Evening Star Newspaper, August 13, 1928, Page 23

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WOMAN'S PAGE. THE EVENIN G STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY. AUGUST 13. 1998.° g The Separate Skirt ‘The separate ski that any woman may include in he wardrobe to very good advantage. 1 should be mounted on a slip top—not THIS AND WHITE IS WORN WIT ED GEORGET C_BLOUSE OF BLACK DOTTED CHIFFON A BLACK PLEAT- TE SKIRT. aimply arranged on & belt at the waist- line I would also suggest that the slip top fo which the black pleated skirt is at- tached cho made to come up fair- Iy high at the neck and back. and not made = across the top with OUR CHILDREZ\ By Angelo Patri Re-Educating the Baby Tt happens now and again that the baby falls ill. perhaps seriously ill. Life becomes a round of doctors, nurees, medicine, much handling, much anx- fous attention. Every breath, every mation of the little one is a matter of th utmost importance and is guarded and recorded in the spirit of waighe tulness. The baby, being a little @e- ture of habit soon fits into this new rcheme where life revolves about his smallest whim. If a cry brings com- fort. why not cry? This is quite all right while the child is ill. There is nothing to be done but whittle down Iife's bumps to make smooth the way of the little sufferer. But it won't do at all when the patient is convalescent. He has ta learn how to live in the world of well folk, and the sooner he begins the bett Sometimes it seems impossible to Wrpin the child back to ordinary routine He demands attention, cries, screams, sulks, works up a temperature that frichtens his poor mother into calling for the doctor who, after he arrives and examines his charge. knits his bre * and savs: “Seems to be all right No, that temperature isn't alarming. T'd put him in his carriage and give %im an airing and see if he does not #oon fall asleep.” He is taken for an airing and he falls asleep. But he wakens again Ble won't take his bottle unless mother Polds it. He won't stay in his erib un- jess Gram sits by him. He won't stay by himself a minute. His bath is a | sereaming time and his meal time a horror for all within hearing. He WHY WE DO BY MEHRAN ow and then we come to a decision without knowing why or how. We say e had a hunch This hunch is technically known as definition of intution is. Intuition. O and immed- the grasp of truth direct] without the usual means of sen- erience. Ordinarily we Kknow things by coming in contact with them through the eye or ear or tongue or nose or any or seyeral of the nine senses But intuition is supposed to give us @nowledge without this process The psvchologists do not believe in ntuition in thi sense. They say that originally all experience and knowledge enme through the gateway of the senses They call this intuition or hunch a feel- ing. Hence “ is more accurate to sa3 MENU FOR A DAY. Siiced_Peach Bponge Cake DINNER Roast Beef. Brc Asshed Pota ed Or Cre: tring Bea Coftee Bak CORN CAKE of pleated black #ilk crepe or crepe satin is something and Overblous BY MARY MARSHALL. shoulder straps top provides protection for t r |the overblouse and prevents in direct contact with the skin. So much for the practical points to consider. Up to the minute and de- cidedly smart is the ensemble made by ombination of the pleated black ski and a long tunic overblouse made printed silk in which some black is in cluded. The material for the blouse may be black and white—or it ay combine shades of green with blac or red with black. It may be of printed georgette or some one of the substantiai | printed silks To make the most of the wardrobe I would suggest having two or even three figured overblowses to wear with vour black skirt. Fine pleating done all th. way round on the skirt is attractive, but perhaps not so practical as a skirt le’t plain at the back. If you have rath-r wide pleats there will be the advantag® that these may be put in and pres in place at home when they lose the original distinctness. However, it is pos sible to have the fine pleating reset at the professional pleater's for less than the cost of originai pleating raight lines are casier for the ama- teur dressmaker o lianage than curves and the new slip pattern which I hav~ ady for you this week hasn't a curv 1f vou will send me a stamped sed envelope T will send it t vou at once My Neighbor Says: To clean dried currants roll them first in flour, wash in cold water and drain, then spread out y. Roll again in flour be When emptying your vac sweeper use a large paper bag such as groceries come in for the ac- cumulated dust. This will prevent the scattering of dust when the sweeper is being cleaned Baked potatoes will be more mealy if one end is cut off before putting them into the oven. By putting them in this way the moisture is let out Milk bottles and ch milk has should be rinsed before washing in vou wish them to be clean bright glasses _ in been served n cold water ot soapsuds if and wants, wants and doesn't know what The baby must be re-educated. We have to start all over as in the begin- ning and teach him the daily routine and his relation to all who are close to him. He must learn that crying brings him nothing. He must know that he eats his dinner or takes his bottle as and when it is offered to { him Having passed through such a siege of trouble with a sick baby. his mother | may be quite unnerved and so un- able to hold out against the demands of the spoiled child. She knows what ought to be done, but her strength fails—and small wonder. Some one |else ought to take hold and help her |if the mother will permit Often it iz wise to allow the nurse to re-educate the baby in his routine. She knows what to do and how to do it and has no emotional strain in the doing. The mother suf- fers with the baby and. having a severe struggle, is too weary. too sus- ceptible to her feelings just now to undertake the task. It must be done and done promptly if the dealth of the baby is to be preserved The mental health of a important as the physical. the one be- ing closely related to the other. A spoiled child is deprived of that quality of meintal health that makes for a fine, healtthy body Re-educate the spoiled child. even if you have to ask the trained nurse to do it and send the mother away for a 10 days’ rest. (Copyriznt. 1928 (Mr. Patri will give personal attention te inquiries {rom parents and _school-teacher: on the are annd development of children Write him in care of this paper, inclosing stamped. addressed envelope for reply.) rained child is as —————————————————————eeeeeee e WHAT WE DO K. THOMSON that we do not such and such feeling that we Feeling. then is a vague, unlocalized impression that is sometimes very strong but never vivid and definite. We cannut know why we should do a thing but we have a should The higher sort of slip he top of | the dis- | t | coloration across the upper part of the ¢ |back that may be caused when it comes of over- | put our fin-ers on it and say just what | it is. That is the nature of all feeling .. moment a feeling becomes definite enough we call it a sensation or a memo or image or soms other mental factor The hunch is not so mysterious as it may seem. It is a vague feeling that may later become more definite and It is based on partial knowledge recalled is the hunch always as reliable as mo.t people imagine. It is about as accurate as a vague, half recalied im- pression is capable of being and that is all We have a hunch because at times that is all we can have. We lack the swiedge and have to depend upon a gue feeling and trust to luck that the impression 1s true to the facts Copyright. 1928 Everyday Psychology WHO REMEMBERS? DICK MANSK sred U S Patent Office ny “)D LIKE ’)'\'OTKIKE | NER FoR \ARIDE IN o ol MY RED A DEVIL When you thought you were a real fashion plate. the white stock and whip siickpin adding a distinguishing touch to your get-up? Y NANCY PAGE Thinks They May Achicve Ideal Relationship The Present Generation as Parents . iDorothyDlx The Lax Disciplining of the Present Generation [ Will Be Offset by Their Strictness With the | Next, Savs Dorothy Dix. “What sort of parents are the younger gen- kind of mothers are these bobbed-haired " inquires What CORRESPONDE 43X (ration going to make? | short-ckirted flappers going to be For this reason: Tt seems to be almost an im- sossibility for people to strike a happy medium in bringing up their children Like a pendulum. parents vibrate between extremes, and, this generation having the limit in spoiling their offspring, the coming gencration is swinging to discipline If vou ask me. T'll sav fine gone one ruie that appears to prevail among parents is nol to bring up their The KEEPING MENTALLY FIT e VER, | | | RFG U PAT OFF | i BY JOSEPH JASTROW. | | tory conclusion that it doesn't pay to | ’ Rest Pauses. be a slave-driver, even from the driver’s | The psychology of work is of enof-| point of view. Psychology is taking a | mous consequence in our type of indus- | part in humanizing industry. | trial civilization. It's too late to con- Last is an important factor which | sider whather factories are suited 10 | explains why the output varies when | human psychology: the human plant | conditions remain the same. It depends must be adjusted. while vet it is con-|on the attitude toward the work. If | sidored, to the industrial plant and | work with zest and interest the output | the mnecessities of output. It must | shows it: lagging interest counts as all be done humanely and humanly: | heavily as lagging energies. Your in- terest is strong and your desire to try keeps up when you feel fit. But emo- tional interest has a psychology of its We became familiar with the for bevond a certain pliability nature will not yield to the machine | The machine of steel proposes. but ! the human mechanism disposes: it own. can't work all the time. The most term that describes it in wartime: we favorable alternation of work and rest | called it morale. It's the spirit that becomes an interesting problem. If | keeps the company together and spurs them on. There is an industrial morale. Industrial engineers recognize it and are interested in promoting it (Copyright. 1928.) work 15 light rest pauses are unneces- | sary: where heavy effort is involved | rest pauses pay: they increase the effi- The experiment may be made | children in the manner in which they themselves were reared. —This is lotenier ot the result of humility, or because they consider that their own fathers and | With s0 simple’ an_ instrument as a | & mothers made a poor job of child ing and that they wonld have boen finer | e cior? which 'vou §Tip In the | Prices realized on Swift & Company men and women if developed in some other school of thoutht, but because there | The Snail | hand making as strong a contraction | sales of carcass beef in Washingtor, D, tanklos i thelr memory some juvenile grievance that the years have never | . of squecze as you can and the instru- | for ‘wrekendine Gaturday, Ausust 11, 192, | ment records the pressure. If You | cents to 2600 cents per pound and averaged been able to efface men and women speak of depriva- hardships they had to undergo aved my children from that.” Nothing is more common than to hear {ions they ecndured in their childhood, or and to hear them say: “Thank God, I have So universal is this fecling that you Iook at children and guess almost with cortainty at the childhood their parents had. No little girls are so aver dressed as the daughters of the woman who went shabby castofl clothes in her childhood. It i the children of women who went barefooted who wear §3 silk stockings | pecially in the younger set Tt'is the fathers who in their own youth walked because they had it ot even a nickel to pay carfare who buy high-powered sport cars for school- | toil, and absolute to school poys. It is the men and women whose own childhood was filled with s never knew any playtime, who rear their sons and daughters up in idleness ad wore somebody’s Similar in appearance, but not in its kull cap Advertisement squeeze every two seconds 60 times the | 22.14 cents per pound | proverbial tardiness. is a new | Which Reboux has called Escargof, | sccond half of the record will fall about meaning “Snail.” It is made of soleil | 40 per cent below the first half in work brushed to simulate the rings on the | done. showing fatigue; but if you in- Peas French Way. | shell of a snaii A pleated tab over | troduce a rest pause of two minutes | Cook three tablespoonfuls of butter with one slice of bacon for five minutes. between the halves (as in foot ball) | Remove the bacon and add two cupfuls | the ear conforms to the down-on-the- | your second half falls below your first side movement. | The Escargot comes in brown. navy.| half by only 17 per cent of shelled peas and eight small onions { black and beige and is likely to Win| Then there is a wartime experiment | Cover with boiling water and cook unJ Drain an til the vegetables are soft. add one-fourth cupful of eream and one egg volk slightly beaten. Season with salt and pepper. many a fashion race for Fall wear, es- | in " making shoes. Where two girls | | had been working continuously for| cight hours on a machine they were engaged, each to work 40 minutes and rest 20 minutes of each hour. On this | plan_each operative worked one-third less than eight hours, but the output was increased by about 40 per cent. (Cobyricht. 1928.) THE DAILY HOROSCOPE | The olaest known earthquake recorder was invented by a Chinese about 136 AD. ND it is the parents whose own parents were grinding tyrants who enslaved . Pots and | e and Scrapers = them, who enforced absolute obedience and who denied them every pleasure fi’..fl ‘.?. ';:; :;(':"o;?:al}:;kgzl :a:?—'hém = - Belong Side by Side. | and enjoyment. who have cast all parental authority Into the discard and left b oLy bt whiere & e to follow their own sweet wills, It is th n and en who | Tuesday, August 14. bl L il s o chiidren free to follow their own sw t he men and women who | ) B S st o & Whaue wevk BY FLORENCE L\ GANKE still tremble before thelr own parents. and fear to disobey them, who Vel vorui] “elerily stave: Tiile. apaint tOOEOW, | o g e el rest- patien; K1 that ey feart 0o e ik B LA o n TEveet ol qHEREER according to astrology, which sees much | output went up to 49 gross. So rest | When the Astons went to Summer That explains this present gene Most of the parerits of today were |helpfulness in the planetary influences | PAUSSS P&V, s o6 more ex- CE this ) cottage or camp they always carried | brought up in homes where a strict and narrow code prevailed. and by hard- | for this date tensive experimentation than the fac- with them a few convenfences. Mrs. | handed fathers and mothers who concelved it to be thelr duiy’ o bring thelr | The sway fators physical exertion and | tory, though the conditions are more delncn s ‘hildren up In subjection. and scourge the ¢ way they thought they : adik Aston said that she saw no sense in | ey 'P Nobody then had advanced the heterdox theory that {hought they | muscular development. 1t presages con- | artiflclal, for working at shoe ma- ous | putting up with all sorts of inconveni- | problem. or that it had any rights that parents chould respect, or that it was |tinued evolution of sports as a part of ;"“ms"z rhm’f‘\?:’;flm":’"-‘n‘;“c‘:'nm“;h“z “' D s st beaiise!the fammlly ws sup- | entllled o any persenal freedom of thought ot not. Likelthe ‘highigorsimotles | Ameriea: Fowing sppamatus. Bach of these s coiree wnd father settled the children's fate. and they were rated dutiful or undutiful| work for engineers who will bridge | so arranged as to register th> amount | A rding to the meekness with which they accepted the parental dispensations. | great wastes of water in this country of work done: it is a work register | It is the reaction from t tern upbringing that ea b e __land Europe is forseen instead of a cash register. You can t 1[lt etfyouj eep is the reaction from stern upbringing that has made the modern |~ One of the new inventions will make | try five-minute rest pauses; you can posed to be roughing it. In fact, she said she thought that such a procedure was really rough on mother So a soap shaker with a supply of soap which would lather even in hard water was first on the list Second came dish mops. She usually took along a half dozen at least. Some sort of metallic scraper. either in ball or flat shape was her next necessity This metallic scraper accomplished wonders with the saucepan, the greasy killet and frving pan For curtains at the Summer cottage they chose oil cloth. This was put on the rod with a large enough headin s0 that 1t slipped easily. Then the cur tain could be drawn to shut out the sun. They were not affected by mois- ture or rain. They did not need con- stant laundering, and no hemming or fixing was needed. Oil cloth covered the table at break- fast time also. This was the simplest of cottage table coverings. It wiped nf(flrasib‘ and always added color to the table. Candlestick “and matches were at hand in many places. Living in a cot- tage is not so bad If you surround vourself with small aids to comfort Tinkline heverages b to Summer time rd cottages. Write to Naney Page. inclosing Ask this paper Aressed envelope Beverazes (Copyrizht BY SARA HILAND, Because chintz is made with either a glazed or an unglazed surface (and sometimes even in a semiglazed finish) it is possible to use the same pattern and coloring for various articles in the same room In the illustration is shown an or gandy and chintz room that is very cool and delightful for the Summer days. The woodwork and walls have been finished in a soft shade of butter yel- P ] [ ] parents too lax. It is because the Joneses still smart under the recollection of - frovmed g . t anni their o t o ot > | possible anchorage in the sl where | try light finger and forearm work: vou the petty tyrannie of their parents that they do not atiempt to control their | Doore will be ait depots and hangars. | can try heavy work with large muscles WHaAT's more refreshing in children at 3 U is because Mr. Jones remembers how Le was never given a |astrologers predict as in rowing: you can try frequent buf summer th gl f iced <o vt aives t o) v 1 Tl b - e1 ler than a glass of ice penny of pocket money that he gives foo much money fo his own bovs. It is | This should be a very lucky direction | short rest pauses as against k‘}nm_r id i Ly Y > because Mrs. Jones rec the harsh scoldings her mother gave her when she |of the stars for aviation and aviators. | less frequent rests coftee for supper? Yet many staved out ”"."v” r:(lmk at night hat nakes her say never a word when her | Airplanes are to multiply too rapidly for There are many factors involved, and people hesitate to drink it be- ghter comes in at 3 or 4 o'clock in the morning |safe traffic within the next five years, there always remains the important cause coffee keeps them . ate getting. the renchion Toik ¢ e the seers forecast factors, not easily measurable, of the i ’ And now we are getting the reaction against the too-casy parent, as we | Tomorrow should be most fortunate | difficulty. the strain, the complication awake. But you can drink have had it against the oo-hatd one. The pendulum is swinging back again and | for all brain workers. Lawyers, orators of the job. Yet with allowances for this it if it's Kaffee Hag Coffe wild are clamping and authors should benefit the generation of children who have been allowed to run e T : n and with a bearing particularly on the i R fnfl lid down again on their own youngsters, so that just as we used to say Merchants should pursue routine busi- | simpler types of f‘.,f’rk a few general Kaffee Haz Coffee is a hat country it was three generations from shirt sleeves to shirt sleeves. 'ness and avoid any sort of extra risk conclusions stand out blEid ot the hresWicatiess Wwe might now say that it is three gencrations from spank to spank while this rule prevails There is a foroidding sign for all who The small muscles rest more rapidly than the large muscles, and unless the with 977 of the drug caf- feine removed. You don’t FINHESE indulged young people who have becn permitted to run wild, whose | ould borrow and lenders may say fare- | work oo I parents never enforced obedience or taught them self-control, have had |well to what they offer friends ,,((',,k‘.(.x:‘.“::r,’:g,g“ {3;‘:'{‘1 L(!gglg’f{,‘;"‘gi e 2 - <ome 'hard and bitter experiences from which they wish to save their own | The rule is adverse for all who would | rests pay: they pay both ways—they miss a thing. But it will not ohildren. They have run risks, where only the mercy of God saved them from |bet on any future event, for chances| shorten the work period; they start re- keep you awake. Try this Qikaster that they do not wish their children to take. And they have found |taken tomorrow will lead to losses | cuperation before fatigue goes too far. conderful coffee. Think he S leai the discipline their patents failed to give them in their childhood life | The configuration is not promising for | Next, despite constant conditions, the wondesius cosees- R BN gave them mercilessly when they became men and women success in any game of chance. for what | qutoit “varies, more so in complicated much better it is than sub- If you will make a tour of the nurseries of the medern young mothers, yo stitutes! At dealers. Full- pound cans. Steel cut or in is counted victory may be a boomerang , | under this direction of the stars. % | London astrologers prognosticate great than in simple work. The human ma- chine doesn’t work as regularly as the mechanical machine. The effect of will find no babies being rocked to sleep; no weary mothers with howling little demons who won't go bye-by» unless they are walked to sleep: no spoiled little | excitement in Europe over an event that | ract” avses comes out better in a series the bean. Order a pound brats who rule the house with a rod of iron, who have to be persuaded, cajoled | M8y lead to war among the smaller na- ) of suce 2 r e f tron, wi 16VE L0, e ipa A 4 oled | 1o s of successive rest pauses carried through today. Jaibelbed fno ::m_\]h-\. milk, and during whose brief ‘siestas every one |03, 1o i mines and docks may | {he day than in one long period with S Dk b el Bt Lt e fhicie’ more: nunierois. \nder tils| (e LSS NSl Separatod DYk tess from J ol ©On the contrary. the modern baby, Mstead of belng spolled as his father | Pltnietary government than fhey have f&'.i'v'f"“}f:n'.’n“ffm?h’ it Nt o and mother wer ared by the book and disciplined like a soldier. He is | Pg8 FOECNAC i gt i tomorrow ork with tired muscles is wasteful lit and behave, and is altogether taught to be a Spartan for heavier In general. and_especially made to obey may have ‘delays in receiving money. | In general, and, especialiy ¥ e s R e e i ot 1 bring |BUL they have the augury of a lucky | ¥OrE S ST T el Suie And if vou talk with the flapper mother about how she is going to bring | viu: "They Should be mos kY| efficient than_longer but more infre- up her children, the first thing she will toll you Is that she isn't going to let | YSAL They should be ot Ho ot s e e e e Ll tms eurmiiten th o, Andl thAL she 6 Bhing. (o | Tinistering QERNSIAERARIES. THs Souls quent rests. It pays to break up work her caughters do the things she was permitied to do and that she i §0I0E 0 | J'an auspicious time for developing the periods. and the more susceptible you waich over them and {ake better care of fhem than her mother took of her. | pghes”attributes of Leo sublects are to fatigue the more vou need rest : be sturdy and reliable. With the sun | Festoret.. > i R T S el e . as their principal guide they may reach | All this suggests a ceneral program - Lesi roe A 80 because the people of the vounger gencration are voung and | Arent suceess I whatever careers they | Of adjustment of the necessities of out- Not a substitute — keeping youn they are going 1o be Soung ennuzh fo sympathize with their | Coose. Girls will marry el put to the vet more important condi- p children “and_understand them. and perhaps thev will achieve the ideal of T Pions of human effort. ‘It's a satistac- #%f REAL COFFEE—smimns caffeine parenthood. which is the iron hand in the velvet glove. Force and authority - — - 50 subtly masked in gentleness that the children will not know it is there at all Anyway. I expect this coming generation to be perfect lambs. Sticklers for propriety and as conventional as Mrs. Grundy DOROTHY DIX Copyrisht. 1028) i DIET AND HEALTH | BY LULU HUNT PETERS, M. D. White Bread Vs. Whole Wheat. “Our State nutrition specialist urged us to eat more whoie grain bread and thus it 1s more difficult to keep. vermin, at least for their young. However, when there cereals, But now comes a woman demonstrator of flous Wwho tells & class| 3 8 Wrefter idemnd [or ths ‘sho of about 35 of our women that white 1 cereals and flours, then ther bread is more nutritious than wholc be a quicker turn-over, and this B e e esident. of the Home | Objection will be done away with Economics Club in my town and would b like the truth to present l-\\‘m'. club. Bacon-Tomato Stew rs The demonstrator of any pzfnm-v Saute two sliced onions with half a would naturally be instructed to make | Cupful of diced bacon. Add two and | one-half cupfuls of canned tomatoes, | statements that would favor the selling |of that product. Mrs. F. In this case. | one has taken a very small part of the | truth and presented it as the whole | truth The part of truth this demonstrator | has taken is that of equal weights of | - bread made of white flour and whole grain flour, there is more absorption from the white flour. as there is some residue left in the whole grain which is not digested. Therefore there would br a small amount more of enel caloric value obtained from th flour. From this the demonstralor evidently reasoned that the white s more nutritiou: But the word tritious implies A great deal more tha simply the energy value of food. Ther are the vitamin, mineral element and the protein or building qualities to con- <ider: also the anti-constipnting effects The whole grain breads contain practically twice as much of the min- eral clements and vitamins as do the one teaspoonful each of celery salt and sugar, and a speck of salt and pepper Cook slowly for half an hour flour nu- BY DN GEIRE W, SEROWLS white breads, and the protein is of much superior quality. The fact that | Social P: thology the bran i1s not wholly digested is a : point in its favor because it helps com Social psychology is really the science bat the ordinary constipation of public opinion. And public opinion \The following s what McCollum ha i little more than concentrated preju- tdhaay in his “Newer Knowledge of | d The man who thinks and act Nutrition b on his own initiative Is as rare as the “Patent flour is one of the most de- proverbial hen’s teeth: IUs pretty hard ficlent foods which enters into the hu get along on any other footing than man diet, being exceeded in this re- ocial assent and approval The one pect only by lsolated foods such big problem in life is finding out what tarch, sugars, fats or polished to do to gain the favor and approval Bolted flour §s rather poor in protein of that dreaded monster—They and this is of rather poor quality. It i your money and you are a very deficient in_calcium, phosphorus t- save it and you are called sodium. chlorin, fron and possibly alsc A miser. Show an interest In social in potassiunt Bolted flour is &l oppotite tendency, you are Known as a 5 stance (water-soluble B), as shown by | ccluse. Work steadily, you are a grind * Ithe frequent occurence of beri-heri| . work only when vou have to, and Y0U jou and (he floor covering is plain|#mong the people of Labrador and New- re calied u trifier j ght green foundland, where bread o from this Talk a lot, you will get the reputation 'The roller shades are of glazed chintz | source is a principle article of food. Tt v having & “shallow brain”* say noth- | with a primrose yellow ground and 1S exccedingly poor in fat-soluble A ou will sometimes be a StuUpidity. fioral deslgn in mauve. rose. orange and | and in the factor plaving « | Or t ctimes 4 sage. depending on the grogy role in the prevention of rickets. From position you 1 occup The draperies are of yellow organdie | the standpoint of human nutriton itj p S Al queer fact, but nevertheless a | fnished with narrow ruffies of the same, | 15 important also that it lacks entirely Y, Nl L i at the higher the position You | and the dressing table has a skirt of the the anti-scorbutic substance Np Eare cANYol DEEVES ublic mind. the lexs you | ona the dressing table nas 8 e sir-| 80, on the different counts of nutri- | You can be pr tell what you are thin f tion, you can see that whole wheat | do what any I5 15 what makes new \ chairs are painted In a shade of | bread 15 by far more nutritious than do wha ors out of PAsSING | mauve which will harmonize with the white bread. However, do not get the | tell you t ve i wancial crises out of per- | genersi scheme dea that some food faddists are tryng | 1 Caston 5 3G0Me On 1he other hand. i1 | The Jarger pleces of furniture in this | (o promulgate that purified products el ad lie ou want o gain # recognized position | room may be of maple and the bed-|such as white flour, sugars, etc, a aby 1 RgIe IS JIURELE o the public mind, you should Hrst|ijvead of yellow Swiss with a lavender | poisonous. They are not. If you prefer | Matter ol v ts. Yet you have iblic hear’ from you. Poli- ot and trimmed with lavender organdle | white bread, et it - But remember | ¢ ed your child without use of a [ i thelr early careers are gen e that you have to make more conscious | single doubtinl drug; Casto is , reformers. : (Copyrinht. 19260 efforts to get your vitamins, complete | vegetable o it's safe to use as The foregoing ilustrations reveal (o ! or : !}.yx;n'.-n;n and_ mineral clemenis n your | oiten as an infant has an ittle pair 0 egpiie) S et Crab Meat on Corn Fritters, |other foads. = = | cannot pat away. And it's al ; No grain has a blologically complete e et Sl e ooy of forces are n con-| ‘Cresm. the ovhblimsaty MEKIIY HH0 ! Nrotain-=(Rt i, s protein Which son=] " s Hoady O e en ‘ot striggle Whenever they strike | sauce with thin cream thickened with | tains all of the butlding elements neces- | C0lIC. or constipation. oo darrhea emporary balance {1 life 18 mov- | the yolks of eggs. Make the usual bat- | sary for repalr and growth: so even| clicctive, too for olde hildren mally When they get out of |ter for {ritters, adding part of & can of | though you are using the whole graip | Twenty-flve million bottles were « something wen. | corn drained and chopped fine. Put| products, you must also have foods that | hought last year this something 18 « ent. creamed crab and friiter batter i sep- | give the complete protemn, such as milk « ar tate Jare. Reheat the crab. Have | and cheese, eggs and fesh foods . veady a hot griddle or pan, pour on | I will add that the reason mill arks have five Lo sevr Hts on | 1ittle of the batter at a time and frv | and flour companies have given f cach Fid 21l roere instead of | brown. turning once. Cover each with | thelr propaganda against whole whes e gl opening & in most other fa spoonful of the creamed crab and | flour fx that whole grain has not good s serve hot. keeping qualities, Being much richer, A insects thrive more readily in it and The | seem to have sense | enough to know that it is a better food | | | | | Rice FLAKES TASTE GOOD — DO GOOD

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