Evening Star Newspaper, August 16, 1928, Page 35

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WOMAN'S Great Variet in Shapes of Hats BY MARY Buying new hats this Autumn is go- Ang to be Jots more fun than, hat hunt- ing has been for vears and years and Years, because there is such a variety ©Of shapes to choose from, and some of them are so surprisingly becoming My advice to you would be not to go PAGE.' THE EVENING SONNYSAYINGS MARSHALL. 1 BY FANNY Y. CORY. | j order you may need to have some minor | ort of alteration. The drapery at the | sides of the new elephant ears or| | Egyptian toques may need to be changed | a little to achieve the most becoming | contours for your features, the brim of | one of the new poke cloches may need | a little expert manipulation, or the crown may need to be pulled in a trifle | or streiched to give you the necessary close fa | Large linen handkerchiefs in all sorts of interesting colors and designs are used this Summer for neckwear. They are folded into triangles and tied abou the neck loosely, bib fashion, with th short knotted ends directly at the back Sometimes an ornamental brooch or clasp pin is used to attach the hand- kerchief to the bodice a little to the | side of the front. While printed squares. triangles and oblong scarfs are still highly favored those made with modernistic geometric | piecing of silk in two colors or two tones are decidedly smart I saw one the other day made of beige and brown silk. a triangle of each | | picced on the bias from corner to cor- | The square was folded across the er corners to form a triangle, half brown and half beige, and when passed around the neck and knotted presented | I was goif’ to help save folks when they's drownin. but Betty Wallace telled me yer got to marry ladies yer saves; an’ I ain't goin' ter marry no- the motley effect of beige at one side body but Baby, an’ my own dear Muv- | to | STAR., WASHINGTON D.. C, The Sidewalks Early morning motorists yesterday were amazed at the manner in which a man in a 10-gallon “kelly” violated Washington traffic regulations obviously from that part of the coun- try where men are men and the hand is quicker than the eye. His antique rattler was veneerdd with a brown coat of dust, and the running boards sup- ported cloth-covered equipment with which he probably slept under the stars. His sleeves flapped loosely in the breeze he scurried along. From his general appearance he would have been more at home on the back of a mustang, riding the purple sage Driving up Fourteenth street he kept the left around Thomas Circle. Other_drivers, obeying the regulations, were forced to swing out of his path as he gayly and smilingly chugged by. At Dupont Circle he again drove to the left, compelling a dozen cars to make a wide detour to avoid hitting him. By the time this is published he will probably be hundreds of miles away. Touring & strange city is a problem for both the police and the visitor Officers sympathetically recognize the fact that visitors, unfamiliar with our traffic rules, are apt to become bewl dered and violate a regulation, BY THORNTON FISHER. He was | which | would not be countenanced in a local | of Washington | back of the neck with her church book. | The poor husband immediately fell to | the floor dead, killed by the blow. Now tell me, what is wrong with this story?" It required three minutes to give the proper answer. We should like to have tell us what they think is A little commen | the reade | wrong with the tale. | sense will solve it. | Kk The great majority of us are hone: There are a few who will purloin ar | thing that is not nailed down securely, and there fs a handful who will try td pry the nails loose. A Spirit of Saint Louis must be care- fully guarded lest souvenir hunters diss it until the last strut and wire are gone. Hotel guests are honesi, though occastonal- ly the manage- ment, in_checking up, will find towels and linens missing | upon the departure of a customer. A traveling man opened his travel- ing case the othcr THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1928.° Killed by Absorption. There are some children for whom I | sorrow more than all others. These {are the children of mothers who, hav- |ing failed to live fully in their own | span of years, begin to. live again | through the lives of their children | "I want Kate to take up music. I'v wanted to be a musician all my lif /but I had to do so many other thing | that interfered with it that I couldn’t |0 1ve | must do what I couldn't dc | The unfortunate thing about that | was that Kate happened to be a medi- | cal student and could not be a musi- | clan. Her mother would not allow her to follow her own line, but insisted upon living as a musician in her | daughter’s life. “Marle thinks a great deal of that | young engineer, but I don't want a | young man who'is going away from the “The men who smilé at dwindling city. I want somebody who is going to made up my mind that Kate | | | | | skirts don’t seem to realize what a park- | have a voice in the social affairs of the | ing problem has been created for the poor lap dog.” (Copyright, - . Tomato and Cabbage Salad. i Shred a small head of new cabbage | “N&Ineer There should be | Sometimes town, plenty of money, a big house, |many friends, I want to travel and meet people. I thought I was going to have all that when I was married, but things went wrong. I expect | daughter will do better than a young 1928.) fathers. have the same FEATURES. can't he do what I tell him? All I want is his good.” Then let him go free. If the mother and father who are persisting in some plan for the good of the child when that child begs to be allowed to follow some plan of his own really mean what they say, they will free the child of all obligation. To some parents this appears to be impossible. The child is theirs. They bought and paid for it. Life, sheiter, care, food. clothing, education—they paid for them all. Consequently, the life of the child is theirs. It doesn't matter to such parents that their chil- dren are unhappy. The child who weeps at the loss of his childhood, the girl who sheds tears of grief at the loss of a lover, the boy who begs and pleads and finally rebels against the all-de- vouring demands of his parents—these children are ungrateful and shall suffer the curse that falls upon those who dishonor their parents. “What falls upon the parents who dishonor théir relationship to their children by absorbing their very lives? How shall they answer for the lives of the children they have killed by ab- my | sorption? (Copyright. 1028.) Mr. Patri will give personal attention to inquiries from parents and school teachers resident. day and showed or chop it very fine. | blind egotism. They think it is par- n the care and development of children : | Write him in_care of this paper. inclosing two cups of shredded cabbage. Add one |ental pride and affection. It is the stamped. addressed envelope for repls. half teaspoon of sugar, one lahlr'<p(mn‘h;|ln!z?l' to live alaam in the lives of | — e o v - | their sons—something which can never | y of lemiort jiiee OF whicghcy three tble | béidone; forweilive only/oxte | Coal Silk Idea Success. spoons of cream, one-quarter teaspoon | s : 5 " : _quarter to one-half tea- | o LVe done everything for my boy.| So successful has been the new pro- of paprika, one-quar Spent money like water. He has been | cess of extracting viscose artificial gilk spoon of celery salt and enouzh salt to {to good schools, graduated from col- | from coal at a German plant that new season. Scald firm tomatoes, peel ..,d‘lfip_ has car. a motor boat—even [‘acvglxl!'s are being edded in urde;m _ ¢ith | thing. Al T asked of him in return|double the output by next year. Sev- | chill. Scoop out the centers, Ml with] B0t 1a take my place and carry | eral tans of the material were produced cabbage salad. Garnish with sliced | o my business, and he won't do it.' this year. The artificial silk is only one olives or small sweet pickles. Has some silly plan of his own. Why of the products, benzine being another. That the circles and triangles of | Washington are confusing to “foreign” drivers there can be no doubt One day, in that era before the motor be- ) came our most ——— popular mode of o J travel, a fouring Vi party drove into yo+ | Washington. ~The | members reached | the vicinity of | A Fourteenth streed { and brown at the other. One might be | vor tempted to make a scarf of this sort | @ at home were it not so difficult to make a small, neat joining of the bias edges of the silk us 16 cakes of soap which he had gathered from different hotels on his route “I don't know why it is." said he, | “that T always feel impelled to toss unused soap into my grip when I leave a hotel. T don't need it and I don't like 1o leave it. It may be dishonest, and yet, 1 wonder if it is. Perhaps has just become & habit.” We believe it is merely a habit. How many of us, when we enter a publie telephone booth, fail to insert a finger | for a stray nickle that might have | slipped into the return slot, before cali- | ing our number? | (Copyrizht, || NANCY PAGE This week's help for the home dress- | L ] iTamE Ay maker consists of a diagram pattern | [R CUNTNT for one of the new pointed slips. which | | Peneil g i v 1 am sure you will like. So please send . me «_stamped, self-addressed envelope ] and I will gladly forward vour copy to you. THIS DARK-GREEN 1928 COMES FROM JANE BLANCHOT OF PARIS. IT IS TRIMMED WITH A LIGHT GREEN RIBBON FAS. TENED WITH A SILVER HOOK AND EYE. FELT HAT forth intent on accepting any hat pr cisely as it stands in the showc because so much depends on the exact shape and outline nowadays that even if you do not have to have a hat made to WORLD FAMOUS and parked the car They on their way to Har- pers Ferry, and one of the members of (Copyrizht e ————————— e was playing quiet games | this Summer. Her nicest occupation | | was taking care of Repeter. But well- | were, | 1928) | STORIES THE HOUSE OF USHER. Poe. Edgar Allan 1808-1 fean Do nd Masaue lack Cat.” “lne Roderick Usher had been one of my boon companions in boyhood. So when he summoned me to his gloomv man- gion, I went, though I thought his let- ter very strange and full of foreboding. The letter gave evidence of nervous agitation. The writer, indeed, spoke of acute bodily illness—of a mental dis- order which oppressed him—and of an earnest desire to sce me, as his best and his only personal friend 1 really knew very little about Rod- erick Usher. But io reach his house 1 had to pass, during the whole of a duil, dark and soundless Autumn day. on horseback. through s singularl dreary tract of country. I found m self. just at evening, viewing the melan- choly House of Usher. With the first glimpse of the building, insuffer- | able gloom pervaded my spirit. I looked up at the bleak ho upon the va- cant eye-like windows—upon a few rank grasses—and upon a few white trunks of decaved trees—with an utter de- pression of soul What was it that so unnerved me in the contemplation of the house of Usher> It was an_insoluble mystery Thinking about it, I reined my horse to the precipitous brink of a black and lurid lake and gazed down—but with a shudder more thrilling than before— upor: the images of the ghastly trees and the vacant and eye-like windows of the House of Usher. I entered there, to stay some weeks. But the more I thought" about the | gioom the more my fancied impression | of it grew. I so worked upon my | imagination as to believe that about | the whole mansion there hung an at- | mosphere peculiar to itself and the im mediate vicinity—an atmosphere which | had no relation with the air of Heaven, | but which had reeked up from the | decayed trees, and the gray wall, and | the silent lake—a pestilent and mysti vapor. dull, slugeish, faintly discernible | and leaden-hued. | Surely man had never before so ter- struggles within the coppered archway | of the vault. hasty!” that just as I was reading about the pounding on a hermit’s door in the forest I was startled to hear the same sounds come from a very remote part of the House of Usher. But perhaps it was the storm. I went on with the story. I next came to a description of the knight's victory over a dragon. Now. | brought-up babies are left aione a great part of the time, so Nancy found other things to_do. When friends dropped in in the eve- ning she and Peter used to keep them busy and cool with pencil and paper | games. One favorite was this A sheet of paper was divided into 5| See the | lengthwise sections and 4 or more cross- | wise ones. In the first section a word with a feeling of wild amazement, I did | actually hear a low. and apparently distant. but harsh, prolonged, and most | unusual screaming or grating sound— | the exact counterpart of what my fancy | had already conjured up for the| dragon's unnatural shriek as described | in the story. ! Pulling myself together, I resumed | the story. For if Usher heard those same sounds he gave no sign of it.| Coming to the description of a brass | shield falling on the floor, in the story. | it seemed as if a shield of brass had | indeed at that moment fallen heavily | upon the floor of silver—I became awar= | of a distinct, hollow, metallic, and clangorous, yet apparently muffied re- | verberation ~ Completely unnerved, I leaped to my feet. but Usher still sat rocking in his chair. I rushed toward him—touched him—and saw_that he was muttering some words. I stooped to listen to these “Of course I hear it: I have heard: it for a long time. Yei I dared not— | miserable wretch that I am—I dared not speak! We have put my sister living in the tomb! Yes. It Is true. I told you my senses were acute. 1| now tell you that I heard her first | feeble movements in the hollow coffin. I heard them—many days ago. Now tonight—those sounds—they were the | rending of her coffin, the grating of the fron hinges of her prison. and her She will be here in a| She will accuse me-of being | Here he sprang furiously to his feet and shrieked out the words: 1 tell you that she now stands out- de that door!” noment. ‘The huge panels of the door threw | slowly back—it was the wind—but no, | there did stand the lofty and enshroud- | ed figure of the lady of the House of | was spelled out. In the illustration the word “morn” was used. It might have been longer, “Morning” for i Or it might have been “ange word which does not repeat letters. The lengthwise columns are headed as shown. Words like food, animal, fur- niture, etiquette, current events might have been used Each player writes in the proper space his choice of word, using the letter in the crosswise column. The second game explains itself. List | Mr. | | Sgegedy (the nearest we could come to tance. | | gue: ANy | One wag, afte; the part, directions from an officer at the inter- section of Four- teenth street Pennsylvania nue. The of course, ave- did not “what s | the best way for me to get to Harpers Ferr; The bluecoat looked rather puzzled for a moment, and then replied, in 2ll seriousness, “Take a train!" 5 The reply was not intended to be smart, for such questions were few in those days. The present-day member of the Metropolitan force must not only possess information concerning the city, but he must have a general knowl- edge, at least, of the highways leading to other important centers. W In a small shore hotel, at which we were recently a guest a profitable eve- ning was spent with a companion e amining the register, Among the names were a Mr Plum, Miss Alto, Nix. and a Mr. pronouncing it being “Mr. Ziggidy') Che manner in which many of the sts had registered was interesting signing his name, wrote. in the address column, “The world Another signed his name and added “and friend.” In the Summer of 1925, a man, evi- dently very elderly, had attached his shaky signature to the register. He registered again this season and the | inseription was scarcely legible. Three years had affected him as it does some base ball pitche: He had lost his control. x o ox The reader is familiar with the cap- tion “What is wrong with this picture?” which was found under an illustration ‘The idea was to cause the reader to seek until he discovered an error in drawing—a fifth wheel on a wagon, perhaps, or a five-fingered man, The other day a witty friend sald: “l am going to tell you a story. There is something wrong with it When I finish, you must tell me what it is. One Sunday a man and his wife journeyed to church. Upon reach- sought | and | officer, | which was one of | HOROSCOPE Friday, August 17. Tomorrow will not be an important day in planetary direction, according | to asttrology, but a benefic aspect dom- | inates. i Women are supposed to be strongly influenced for their own welfare while this sway prevails. It should be stim-| ulating and helpful. | Love becomes of prime interest to many while this configuration con- tifes, and should bring happiness to | both men and women who let the head | as well as the heart dictate. i Older persons may be susceptible to romance, and they should watch their teps, because Saturn frowns on aged alliances | All who appear before the public hould benefit {rom this rule, which is especially fortunate for orators and actors . Musicians should benefit, and there is a sign of promise for operas as well as those who appear on the lyric stage Again the seers fortell drastic changes in motion pictures which will bring fame to new stars and tribula tions' for old ones. Whatever pertains to beauty should benefit under this sway, which pre- | sages profit for painters and sculptors. | Women should push all their finan- clal or political interests tomorrow, | which promises success for many who | | THE DAILY l \ | work with high purpose. | This direction of the stars is fortu- nate for all who deal in household necessities or luxuries. 1 Hotels are subject to a government of the stars that brings them increase | of patronage and added scope of en-| tertainment. \ The seers foretell the multiplication | of small shops in which women are interested. Dancing 1s to be even more popular | than it has been in the past, and many | American girls are to gain fame on the | stage 1 Persons whose birth date it is should | It shows them no mercy WHY play hide and seek or give in to flies and mosquitoes? You don't have to tolerate these annoying pests another single day. Spray Dethol. Get rid of them. Dethol never fails. Flies and mos- quitoes breathe it—and die. moths, fleas. For cleaning, spray basins, bathtubs, tiling. Leaves a spotless, glis- tening surface when wiped. And yqu'll like the clean, refreshing odor of Dethol. Nothing is so quick, so sure as Dethol. By the If you don’t think so too, if you're the roomful. And it’s so easy. The Dethol mist from the handy sprayer does it. it to the store and get your money back. 1 TJust as deadly to roaches, ants, bedbugs, Dethol Mfg. Co., Inc., Richmond, Va. Sales Representative, H. Clarke & Sons, Inc., 405 W. Lombard Baltimore, Md. 2 A least bit dissatisfied with Dethol, return Tibly altered, in so brief & period. as | Usher. There was blood on her white had _Rodcrick Usher! 1t was with diffi- | robes—and signs of her bitter struggle culty that I could bring myself to 8d- | on her emaciated frame. For a mo- | mit the identity of the wan being be- | ment she reeled there, and then with | fore me with the companion of my | a Jow moaning cry, fell inward onto | bovhood. Yet his expression had al- | ner brother, and, in her violent death- ways been like that of a corpse; his agonies, bore him to the floor also a eyes large. liquid and luminous beyond corpse, a victim of his own terrors. i comparison: thin and pallid lips. His| T fied aghast from that chamber skin was now more than ever pale, and | and that accursed house. The' storm his thin. silk-like hair had grown until | was still violent, and, 2s I fled along it _surrounded the face and made it | the road, there shot out a wild light. seem ‘not human. |and I turned to see the full, setting, ing the door, the wife discovered that she had left her church book at home The husband suggested that while she returned home to get it he would go inside the edifice and wait for her. “Dropping into one of the pews, he fell into a sound sleep and dreamed that he was about to be executed for a serious crime. The executioner was | lifting his knife just as the wife re- turned. Seeing her spouse asleep she was angered and struck him on toe| be careful in all business matters, and | especially in real estate deals. They may be oversanguine, and should avoid changes in their associates. i Children born on that day are likely to be endowed with brains and com- mon sense, but they may be too gener- ous for their own best interests. These subjects of Leo usually see life in its | largest relations, and so plan careers that are important. (Copvright. 10 or multiples of 10 objects. Choose | any letter—in this case it was H. In a | given time each column is filled. In| playing these games set a time nllnw-i ance—say 10 minutes. Make divisions | such that scores of 100 are obtainable. A blank space counts minus. A word used by another player gives each on~ | who used it one-half the legitimate | 1928, He lived with his sister, who was a | victim of fits and attacks of suspended | animation. While there with him. I| was present at his sister’s death. We | buried her in an inner tomb of the | mansion. behind walls of stone. | some days of mourning and bitter grief, Usher resumed his life with me as his companion, and, as before, I often read to him. One night, unable to sleep, and with my imagination constantly agitated by y melancholy surroundings, I felt | bout my heart a feeling of inexplain- | le alarm. Shaking this off with a | gasp and a struggle, I uplifted myself on the pillows, and peering earnestly into the intense darkness of the cham- | ber. I listened to certain low and in- definite sounds which came, through the pauses of & violent storm raging outside, at long intervals from I knew not where. | Overpowered by an intense sentiment | of horror, 1 threw on my clothes with haste, and endeavored to arouse myself | T my pitiable condition by pacing 1 and froin my room. I had but a few turns in this manner, when a step nearby attracted my at- tention. 1 presently recognized it as that of Usher. An instant afterward he rapped at my door and entered, | bearing a lamp. His manner appalied me, but anything was better than being alone You have not seen i7" he asked | abruptly. and he went to the windows | and threw them wide open The storm outside was indeed violent, for the entering gust almost blew us off | our feet. 1 looked out. There was no| £ign of moon or stars, nor any flashing of lightning. But the under surfaces | moving clouds, as well as earthly around us, were glowing with ural light of a faintly luminous inetly visible gaseous exhalation ng about and enshrouded the for friend’s made 1 read to him. The book by ehanee. It 5n happened my back and sanity, I him sit Fearing him Blow for the Crawling Ones HE most effect ive method to kill flies, mosquitoes, and other flying pests—is o spray Black Flag Liquid. Shutthedoors Close the windo As you spray, the fine mist pen etrates every corner. Not an insect can escape. They die—every one of them! And remember, not only is Black Flag the deadliest liquid insect Killer, but it is 8lso the most eco. nomical one. Black Flag costs only 25 cents for a full half-pint. Other Jiquids cost 50 cents for the same quantity. In desling with roaches, bed fleas and ot her crawling pests, use Black Flag Powder, instead of liquid, For you can’t stand around and spray these pests. They hide After 'upon my sight, and my brain reeled | | mitted 0 blood-red moon. While I gazed a fissure in the masonry of the House | of Usher rapidly widened—thers came a fierce breath of the whirlwind, the entire orb of the moon burst at once | score. If 5 players use the name Hiram and each space filled should count 10, each player gets only 2. Evening games call for evening refresh- ments. ~Write to Nancy Page. care of this paper. inclosing stamped. self-addresse velope and asking for leafiet on “Beverages.’ as 1 saw the mighty walls rushing (CoByrisht, 1938 asunder. There was a long, tumultuous shouting sound, like the voice of a thousand waters, and the deep and dark lake at my feet closed sullenly and silently over the fragments of what had been the House of Usher. | il i Why Forests Disappear. North America, vith one-twelfth of the world’s people, uses about one-half of all the timber consumed in the world. The rallroads of the United States use about 130,000,000 new wood ties every year. There are about 3,000 to the mile. Something like 5,000,000 tress are cut annually for telegraph and telephone wires: we e | fence posts every year. MODERN WOMEN APPLY BRAINS T0 THEIR J0BS Laugh at Old-fashioned Ideas —Keep Their Looks, Save Their Hands Two years ago Clyde Wheless, now 21, was a stenographer for a law firm | in Atlanta. Later, she was admitted 1o the bar, and the other day was ad- | the Supreme Court of Georgia, DAILY DIET RECIPE MARGUERITE SALAD. ‘ Canned pineapple slices, four; | | hard-boiled eggs, four; sweet green pepper, one; lettuce leaves, four; French dressing, one-half cup. | SERVES FOUR PORTIONS. Arrange slices pineapple on a lettuce leal on four individual | | salad plates. Carefully cut the whites of the egg in long slices to represent the flower petals of a daisy. Place these on the pine- apple slices and make the cen- | | Not long ago housewives were ters of finely mfinced egg yolks. ‘ | afraid to use Ive in cleaning pots and § They used it only for opening up clogged drain pipes, re moving rust stains from wash bowls, or for purifying garbage pails §i They knew lve cuts grease like knife ‘cuts cheese. They knew it instantly rinsed away, leaving broilers, pots and pans sparkling, sweet smelling. But lye dried the skin of their hands. “Sa in their cleaning water they depended on much soap, hot water, steel wool and muscle, Tired backs and red hands followed Then came the efficient oung women of today, determined not 1o let housekeeping destroy their Jooks or kill their joy in it looked these eternully pots and pans, They saw did hands and determined 1o keep out of water smiortable rubber long-handled mops they ueing ve. In ten seconds they swash clean a big that took their mother ten of hard scouring Seal Lye is their favorite o pure lye—the quickest acting made Don't let rontine drag yon down Iry this clever Wit Tust write down “Red Seal Lye" on vour list: now —and tomorrow this drudgery forever, Cut strips of green pepper 1o represent stems. Dress with French dressing. DIET NOTE Recipe furnishes protein, fiber, lime, iron and vitamins A, B and €. Can be eaten by normal adults of average or under weight and by those wishing to reduce if non-fattening French dressing were used. dong in cracks when you're nesr. Just blow Black Flag Powder with a gun ioto cracks. Then go away. When the pests come out—they crawl through the powder. And its secret ingredient strangles them. They die!—and they die quickly! Powder also kills fleas on dogs. cleaning I he eir liand Buyir began now brotler Both Liquid and Powder are absolutely deadly to all household insect pests. (Money back if it doesn’t prove s0.) Powder, packed in glass to prevent spoiling—15 cents and up. To rid their homes of all insect pests, some people prefer Black Flag i Liquid 1o kill the | flying ones— i new will end Black Flag Powder to kill the erawling 500,000,000 { | | Now good for breakfasts Joy of Liv ng . How often have —and the you longed for “something different” for break- fast? Then try Heinz Rice Flakes. Crispy, crunchy flakes of rice— fairly melting in your mouth...a delicate, appet: izing, nut-like flavor that just “touches the spot”. Good not only to your taste— but good for you to eat. "For Heinz Rice Flakes, you know, are naturally “laxatized” by a patented Heinz processwhich so utilizes the n ofthericeitself as atural roughage toimparta qual- ity which makesthe flakesa gentle, natural laxative +++ That's why Heinz Rice Flakeskeep you fitand fine—keen for the Joy of Living. HEINZ Rice & TASTE GOON~ DO GOOD Washin gton woman tells How She Does a Week’s Wash Before 9 Yet Has Clothes Whiter Than Ever Before *'QO many of my neighbors are telling about their experiences with Rinso, I want to tell my story, too,"” savs this delighted local woman, one of thousands who have written us. “I used to give a whole day every week to washing clothes. 1'd rub and scrub until my back ached; then I'd boil the clothes to make sure they were white enough. “Now I never scrub or boil any more. Why should I, when Rinso seaks out the dire and washes the clothes so much whitdr. It's so easy; if 1 puc the cloches to soak at nighe, all Lhave to do in the morning is rinse. By nine o'clock I have my wash on the line—and so snowy, too, i a pleasure! “l also use Rinso for the dishes, floors and woodwork. It makes all cleaning easier." VRS EDHARD A 101 oth St PARKMAN, N.E., Washington Rinso is marvelous in washiny The makers of 34 lr.\\hug Rinso for safety and for whi Try Rinso free o’clock machines, too. washers say, “Use frer washess™ ‘To try this famous granulated soap entirely free This way saves the clothes Thousands of letters are received from delighted Rinso users. Over and over again women tell us how Ry saves the clothes because “dirt is soaked out so gently ~and “even cuffs and edges come snowy with little or no rubbing!™ Co. Dept. G80, Rinso's suds are thick, creamy and lasting. That's why #0 many women say of this granulated goap, “It's eco nomical . little goes so far.” And it's all you need on washday=-no bar soaps, chips or powders, 4 e~ simply send your name and address to Lever Bros Cambridge, Mass. A full-sized package of Rinso will be sent you without cost. ed soak clothes whiser

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