless child and arrogated to themselves the right to decide that child’s life; who picked out the husbands and wives for their daughters and sons. and forced boys to follow careers they hated. It is | only modern parents who are big enough and broad enough to gr their | children the right of self-determination | | | So I think that the modern parents arc an improvement upon the old. | At any rate. the only parents that I know whe are making a mess of their Job | | are those who are trying to appiy the 1840 methods to 1928 youngsters. | | DOROTHY DIX. | Coyrieht MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. e The Shampoo. of soap on vour halr: always use n It s not the occasional visit to a | 19X, 503D for the shamwoo. beauty parlor that keeps milady youth- also a tonic for scanty. olly hair may ful and pretty, but it is the regular :’)"m'n;:‘l;;‘;‘vf‘;‘l‘fimfig}n:::;fi! ln&mdh’n( | care that she bestows on self-improve- 7 e soap pow- ment in her own home. The fittle | SCFed: one-haif teaspoonful borax, one- | commonplace details of the totlet, like fourth ounce sal tartar. one-cighth ounce tincture cantharides, one- | washing the face, manicuring the hnndsj ;lxlr;lh ougcc carbonated ammonia, one- !and brushing the hatr, are more im- | Dalf cup bay rum and three quarts boil- lmrunl o the 1orz run than profes- | 108 water. Melt the soap and borax sional treatments taken now and then. |1 the water, remove from the fre, | The thoroughness and intelligence with | €001 slightly and stir in the other in- | which these sim| beauty rites are pe ‘g(redlems. ‘This soap may be put into formed are of greater moment than | POities and kept for weeks. Only a lit- most_women realize tle is needed for cach shampoo. This is particularly true of the care | Whenever possible, soft water should | ! of the hair. The average girl or woman | D¢ used for washing the hair. 1If your | | washes her hair twice a_month. Others ;‘“‘” supply is hard, catch rain w | wash theirs oftener. ‘The shampoo is, | for the purpose or use boiled | therefore, an important part of milady’ tilled water. This will prevent | beauty program and she should le 1028 formation of sticky soap curd on the | what 15 the best method to use. Some- | Balr. Another way o get rid of this I times she 13 not so careful s she should | Surd is to e the Julrvnnr{ haif a iemon |be in the selection of a scap or in|IN the rinsing water. Before using the | rinstng outthe lather. ~One of my |lemon, however, wash off all the soap | readers reports that she has been using | YOU can. Rinse Mm:‘h‘;lr again in clear a hard-water washing soap for her | Whter after using the lemon shampoo, with the result that her hatr | hair by rubbing it between has beeome faded and brittle. ‘This | toWels or shake 1t in the sun | sort of soup 15 good for washing clothes, wCoaviiaht, 1998 ) but not for the hair, as it contal too k- . { much horax. A little borax, however, 35 | Crack excess-fare trains have been | helpful, s 4t softens hard water and jput inte operation on the new Rome- | { makes the hair flutty. to-Naples ratlroad | |1 15 & good plan to make your own | shumpoo sonp, 50 that you may know s b a A 23 ’ | €S Some- | that it is pure ‘The simplest kind of thing Wew | shampoo may be mude by grating some f r a dime | castile sonp @ld melting it to a ilquid n hot water. A nutmeg grater is handy I'1o use for ro@eing a dry cake of soap o powder. Of course, never rub u cake HE smacksome savor of succulent ham- the subtle delicacy of alluring spices all blended into the thrill of a brand new flavor, ‘That's what you get in every can of Underwood Deviled Ham. The new size, and often the most convenient, costs only ten cents, Larger sizes 25cand 40c. Try Underwood's for sandwiches and wherever & recipe calls for ham, ‘ Bend for FREK Cook Book ' of 70 Underweod Recipes 62 Walnut St,, Watertown, Mass. WM. UNDERWOOD CO. 10¢ CANS IN CARTONS OF 6 Al 25¢ and 400 sises n Dry the | warmed Deviled Hd.m The STYLE POST is the marker on the road to being smart. Rolled Gold. With daily additions being made to the ficld of gold jewelry, there is a new bracelet of rolled gold and silver which is particularly conspicuous for its smartness. An attractive pattern is made by al- ternating the gold and silver groups which are perpendicular to each other. Two metals make a combination which is pleasing in itself and which blends particularly well with the subtle grege (gray-beige) color used in silks and | sheer woolens. (Copyright. 1928.) nY Monday is the day we go back to work, after a week end of rest and recreation. It seems blue berause it marks a transition from doing what we | wanted to do to what we must do, whether we like it or not. For all intents and purposes, you ! hcsfln your job fresh every Monday and it takes time to get warmed up to the task, to fall back in the groove, to fit the harness on the calloused soots. You haven't becn out long enough to get homesick for your work, to attack it with a will. as you do after a long | vacation of uncomfortable trins, mos- | ouitoes and primitive living. The short i week end vacation is only a teaser. On everv Monday vou are in the plight of the man with sore fest who i<tops to rest. So lonz as he ke~ps go- irg h> doesn’t mind it so much. But after a brief rest, not sufficiently long to heal the bruise. he finds it next to impossible tn stand on his feet. Monday is 2 blue day bacruse it is the dav of adiustment. It is neither recreation nor work. ‘The b'ue rart is dus to the emotional llet down. It represents the emstional || Lessons in English BY W GORDON Words often misused: Do not say “I | it was they.” { nounce pik-a-yun, i as in “pick.” a as in “ask,” u as in “unit," accent last syllable. Often misspelled: Generally: two I's Synonyms: Extinguish, subdue, stific, | thought it was thm.” Say, “I thought | | " often mispronounced: Picavune. Pro- | WHY Wi DO WHAT WE DO . K. THOMSOMN, Ph. D. tate of mind after any period of ex- citement. These thrilling moments we to keep us happy and con- but thore are always the biues for them. You can't have the mountains of emotional excitement without the vallevs of emotional de- pression and the blues. The two are inscparable Of ccurs>. the let down is in pro- portion to the height of the excita ment whicn precede-s it. just as the it of a_mountain is dependent on Tt will alz0 make a difference whether 11" YOUF WOTK OF positivery despise | better flavor and more tender. | makes & most nutritious breakfast dish | Nutrition Nuggets. smother, put out Word study 'se a word three times and it is yours” Let us increase our ‘The combination of grape and orange’| vocabulary by mastering one word each juice, using about one-quarter grape | dav. Today’s word: Sumptuousiy: lux- juice and the rest orange juice, will be | uriously. ~“The room was sumptuously found a good change for breakfast. In | decorated. addition to bring v:);cel;)en: in na;'or.g the tonic qualifies of the fruit juices 2 and their mineral content have @ very | Easy Salad Dressing. beneficial effect on the system. | Mix one-half a teaspoonful of mus- Do not be afraid to make use of the |tard with one tablespoonful of sugar, . canned fisn products. They are high in one tablespoonful of flour, one-fourth nutritive value and their convenience|teaspoonful of cayenne pepper and a makes them almost a necessity in pres- | little salt. And the yolks of two eggs ent-day housekeeping. Most of the can- | beaten, one-half a cupful of vinegar, ned fish contain some jodin that is val- | one-fourth cupful of water and three uable in conteracting a tendency toward | tablespoonfuls of cream and a small goiter. During the Lenten season when | pjece of butter. Cook in a double boiler meat substitutes are desired and where | until thick. fresh fish is difficult to obtain, canned fish should have wider use. i in Two Weeks! | 'member ‘when roasting meat that the oven should b> very hot when the| meat is first put in. If you have an| oven regulator, 475 to 500 degrees is the | required temperature. This quick heat| seals the fibers of the meat so that the | julces cannot escape: makes the meat n{ After | the first 15 to 25 minutes, the heat| should be reduced to about 350 degrees | to finish cooking Old-fashioned milk or cream toast and a very simple one to serve whenever a quick breakfast is desired. The chil- dren as well as grownups occasionally | will tire of the regulation breakfast| cereals. place. | Finnan haddie is a smoked haddock. Smoked fish are somewhat concentrated 100?. due to the fact that a good deal| of the moisture has been removed in| the smoking process. Therefore, the fish should be soaked or cooked in a| liquid, such as miik or water, in order to freshen it and to put back some of | the water. The finnan haddie if cooked | slowly in a mixture of equal parts of | milk and water for about 25 minutes| will be found tender and excellent Xn! flavor. Served with baked potatoes it} makes on excellent luncheon:or break- | fast dish. Finnan haddie should always | be cooked in this way before it is| creamed, scalloped or used in any of the number of other recipes. i The end of a sirloin steak should be ground through the meat chopper and | can then be used in the making of | American chop suey. casserole of rice | with chopped meat, some of the stuffed | pepper or tomato mixtures, etc. Thi end is usually rather tough, and when| d and served in this way it can| be utilized to the best advantage. ‘This can be made to take its| o crave fruit every day, and every: let them have California fig: it, never fear! Nor ever fear to rich, fruity syrup as plentifully for it. They give it to tiny babie: or feverish. And to older as sour stomach, bile, or any seen. One spoonful of the f twenty-four hours the whole and in the pink of condition. curring spells of constipation further apart; fig syrup will need of harsher measures to bowels give this remarkable product with the confidence you could have : in any tonic—and with far mores Crumb 7Griddle Cakes. | Soak one and one-half cupfuls of ! stale break crumbs in one and one-half | cupfuls of milk, add three well beate eggs, then haif a cupful of flour sifted Wwith one-half a teaspoonful of salt an four teaspoonfuls of baking powder. \ made, and see if your children, too, don't respond in almost magical manner to the invig It isn't dispositions that make some urally active and athletic, and others | what they eat, and what becomes of in ten, a boy or girl who eats lots of | on the go—up and gaining. Your: regular and thorough. happy results! Make the two-§ week test so many parents havel HOUSE COFFEE The Flavor is Roasted In! Any oungsters nat- so listless. It's it! Nine times fruit is always children may not meal. No matter; syrup. They'lllove . let them have this as Nature signals who are fretful children as often sluggishness is syrup, and within system is cleansed P prpy e Add one tablespoonful of melted fat. Beat well. Drop by spoonfuls onto a hot greased griddle. Cook on one side. When full of bubbles and dry on the cdges, turn and brown the other side. . Steamed Brown VBre-ndA Mix one ecupful of rye or white flour with one cupful of graham flour and one cupful of cornmeal and two tea- spoonfuls of baking soda and one tea- spoouful of salt. Add three-fourths cupful of molasses and one and three- fourths cupfuls of sour milk or butter- milk and mix thoroughly. Half & cup- ful of chopped nuts or raisins may be added if liked. Fill well greased molds about two-thirds full to allow for ex- pansion. Put on well greased covers and steam for about three hours. Clean and Healthy WITH CUTICURA Guaranteed pure imported POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL Sold Everywhere Afler * the lentre Treat yoursell to a glass of Weleh's Grape Juice. Cool and refreshing, it is good for you, too. Because it is pure juice of fresh grapes, Welch's is rich in frait nourishment, min- eral salts, energy value, And it tastes richly of the ripe grapes, whether you drink it straight, blended or diluted. At the soda fountainor at hame, be sure you have Weleh's. Once you've tasted Weleh's no other grape juice will do. Welch's Grape Juice orating influence of the fruity goodness they can have in such agreeable and inno- cent form as genuine California fig syrup. The only care you need exercise is in purchasing this is California fig syrup, and it is product. The genuine “California™ syrup that vou should ask for (always found in any drugstore) in the Renerous sixty-cent bottle. Young Johnnie McGroucher, usually a last- minute arrival at breakfast, hears rumors that this is Pillsbury pancake morning. And a rumor is enough to bring him running! Here's one noyrishing breakfast the children will eat without persuasion = Pillsbury’s pancakes. They're goud for them = light, tender, delicious, easy to digest. And they're amazingly asy to make—sunply add water or milk to Plisbury's Pancuke Flour and bake! Pillsbury’s - Pancake Flour ““““"‘Mw,nuh-mhd.