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WOM N’S PAGE. Instructions for Duplex Crochet BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. €NTIRE TABLE RUNNERS CAN BE FOUNDATICN crochet is really a crochet for there a foundation grocheted first, and then motifs which are sewed to this foundation. As will be seen the foundation may be solid or openwork crochet, but it is only the latter that supplies the effect of lace. which, by the way, was the first form that crochet took. Filet crochet makes a fine background purface. It is not made as ordinary filet crochet, for the posts or bars are made of chain stitches and not of dou- ble crochet. The latter would not have sufficient firmness or “body” for the sturdy crochet of the motifs. The mesh foundation is easy to fash- ton. Crochet a chain. the Duplex Applique is dation. Make one extra chain stitch, turn and into each of the stitches ex- cept that next to the hook make a single crochet stitch (not a slip stitch). Crochet a chain of 12. 16. 18 or 20 stitches, according to the size of the thread and the size of the square de- sired Fasten the chain with a slip stitch into a stitch in the crochet al- ready made, skipping as many stitches #s will allow for one side of the square to be formed by the chain. Crochet in half-stitch up this chain for as many stitches as will form an- other equal side to the square, of which the remaining stitches in the chain form the other two sides. Crochet & chain of stitches that will equal three ides of a square. and fasten with a slip stitch into the foundation rows of crochet as before. fore to end of row. Make a chain as st the beginning of the first row of meshes and form another mesh row. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1928.) 1. Those who offer thelr services. Cretan mountain. Either. Owing. Btreet Cut off Member of Parliament Trickied through. Carry Row Ex| Ocear Note of the seale Primitive inhabitant of Japan. Army officer (ab.) Devise something new Fragment Com point Philippine mountain. Midday Resting on Down. Se ab, (ab). SRHRRE 3910 89 B9 A9 1t 1t 1 1t ot bt 0t o8- m Southern State (ab) Not any Journey Nickname of & boy Liquor Breaking spart Observe Fondle Inclosure Pluto West Indian witcheraft Snakelike fish SRRl s as s — ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE clalm sIlelRolA length | equalling the desired width of the foun- | as be- | | Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. July 30, 1858—Washington has Iast begun to win back her lost repul tion for law and order. The ~ ington correspondent of the St. Louis Republican has sent the following com- munication to that paper: “Washington is about regaining her former good name, if a vigorous prose- cution and punishment of the violators lof the public peace be any earnest of that fact. One murderer has paid the penalty demanded by a violated law and | | | | | | MADE OF DUPLEX CROCHET, BOTH | AND DESIGN i Continue, row after row until the entire foundation is completed | Finish the edge by crocheting a chain the length of the side of a square at the edge. Fasten at this point with a| slip stitch. Crochet back over this| chain making three picots. Continue | ound the foundation strip, and the | meshed foundation or latticed founda- tion is completed. | An attractive foundation is made b; having the ends graduated. For in- stance, if the width of the foundation | is to be 22 meshes, start with but two meshes in the first row, increase two {on each side for the second row, mak- ing it six meshes wide. Increase each succeeding row by two meshes on each end until the row has 22 meshes in it | Then do not increase any more but continue to make the foundation as long | as it needed before decreasing to make the foundation as long as it needed be- | fore decreasing to make a finish cor- responding to the opposite end. Edge | | with the chain and picot as described. | This finish is particularly good for | dresser and bureau scarfs, table run-| | ners, ete. i The motifs may be of any preferred | sort. They are made entirely free from, {or regardless of the meshed formation, |and when completed are sewed to the mesh in such arrangement as the | worker chooses. 1 would suggest that ‘each end have an arrangement of motifs for a runner, that a square have & border or corner motifs only, and that an antimasassar have the motifs in the center chiefly. Very few motifs are | needed, three or four leaves and a full | blown flower with a bud or two is {enough. A bunch of grapes and a few leaves, or cherries and foliage make good grouping. Do not use many motifs ‘bul have them in artistic reserve. | ! (Copyright. 1928.) : . Once again. 7. Indefinite article. Upon. . Japanese statesman. Spigot International language. . Italian river The Galvanic Process For Cleaning Sterling | 11, due to proionged absence, sterling has been long unuscd, one of the simplest and most effective methods of removing tarnish from silver of bright | Bin is that method known as the | %nl'.unlc process. Far those persons who ave a large quantity of sterling this method is a decided time and labor| saver and, when correctly used, proves most satisfactory To obtain the best results in using the galvanic process the sterling should | turned | excite | be placed in an aluminum pan in which there is the proper amount of bolling water, salt and soda. TE€ proportion | is one teaspoon of soda and one of salt to one quart of boiling water. Let the sterling remain n the solution for 2 | few minutes A chemical action then takes place which removes all tarnish After taking the sillver out of this solution, wash it | somp suds, rinse in clear water and rub | off ‘with & chamols or polishing cloth | “This is one of the easiest | remembered that this solution removes | {all oxide and if the sterling has a_gray | or oxidized finish it cannot be employed {1t an article, such as a vase or candle- | stick, 1s oo large to he submersed in | the pen it can be done in halves, first | the bottom part and then the top part | The galvanic sterling should be used carefully and insiructions should bhe followed out diligently 1f it s to be & Buccess While passing some children swinging | on 8 Jamppost, John Temple, aged 84, of Kensington, England, was knocked down by one of them, and as a resuit died from heart failure and bronchitis, ac- in warm water and | ways 1o | clean *bright” sterling but it must be | method of eleaning | | virtuous.” celerated by a fractured leg, according to the report, another will soon follow in his steps to the spirit world. A third is now under trial with the current setting in strongly toward a conviction of murder in the first degree Besides these, the active force of the national penetentiary has of late been largely increased. In a word, our court and juries seem to be posting up {he criminal ledgers and making the final settlements with those who & few months ago held this community in terror_ by thelr lawless outrages, and caused our city to be spoken against not only in the halls of Congress, but throughout the Union. The day of rech- oning has come and the law will be vindicated. Let evil doers who flock to the national metropolis beware.” The above dispatch gives a pleture of a gratifying change that is taking place here. A few months ago it is well known that it was almost impossible to convict a criminal fn our court, and lawlessness was conséquently fearfully prevalent in this city. The press of the country generally was loud in its denunciation of Washington as a law- less city Public opinion and congressional no- tice of this unfortunate condition of affairs subsequently drove the court to a change of policy. The change is now being heralded abroad and the bad reputation which Washington deserved- 1y bore but a short time ago is giving place to a fairer one throughout the Union Although a limited number of me- chanics and laborers has been employed this season on the Patent Office exten- sion, the work on the north front is progressing satisfactorily. The walls have been erected from the foundations so far as to complete the second story and in some places the third story is in course of construction. The out- side wall ori the north front is of marble corresponding with that used in the onstruction of the east and west wings RY CAPINI VEQUIN. % Look at the Skin on the Back of Your | Hand— | | 15 Is it very fine, close-grained in | texture? 2. Is 3. It coarse? 4. Is 5. Is 6. Is it very course, tough-looking? is medium, neither fine nor it stretched taut? it very loose? it brownish in color? Answers. 1. Great refinement of character shows in all your actions. Anything coarse or ugly jars upon you, makes you really unhappy. You have deli~ cate sensibilities, a gentle nature and exquisite taste. 2. There is nothing delicate about you. You possess none of the fine feel- ings, but are perfectly happy in your own sphere, which is a hard, rough, somewhat vulgar one. You are a schemer and a battler. 3. You have a fine balance between the two extremes of super-refinement and vulgarity. This gives you good mental poise, refined taste, excellent judgment. You can be successful in | business or a profession. 4. You abhor extravagance. While you can be generous, prudence always has the upper hand. You know how to | hold onto vour money. You are level- | headed, practical and have much self- | control. 5. Talented, brilliant, enthusiastic, with a keen, quick brain, your handicap is in being too versatile and too ambi- tious. You try to do everything! You get a great deal of joy out of life. 6. Your combination of great ambi- | tion and an alert mind should carry you far. If your hand is lean, as weil as brownish, physical energy will be added and you should forge ahead to | | the very top of the ladder. (Copyright. 1928 A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOMN R. GUNN, Parable of Speckled Bird. Text: “Mine heritage Is unto me as a speckled bird: the birds round about are against her.”—Jer. 12:9. When Solomon bestowed gifts upon the birds, the hoopoes received lolzen crowns and flew away delighted with the distinction But their golden | erowns excited so much jealousy among the other birds that in” time they re- to their would-be benefactor and besought him gift which had at to take away the first 5o delighted | them This old fable explains the reference to the speckled bird in the text. The birds round about are jealous of her, jealous of her speckled and beautiful adornment.. And herein 1s a parable. Superlority is as a speckled bird to inferiority. The speckled bird of genius is apt to jealousy and dislike. Both su- perior ability and goodness tend to pro- voke antipathy and hostility The truly g.md man is a standing re- buke to the habits and practices of bad men, and usually they are intolerant of him. ¥ you would be a good man and contend for your convictions of right, you must be prepared to endure the | scorn_and sneers of those who are re- | buked by what you are and do. Indolence and self-complacency do not take kindly to energy and pros gressiveness. The dull and incapable are apt to be irritated by intellectual brilllaney and successful achievement Colton wrote: “If you want enemies, excel others; if you want friends, let others excel you.” There are excep- tions to this rule. Excellence some- | times gets itself admired and applauded But as & general thing every kind of excellence excites jealousy and invites attaeck An old writer wittily says:: “Let those who would be singular be very If you are singularly su- pertor and successful you will need to be very virtuous, for you will likely he closely scrutinized by jenlous eyes. (Copyrixht. 1928} Prices realized on Swift & Com| i cents wor pound. any 0. i, on onip cents per pound and everaged 319! —Advertisementyy WORLD FAMOUS STORIES THE VISION OF BY NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE (Nathaniel Hawthorne. 1804-1864, was an T s American_ writer of romances and, short stories. | He i3 particularly famous for his Rover The Scariet. Lotter.! and his col- lection of “Twice-Told Tales.") From my childhood I have loved to gaze into a spring. In one spot, in the spring into which I was now gazing, the gush of water violently agitated the sand—it appeared as if some llving crea- ture were about to emerge, the Naiad of the spring, perhaps, in the shape of a beautiful young woman, with a gown of filmy water-moss, a belt of rainbow droj and a cold, pure, passionless countenance. Reclining on the border of grass, where the dewy goddess should have been, I bent forward, and a pair of eyes met mine within the watery mir- ror. They were the reflection of my own.- 1 looked again--and lo!-—another face, deeper in the fountain than my own image, more distinct in all the fea- tures, yet faint as thought. The vision had the aspect of a fair young girl, with locks of pale gold. A mirthful expression laughed in the eyes and dimpled over the whole shadowy countenance, till it seemed just what & fountain would be, if. while dancing merrily into the sunshine, it should assume the shape of a woman Through the dim rosiness of the cheeks, I could see the brown leaves, the slimy twigs, the acorns, and the sparkling sand. The solitary sunbeam was diffused among the golden halr, which melted into its faint brightness. and became a glory round that head 50 beavtiful. My description can give no idea how «uddenly the fountain was thus in- habited, and how soon it was left deso- late. I breathed and there was the face! I held my breath, and it was gone! Had it passed away, or fade into nothing? 1 doubted whether it had ever been, For a long time T sat perfectly still. walting till it should reappear, and frighten it away. Was she a water- nymph? Or fairy Or had a lovely girl, with a warm heart, and lips that would bear pressure, stolen softly behind me, and thrown her image into the spring? I watched and waited, bt no vision came again. Sad and heavy, I was re- turning to the village. the church spire rose a little hill, on it a group of trees, Glory and gloom were mingled in the placid light of late aft- ernoon. I was admiring the picture when the shape of a young girl emerged from behind the clump of trees. My heart knew her; it was the vision; sut so distant and ethereal did she seem, so unmixed with earth, so imbued with the pensive glory of the spat where she was standing, that my spirlt sunk within me, sadder than before. How could I ever reacn her? pattering down upon the leaves. In a moment the air was full of brightness, each raindrop catching a portion of sunlight as it fell, and the whole gen- tle shower appearing like a mist. A rain- bow, vivid as Niagara's, was painted In the air. Its southern limb came down before the group of trees, and envel- oped the fair vision, as if the hues of heaven were the only garment for her beauty. Waen the rainbow vanished, she, who had seemed a part of it, was no longer there. Was her existence absorbed in nature's lovellest phenomenon, and did her pure frame dissolve away in the varied light? Yet, I would not despair of her return; for, robed in the rain- bow, she was the emblem of hope. ( Thus did the vision leave me, and many a doleful day followed that part- ing moment. By the spring and in the wood and on the hill and through the KEEPIN Exercising the Brain. Everybody knows that your muscles grow bby if they are not exercised. The same is even truer of your brain. in so many ways the most important organ of your body. And a mere daily dozen won't do for it either. If you do your work mainly with your hands and the big muscles of your body, you get your exercise, your physical fitness, out of your work, provided it Is a good wholesome kind of activity. A letter carrier doesn't need a dally dozen. He gets his on his daily rounds. Head workers get enough exercise for their brains as they put their minds on their work. A writer, no less than an organizer or a promoter or an inventor or an architect oT & campaign manager or a designer, is exercising bis brain, and the more 8o as his work is interest- ing, as it offers problems and the joy and interest of their solution. Exercise for exercise's sake is never completely satisfying. Pulling chest- weights is monotonous; the same encrgy spent in bowling lsn't. You inject the interest of the game. Using the play instinct to get more “kick” out of your exercise is sound rlycholnry: you put headwork and skill into the play of museles. Any job which is too much of the same thing becomes a daily grind. You want to play with your mind also But exercising your mind is a far more complicated process than exercis- ing your muscles. It means that you must cultivate interests. You find re- Jaxation from your job in your sport. Golf s a tonic because it is a whole- some outdoor play and a contest besides, and takes your mind off your work. You are more mentally fit for taking | time off. But it isn’t relaxation and certainly not dissipation that” offers a Banan | You have heard the story of the little | oy who was asked by Dhis teacher how to spell a certain word. He spelled it and the teacher responded automatically: “That's good.” The little boy tersely remarked: “Gee, tencher, | that's mor'n good: that's perfect.” X. wants to know if the banana is a good food | as this little boy did his teacher. | 'Bananas have come into their own in recent years, They used to be in dis- repute, especially for children, but that was because they were given in an un- ripe state and not thoroughly masti- cated. Thoroughly ripe bananas (when they are thoroughly ripe they have specks of brown on thelr skin) are not only very delicious, but they contaln a carbohydrate or sugar that Is one of the most ensily digested, and they are a good source of lime and iron. In a certain intestinal discase | disease—in which children digest the usual starchy foods, found that they ean digest rlkr bananas, and these are given (o the exclusfon of all other starches. Chil- Iren (and adults) suffering from ogher intestinal upsets can also take bananas when they can't take other starches Infants as young as 4 or 8 monghs can take pureed ripe bananas The caloric value of the banana, weight for weight, is higher than other fruits, so 1t 18 a splendid gaining food. For example, one banana, weighing 81 ounces, 18 100 calories, as compared 1o one fresh apple welghing 7}a ounce same number of calories . Water Drinking. E. Waler comprises about twos thirds of the body weight, It is neces- sary for all of the body fluids and secretions, and it s & part of every cell in the body: it holds the food ele. ments fn solution until they are posited where they are needed, and carries away waste products, carrectly, celinc nnot it 1s fearful that the slightest motion, or| even the flutter of my breath, might | v or woodland goddess? | Between me and | While I gazed a sudden shower came | > MENTALLY FIT BY JOSEPH JASTROW. | DIET AND HEALTH BY LULU HUNT PETERS, M. I feel like answering’ her | THE, FOUNTAIN village, at dewy sunrise, burning noon and at the magie hour of sunset, I sought her but in vain. Weeks came and went, months rolled away, and she appeared not. 1 imparted my mystery to no one, but wandered to and fro in solitude 1like one that had caught a glimpse of Heaven and could take no more joy on earth, I withdrew Into an Inner world, where my thoughts lived and breathed, and the vision in the midst of them In the middle of January I was sum- moned away. The day before my de- parture, visiting the spots which had been hallowed by the vision, I found that the spring had a frozen bosom. Most of the day was spent in preparing for the journey. About an hour after | supper, when all was in readiness, I | descended from the chamber to the sitting room to take lepve of the old clergyman and his family with | whom I roomed. A gust of wind blew out my lamp as I passed through the | entrance | According to their custom, the fam- ily were sitting in the parlor, with no | other light than what came from the | hearth. The foundation of the fire was | a large heap of tan or ground bark, | which would smoulder away with a dull warmth and no flame. There was no light, except the little that came from two half-burnt brands. But I knew the position of the old minister's armchair and also where his wife sat, with her knitting work. Grop- ing through the gloom, I found my own place. I noticed there was less room than usual, tonight, between the clergy- man’s chair and mine As people are always silent in the dark, no word was said for some time after my entrance. At times the fire threw out a brief and dusky gleam, far too faint to light up the faces in the rcom. The silence was finally inter- | rupted by a remark addressed to some one in the circle, who was called Ra- chel. 'The answer was a single word, | but in a veice that made me start and bend- toward the spot whence it came. | " Had I ever heard that sweet, low | tone? If not, why did it rouse up so | many old recollections and fill my mind with confused images of her features, who had spoken though buried in the gloom of the parlor? = Whom had my heart recognized, that it throbbed so? | T listened, to catch her gentle breath- | ing and strove, by the intg.sity of my | gaze, to picture forth a shape where | none was visible. | " Suddenly the fire blazed up with a | ruddy glow: and where the darkness | had been, there was she—the Vision of the Fountain! A spirit of radiance | only, she had vanished with the rain- | pow and appeared again in the fire- ! light, perhaps the flicker with the blaze, {and be gone. Yet, her cheek was rosy | and ifelike, and her features in the | bright warmth of the room, were even | sweeter and tenderer than my recollec- tion of them. She knew me! The mirthful expres- | ston that had laughed in her eyes and | dimpled over her countenance when 1 | beheld her faint beauty in the fountain, | was laughing and dimpling there now. | One moment, our glance mingled-~the Inext darkness snatched away that | Daughter of Light, and gave her back [to me no more! Fair ladles, there is nothing more to tell, Must the simple mystery be re- vealed, then, that Rachel was the | daughter of the village squire and had | left home for a boarding school the | morning after I arrived and returned the day before my departure? If I | transformed her to an angel it is what | every youthful lover does for his mis- tress. Therein consists tiE essence of my story. But slight the change. sweet maids, o make angels of yourselves in | some young man's heart of hearts! complete program for exercisfhg your micd. The temptations for mental dissipa- tion abound on all sides. A diet of sensational stories and lovesick novels doesn't exercise your mind. detective story may afford relaxation and give you something to think about, but every mind that wants to keep fit must have something to bite on in the way of solid food. So long as you were at school, your mind was getting & lot of exercise. Some of it you didn't like. but it is good to do something because you have to. Much of it interested you, and you went at it and built up your brain power. You called it studying or learning. No mind is too old to learn. If you stop learning or quit thinking, you are | just Josing so much of living. To keep *younr. exercise your mind. Fathers should stay Koung with their sons, and mothers with their daughters, not Ry | doing the same things that interest the youpger generation, but by cultivating interests of their own. Get an interest; read for exercise as well as Information and pleasure. Attend lectures; join some clubs, do u\mething for your mind's sake. Don't get all absorbed in petty details, local gossip and small talk. Give your mind something real to think about. You | live in a wonderful age full of interest. ing discoverfes. Lots of write and speakers are’ setting before you a rich, wholesome diet of ideas. The magazines are full of it. Fbr ong good popular book on sclence or art a score of years ego, there are now a dozed. Use them to exercise your mind. Keeg your wits sharpened, your interests bright and you'll keep mentally fit. (Copyright. 1928) About two and one-half quarts of water are eliminated normally from the lungs, kidneys, skin and Intestines daily, and we must supply this loss. The normal should take from four to eight glasses a day, in addition to that which {8 taken in the food. Children's bodies have a higher percentage of water than adults so they need more water In proportion to their weigh{ than do_adults. It is a good practice to have regular times for water drinking, say one or two glasafuls before breakfast (this can be taken moderately hot if liked) and one or two between meals. Chil- dren should always have some between meals, and especially during hot | weather. Yes, water drinking at meals is all |right, E.. unless excessive amounts are taken and unless it is used to wash the foods down. Ice water and other iced drinks are permissible in modera- tion; these should be taken slowly, for '!f taken too rapidly and in too large [amounts they may oause severe in- testinal disturban both in children |and in adults Needless to say, all water must be pure, Pecan Pie. Scald one cupful of sweet milk with one-half a cupful of sugar. Thicken this with two level tablespoonfuls of cornstarch rubbed smooth with three tablespoonfuls of water, Add gradus ally the well beaten yolks of two eggs and & teaspoonful of butter, Cool and add the juice of one lemon and one cupful of pecan meats chopped fine. Cool, then pour into a baked pastry orust, ‘Top with meringue made from two egg whites and two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar. Return to the oven and brown for about 15 minutes slowly. Chopped almonds may be used in place of pecans. % The STYLE POST is the marker On the road to being smart— “The Raven.” Patou takes a rather somber view of his stunning new black felt hat when | he names it “The Raven,” but its smart blackness and sleek lines make in a | fitting counterpart of the handsome | bird. { The new line that gips far down over the right cheek is accented by the brim from the left side, which crosses up and over the crown. This model is typical | of the best in the Fall millinery mode. | | Home in Good Taste } BY SARA HILAND. i ‘The first thing the tired business man wants after a congenial family dinner is his evening paper: and he doesn't| want to go to the inconvenience of hunting for it. Scattered about the room, separated and laid on the table, or put in a low unhandy magazine rack, the paper is not in the place which will be the easiest to reach. But if a rack like that in the fllustra- tion could be placed to the right of his | easy chair, and a bridge lamp and| smoking stand to the left (and don't| forget the footstool of generous size in | front of the chair), what more would be required to make his leisure hours happy? | e advantage of a magazine rack like this is that it is just the right| height to bring the papers within reach | without leaning over the side of the| chair, and the pockets (of which there | are two) are large enough to hold a| generous supply of magazines. ‘The finish may be walnut, mahogarv or enamel, in any color desired, and the decoration is a simple floral spray in soft, rich colorings. It is also pleasing to Rave the interior of the rack painted in a color to contrast with the exterior. | Apricot Snow. | Soak for five minutes two tablespoon- | fuls of ulated gelatin in half a cupful of cold water, then dissolve in half a cupful of boiling water. Put through a food press enough canned or ste! dried apricots to make one and | gne-half cupfuls of puree. Add one- fourth eupful of sugar, the juice from one and one-half lemons, and the gela- | tin, When the mixture begins to set, beat to a stiff froth the whites of three eggs. then whip the apricot mixture un- til it Is light. Beat In the egg whites and turn into & large mold or small in- dividual molds to chill. Serve un- molded with whipped cream, garnished | with sliced candied cherries. FEATURES, ICED TEA The economical summer heverage. You can make a galion of iced tea for 10¢ using . . n one minute They work likemagic. Inone min- ute Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads end corn pain. Millions have adopted thisnew, scientific, quick, safe, sure way. By this method a corn heals it- self,becauseit removesthecause —friction and pressure of shoes. Ifapplied at first sign of irritation from tight shoes, Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads positively preventcorns. Powerful liquids or caustic plas- tersdon’tgive you these results— often make the toes sore from acid burn, Zino-padswon'tirri- tate the tenderest skin. They are thin, protective, healing. At all drug, shoe and dept. stores, Buy apackage today=—35¢c. DrScholl’s Zino-pads pain is gone! ;_“lndisposed” Put one on—the: Sometimes it's the “nerves.” Other times, systemic. But whatever the cause of an aching head, there’s an antidote. Bayer Aspirin stops such pain. Millions wouldn't use it if it didn’t! And dectors wouldn't tell men and women to take it freely, if they didn’t know it to be perfectly harmless. (Has no effect whatever on the heart.) Genuine Aspirin has Bayer on the box, and proven directions inside. Amirin s the trade mark of ‘Bayer Manu- facture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid Those Keen Critics would buy no other bread OUSEKEEPING thirty years ago was no haphazard affair! The men of the family liked good food. And the housewives vied with one another in serving the best! Because they thought no “bought* bread ever could measure up to their high standards, they made their own bread. They speat hours in the .mixing, kneading . .. wearing them selves out with tedious drudgery! Then Mother Bread made its appearance. A bread as render and delicate as the best hore- and it could be had fresh kitchen baked bread . . . every day! The women of Washington were delighted smooth, texture. Thousands tured to Mother's Bread .+ . and they never went back to baking! with its delicate flavor, it AANWY Today, Madam, you can buy this ssme Mother's Bread. If anything, it is even more delicious than in your mother’s day The quality 1s uniformly good. Never any “below standard " loaves. Each loat of Mother's Bread is as delicious as the last It vou could only watch us bake it, you'd know the reason. We use the highest grade flour; finest-grade shortening, rich, wholesome milk The most particular housewife couldn't be more careful to have every loat just right. Just order « loaf tomorrow and test it for your- self. See how your family like it . Notice how children take to it at once. even Just say “Mother's Bread” to your grocer. It is fresh from our ovens twice every day éorby's Bakery; Continental Baking Company. \OTHERS BREAD A Cordial Invitation Corby Bakery 1s always open 1o iuspectron, and vasitors wre cordially weicomed. fi Won's you come in and see for yourself just bow Mother's Bread is made?