Evening Star Newspaper, September 10, 1928, Page 24

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WOMAN’S PAGE. Butterfly in Applique for Napery BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. E VANG E- i B THERE ARE MANY EXQUISITE ARTICLES UPON WHICH THE ROS‘E AND BUTTERFLY APPLIQUE CAN BE USED. Th season for out-of-doors butter- flies is not one which lasts throughout the year in most sections of the coun- try, but there is no time of year in which the indoor butterflies on napery do not flourish. They are subject, not to the dictates of climate, but the pref- erence of those who are fond of plying their needles. A butterfly without a flower, even if #t be but an applique one, could not pursue a happy life. The dainty ‘ones that flutter on tea napkins are well supplied. An applique flower and an applique butterfly are an excellent com- bination. If one doubts that they ac- tually flutter, one has but to lift the napkin so decorated and see the tiny starched wings quiver in sembiance of | Peality. Picture a linen, light brown, cream | colored, white, etc.. with a wild rose or buttercup adorning one corner, and perched upon it as if for flight a radiant blue butterfly with a spot of lack or purple on either lifted wing. Does it not sound fit for a queen? The edge of the butterflies’ wings are lightly scalloped or finished with a Jvee binding of organdy, sclected for peing one of the sheerest materials, ending almost no weight to the wing. ‘The latter must be starched, separately {rom the napkin. which should have none and be pressed into stiffness. Since the wings and the napkins are THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1928.° attached only at the body of the but- terfly, this is easy to do. As a trousseau or wedding gift noth- ing could be prettier in the way of napery than this. Nor need the gift so adorned be confined to napery alone. A handkerchief, nightgown case, and soiled clothes bag can form a set to be done in this style. The pieces can be made in a variety of materials from the inexpensive but colorful Japanese crepes to the most costly of silks or satins. If a kind of goods such as crepe or soft silk is used, the starch in the wings is supplanted by tarleton, sewed between two thicknesses of the finer goods and supplying the neces- sary stffiness. If one is content to have the wings spread, but not tilt upward, | this extra process is not needed. The body of the butterfly may or may not be slightly padded, beneath the applique, to give it & suggestion of rounded effect. Two wee antennae of twisted silk or linen may also be added if desired, but are not advised | for napery or those things which re- quire frequent laundering. Those who make handkerchiefs of exquisite fineness for Christmas gifts THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Tuesday, September 11. While adverse aspects will be strong tomorrow, according to astrology, there is also promise to many workers. Under this rule it is well to push all constructive work and to encourage or- ganized activities, Engineers continue subject to the most promising planetary government. Much building of bridges and public improvements is presaged for the terialize, Cities projects beatty. through are to benefit from great that will add much to their Under this sway progress united effort is supposed to be great. Women _ should not push _thelr projcets, philanthropic or political, un- ule of the stars, which seems ate that they will mest with de- termined opposition. Theaters may find this an unlucky time for presenting new plays or new players. Under this dircction of the stars the public may be unfairly critical. New inventions in wircless and in aviation_are to make sensations in the are prognosticated for th2 Northwestern States. London astrold¥ers warn Great Brit- ain that Uranus is in an aspect presag- ing warfare in the air and that there mav be battles on the seas. All the prophecies appear to be of great promise for American business and commerce. Persons whose birth date it is have the forecast of a happy year, in which many of their drcams may come true. These subjects of Virgo usually have great imaginative powers, and for this reason are not easily satisfiod. Children born on that day probably will be exceedingly careful in all that they do, and they may be excerdingly gifted. The sign under which they were born is supposed to impart visions and fine aspirations. (Cobyrizht, NANCY PAGE New Curtains Are Both Tailored and Frilly 1928) RY FLORENCE LA GANKE. One of Nancy's friends had just re- turned from a trip to New York. While there she had hunted smart interior decorating shops and the stores on Fifth avenue. The curtains which will do well to employ this style for some of their handiwork this year. | The design which has been made espe- | cially for the readers of this depar | ment is adapted to many uses, only a | few of which are mentioned. i (Copyright, 1928.) 1 Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. Before Your Return. If you are reading this from the rorch of your Stmmer home or vaca- on spot, you may be thinking vaguely + [ your moving problem upon your re- arn to town. The exact figures show- 1g_the number of families that move ach year are not available just nov. >ut a good proportion are on the trek ¢ the beginning of Fall. Now is the time to plan moving in ~der to effect whatever savings may i practicable, Any new furniture or furnishings ‘1at you may buy now or between moyv- tag time sou will certainly have held atil they can be delivered to you: v residence. This will lighten your oving load to some extent. Many families have pieces of furni- , often whole suites, in the hands | the upholsterer and carpenter at is time of the year. 1In that case +ne should also give instructions to fer shipment until one’s things may ~2_moved into the new quarters. If you are undecided about new ruarters defer any buying you may be ronsidering until your decision is made. Another room more or less makes all e difference in the world in one’s iaopping. Frequently women put their “Sum- mer” things away in a trunk which is stored in an attic or cellar. If that is your habit, send the trunk contain- ing those things to the new abode. Any lessening of the load may mean a considerable saving. Decide now when you will move, so that you will have proper facilities, also s0 that your phone, gas and elec- tric service. will be installed and operat- ing by that tme. If the home is a new one have the landlord or agent state in the lease when you may take possession, so that you will not be pay- ing double rent while awaiting the ¢ompleteion of the house, or to cover yourself against extra caused by “living out.” These affairs may all be attended to before one returns to the city and is again in the “rush of things.” They may all be attended to in a leisurely but efficient way. living costs Fireproofing by a Combustible. Selenium of itself is very combust ble, but when a dilute solution is ap- plied to the insulation of braided tele- phone wires it makes the line quite flame-proof. The paradox is not very | clearly explained, but there are a few | other chemicals which behave in the same manner. The Daily Cross Word Puzzle «Copyright, 1928) Across. . Lover of Juliet. . Plant. Constellation. Hurried. Be in debt. 18. Cunning. 19. Military aviator. 20. Loose. Nodule of earth. . Salt. . Ves: pleased her most were simple, could be made at home, but had an air of smartness which is not the easiest thing to get. For the curtains Nancy chese cream-colored glazed chintz printed with old-fashioned rosebuds in old rose and black. The material also comes in old rose and reseda green. The cream ground was much in evi- dence, since the rather far apart. The valance had a tailored top to which was attached a ruffle edged with a band of glazed chintz in rose. It was fastened to the top by a flat band of black glazed chintz. The curtain_had no ruffie until it reached the sill. The edge was fin- ished with a tailored flat band of black. But below the sill there were two ruffles which extended around the bottom. One ruffle was edged with rose, the other with black. The tie-back was of a straight piece of material edged with black and ending in a rosette of mate- rial held in place at the center with a flat rose-covered wooden button mold. Had Nancy chosen the green and rose material she would have used green chintz bands in place of black. A room as decorative ms this needs com- pany to see it. And company. calls for re(reshments. Write to Nancy Pave, care ot this paver. inclosing a stamped. self addressed envelope asking for her leaflet on “Tea Time Goodies.” (Copyrighted, 1928.) MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. buds were placed Playing Store. One Mother Says: I save all my grocery cartons, such as cereal, cocoanut, sugar and crackers come in, and all cans, as coffee, baking powder and the like. They are stored away in a bottom cupboard drawer and are brought out on rainy days. The children set up a store and when it is opened each child goes a-buying equip- ped with a shopping bag. Besides the fun it affords them, it also teaches them to recognize the makes of food I use so when I send them to market they bring home the correct errand. (Copyrizht. 1928.) Biscuit Twists. Autumn, when ideas will rapidly ma- | ess before the new year, | | cannot do the simplest thing without asking permission. | | | | | | | | | Blames the Husband as Behind the Times What Makes Matrimony So_Difficult Today? DorothyDix Autocrat of Breakfast Table Does Not Realize That Antiquated Idea of His Own Superiority Is Whole Trouble. ROF. ERNEST GROVES of Boston University, speaking before the American Sociological Society recently, drew a melancholy pidture of the dethrone- ment of the modern husband. | He told how the once all-powerful head of the house, whose word was law | and before whom his wife kowtowed and beat her head upon the floor, had been toppled from his pedestzl and had his authority wrested from him until he became a figure of comparative unimportance in his own home, with none so | poor as to do him revercnce. No longer is a husband a hero to his wife. No longer does she regard him as an oracle. No longer does she look up to him and reverence him, and to this decadence of husband-worship Prof. Groves attributes many of the matrimonial troubles of the present day. 5 For he thinks it was the leaning woman who made the husband the sub- limated being he was in the good old days when she depended upon him for a livelinood. This attitude affected them both. The clinging vine and sturdy oak cause different reactions in a man, and the wife who can make more money than her husband coes not regard him with the same awe and respect with which women once looked upon their meal tickets. Hence a never-ending struggle for supremacy in the family, and arguments and bickering, and conse- quent wife desertion and divorce. This is a very {lluminating searchlight that is thrown upon the troubled matrimonial sea, because it is true that much of the conflict in many house- Holds, and the domestic discord of which we see and hear so much at present, may be attributed to the fact that a new relationship has developed between husbands and wives, and that they have not yet learned how to adjust them- selves to it. .. FOR the old order has changed. The autocratic, tyrannical husband who ruled his family with a rod of iron has been swept away along with the other supreme monarchs who have no place in a free world. Gone, too, is the patient Griselda wife, who bowed her head meekly to her husband'’s orders and looked upon his every word and act as of inspired wisdom. Gone also—dissipated into thin air—the superstition that made women believe that just because a man was & man he was a godling, possessed of superior powers. Education knocked the first prop from under the altar which men had reared to themselves. Girls who went to school with boys and beat them in their studies lost their faith in the mighty masculine intellect of which their mothers stood so much in awe. And when they married the Toms, Dicks and Harrys who had quit school in the grammar grades, while they had gone on through the normal schools and perhaps graduated at college, they couldn’t sce why they were not qualified to form as intelligent an opinion on a subject as their husbands, or why they should not have as much say-so in running the family as their husbands. The first married woman who founli out that she could support herself got up off her marrow bones and stood upright before her husband. She was free, and could look him in the eye as an equal. She did noc have to cringe before him as a slave any longer. She did not have to wheedle and cajole him, or bear with any kind of treatment he accorded her, lest he cast her out and she have no place to go and no food to eat. So here you have the new state of affairs. The home has been turned into a democracy instead of an autocracy, and a lot of the ex-kings don't like it. They wouldn't, naturally, because no one likes to be shorn of his power and have his perquisites taken from him. But the only thing they can do is to reconcile themselves to conditions as they exist. e e IT ISN'T that the modern wife wants to usurp her husband’s place as head of the house, or that she wants to boss him. She doesn't belleve in there | being any one head of the house, or any bossing. She believes in matrimony as a partnership in which the woman who puts into it all that she has and is, of money and work, and heart and soul and body, has equal rights with the man and equal au‘hority with him, And when men get up-to-date enough to accept their wives as their equals instead of treating them as their inferiors, it is going to make for peace and harmony. For the things that women resent about matrimony now are that their hushands ude them from their confidence, and that they know noth about their husband's businesses, despite the fact that their whole lives are invested in them. They resent the fact that their husbands do not deal falrly with them about money, that they have no regular allowance on which to run their house- holds, and no money whatever of their own to spend, though they do the work of two or three maids about the house; that they have no freedom of action and The remedy for the situation is for the man to realize that he has lost his Job as supreme and exalted potentate of the home forever, and that he must | now get himself elected president of the domestic republic by the unanimous vote of a wife who considers him the wisest, the most just, the most generous | ruler in the universe, because he is wise and Jjust and generous, and fot because she has to jolly him to get along with him, (Copyright, 1928, KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY JOSEPH JASTROW. DOROTHY DIX. ents of Thflnght. . knows what an impedi- ment of ch and if you have one, everybody detects that, too; but would you know if you had an impediment of thought, and would others detect it? Perhaps few speak perfectly; no one thinks perfectly. What are the com- mon impediments of thought? And why are they? | This fundamentally im- portant inquiry been strangely dis- regarded: nothing is so fatal to mental fitness as serious impediments of thought. * Francis Bacon, one of the great Impe Everybod; to understand why, though we live in much the same world, start with about the same facts, we reach different con- clusions; why we agree with some per- sons and disagree with others. Quar- rels, controversies, law suits, parties, sects, movements all present arguments, Both sides are sure they are right; yet the truth must lie somewhere. We can't see it because of the glasses or the blinders we wear. It's well to recognize how our minds are built and our opinions are formed.” We have the job of running the world under these conditions, with these impediments. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. S. Patent Office. ‘When Postmaster “Bill” Mooney was a champion scrapper for the old Colum- bia Athletic Club? MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes. ‘Wheat_Cereal. Creamed Dried Beef. Corn Meal Gems Coffee. LUNCHEON. Sardines. Sliced Tomatoes. Crisp Rolls. Sponge Cake. Tea. DINNER. Pot Roast. Boiled Potatoes. Succotash. Vegetable Salad. Coffee Jelly, Whipped Cream. Coffee. CORN MEAL GEMS. One-half cup corn meal, one cup pastry flour, three teaspoons baking powder, one tablespoon sugar, one-half teaspoon salt, one egg. Mix and sift dry ingredients two or three times. Beat egg well, add three-quarters cup milk, stir this into dry mixture, beat until smooth, then add one tablespoon melted butter. Pour into small heated and greased gem pans. Bake in rather hot oven. SPONGE CAKE. Three eggs well beaten, one and one-half cups sugar, beat five minutes, one-half cup cold water, salt, one teaspoon lemon extract, one scant cup pastry flour, one scant cup self-raising flour. Bake in moderate oven until it shrinks from pan. A great deal depends on oven being evenly heated to let it raise. COFFEE JELLY. To one quart coffee (as pre- pared for table) add one-half box gelatin; soak gelatin in two- thirds cup cold water one-half hour or longer; then set cup in hot water until gelatin is thor- oughly dissolved; add one-half cup sugar to quart of hot coffee and stir in meited gelatin; add little vanilla before the whole thickens. Set in cool place to mold, and serve with cream and sugar. ‘The maximum rainfall over the vir- gin forests of western Washington amounts to 250 inches per year, while the minimum in the eastern part of the State is 16 inches a year. FEATURES? MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Music in Laughter. Among the myriads of beauty ques- tions I receive day after day there are a few that stand out from the others. They owe their unusualness, not to the point raised, but to the broader conception of beauty they illus- trate. For example, there are thou- sand of girls and women who realize that blackheads are beauty blemishes, but only a few who realize that the quality of the voice may be such. And yet there are many girls who are considered pretty until they open their mouths to speak in a harsh, nasal voice or emit a raucous laugh. A letter from one of my readers brought up this ques- tion-of an unpleasant laugh. I think that many of us, if we are honest with ourselves, must plead guilty to the same offense. If we could hear phonograph records of our laughs I think most of us would be shocked at their lack of beauty. The first step in gaining a pleasant laugh is to realize its special character- istics. I think that every one will agree that a woman's laugh must alwa have a musical quality to order to be agrecable. Such adjectives as lilting, rippling, pealing, melodious, tuneful, duicet and soft are applied to the laughter one enjoys hearing. On the other hand, laughter that grates un- pleasantly on the ear is described as harsh, explosive, hoarse, cackling, shrill, piercing, strident or nervous. There are a.number of words in our language that describe this merriment as guffaw, snicker, snigger, chortle, crow, titter, giggle, etc. There is neither beauty nor music in these words nor in the action which they describe. After deciding that one would pre- fer a melodious laugh to a raucous guffaw or shrill cackle one must be ever on her guard against permitting any discordant sounds to issue from BEAUTY CHATS Back of the Neck. ‘The best time to give your skin the thorough daily cleansing it must have is before bedtime when you can tgke off your dress, pull your hair back and really make a thorough job of it. Then you can do the back of your neck with comfort, a most important matter, espe- cially now that cool weather is coming and higher collars will be worn. Nothing lcoks worse than a neck creased and wrinkled in back, with little black marks in the skin, flabby muscles, discolored and neglected. The neck front and back and the chin line—that is, the part under the chin—should be treated the same time as the face. Always! There is no exception. Spread cream all over these parts and rub in quickly. Cleansing cream will do. Wash this off with a cloth wrung from hot, soapy water. Wash again without the soap. Use some sort of astringent, anything to close the pores. The cloth wrung "from cold water will do, a pint of cold water to which 10 drops of tincture of benzoin has been added will do—pour a little into the palm of the hand and rub over the skin. Witch hazel is fine. Ice is recom- mended for skins that get old and flabby. Buy special astringents if you want, but nothing is better than ice for severe cases, nor these others for mild ones. Keep the back of the neck in as good condi as the face, whether you think it needs it or not. Remember you do not se#this part of you, except now and then when you use your mir- ror and hand glass. But others see it. and it is painfully exposed when you wear an evening frock. Use some as- tringent always, daily, because wrinkles form across and around the neck if you sleep with a high pillow or with your head twisted, even before middle- aged wrinkles coms Marion B.—You would put yourself to a great deal of discomfort, and per- haps set up inflammation in the nasal passages, if you used pressure over the bridge of your nose to try to change it shape. R. P. P.—Of the three samples of silk sent, the lighter one is the jade green that you wish. 3 minds that heralded the modern way of thinking, enumerated four ‘“idols,” or congenial errors of the mind—in reality impediments of thought. He gave them dramatic names. First are the “idols of the tribe” or presup- positions and assumptions and accepted notions common to nearly all men. We all belong to our age and kind, reflect and imitate, and absorb the views around us, and so repeat the errors and fall into the way of the day. We fol~ low the fashions of our tribe. The second are the “idols of the cave,” false notions and prejudices of those who sit in the darkness of ignorance, or the prejudices peculiar to their bringing _up, including . all the personal limitatipns. Your sectarian views, your provincialism, your class and clan leanings and favoritisms and antipathies and peculiarities, stand in the way of your fair judgment, and are errors due to the cave you live in. Third are “idols of the forum,” which arise largely from misunder- standing, and not a little from the im- plications of words, which, if they do | ot conceal rather than reveal thought, distort it in the reflection of language, what you mean. Fourth are the “idols of the theater,” or platform, or rostrum, or pulpit, which are the errors in ac- cepted systems of thought, religious, philosophical, political, social. These are peculiarly the thinker’s impedi- ments of thought. That was a good start 300 years ago; but 2,000 years earlier Aristotle made a beginning by enumerating the falla- cies of thought. But he made logic a sort of a game with fixed rules, and if you broke the rules, you made an error. Mistakes, errors, fallacies, idols, prejudices, delusions—they are all im- pediments of thought, or, rather, they are the results of such impediments. Aristotle neglected (for he, too, sat in a cave) what Bacon considered, name- ly, the natural temptations of men in their thinking to follow certain leads, to believe not what could stand the test of proof, but what appealed to their likes and dislikes. It was not until Freud came along and make what you say different from | Most minds are full of all sorts and conditions of impediments of thought. They distort your vision, falsify your judgment, make you a poor witness and a worse judge. Yet just as most of us speak as well as our neighbors and have no very conspicious impedi- ments of speech, so most of us think as well as our neighbors. We share the same idols. Yet in the interest of mental fitness we must keep all these tendencles down. We cannot aim to be perfect thinkers; we can aspire to be Teasonable ones. (Copyright, 1928.) When zour Eat it for LEEDS. her lips. The habit of deep, free breathing is a great aid in developing a pleasant voice. A girl reveals char= acter, and degree of physical fitness in her laugh. 1If she is pessimistic, nervous and underweight, her laugh will be tense and unmusical. Tight clothing especially tight shoes with high heels, and anything that makes for discom- fort affects the tone and quality of the voice also. ‘The reason for so many unpleasant laughs is, I think, that not enough at- tention is paid to the subject. Girls lavish time and money on beauty treat= ments and succeed in improving their complexious and coiffures, but they give no thought at all to the quality of their voices. It is only natural that this neglect should show. A good exer- cise for encouraging free breathing and relaxation of muscular tension is to swing the arms at the shoulders. Keep the muscles of the arms relaxed as they swing in a wide circle. While doing the exercise say “ah” in as musical and full a tone as you can muster. (Copyright. 1928 BY EDNA KENT FORBES Irene P—' a mixture of peroxide and u.mmnn;x;ryul the household kind, about half and half, to bleach and p}osxs,ibly destroy the dark hairs on your chin. Tomato Rarebit. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan, and add two tablespoonfuls of flour. Pour on gradually three- fourths cupful of thin cream, and as soon as the mixture thickens add three- fourths cupful of stewed and strained tomatoes mixed with a pinch of baking soda. Then add two cupfuls of finely cut cheese, two eggs, slightly beaten, and a seasoning of salt, mustard and cayenne. Serve as soon as the cheese has melted on rounds of toasted whole wheat bread. Famous For Her Complexion “MELLO-GLO, the new, wonder- ful French process face powder, stays on longer and the youthful bloom it bestows does not wear off | so quickly.” Thus Rachael Chester | | of 301 W. 105th St., New York City, lauds MELLO-GLO, the magic pow= der that does not leave the skin dry! | or clog the pores; that keeps the | ugly shine away and spreads so | smoothly that not a single pore is | visible.—Advertisement. bulk Eat it for flavor I 15 deliciousness — its efibctz'veness - have made this bran cereal the most popular mn the world Because they have found it so effec- regular habits. You can count on its crisp, delicious flavor to tempt Mix two cupfuls of flour with four|in this century and announced that level teaspoonfuls of baking powder and | in their thinking and no less in their one-third teaspoonful of salt. Using | dreaming, men followed the path of the fingers, rub two-thirds of a table- | Wish and desire, that the source of 1. . Three-toed sloth. Babylonian god. Assume an attitude. An old measure. Myself. The children’s friend. Man's nickname. tive—because they have found it so ‘Children Cry Ceremonies. Means of defense, Irishmen. Cover West Indian witcheraft. 1) out of, ic_pole. . Spanish definite article. 3.1416, Metric unit. An oasis. Belonging to it. . Possess. 2. Ascends. . Wind instrument (plural). . Be filled. 7. Instructed. Down. Crash. Swedish coin. Mother. Speech. Alkaline remedy. ‘Toward. Female sheep. Cole or. Babylonian deity. Close relation, Beverage, Tear, B m I vt e s . Either, Five cents (slang). A doctrine, | Scotia (ab). Engineering degree (ab.), ollegiate degree (ab.). spoonful until there are no lumps two-thirds cupful of cold wat slowly until a stiff dough is formed. St mixing and molding of the stifl dongh, the better. three-fourths of an inch thi the biscuits with a_baking powder n if made outdeors. If twists ave de into two-inch strips. two fegt long and about three inche in diameter. peeled at one end. ma; be used. Sharpen the unpeeled cnd and drive into the ground in a position leaning toward the camp fire. As the strip of-dough spirally around the peel- ed portion. as possible, turning the stick to bake the twists evenly. Such a stick could be held over a stove, or propped up in- side a stove oven: Biscuits take about fifteen minutes to bake in a hot oven. Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcass heef in Washingfon, D. C. for week ending Saturday, September '8, 1026 on shipments sold out, ranzed {rom 18.00 cents to 26.50 cents per pound angaverazed 22.61 cents per pound.—Adverlisement. The less water, the better, and the less | Flour it and roll it to about | he p of cold lard into the mixture | much of our misleading and distorted bont | thinking was definitely stated. Freud in | didn’t discover this; he formulated it [in 2 new way, in keeping with modern psychology. ~ When Aesop wrote the | fable of the Fox and the Sour Grapes, t into a story one of the common liments of thought. ~To decide the grapes you can’t reach are | imp that d, | sour and not worth reaching, rather the dough should be rolled out and cut | tham admit defeat, Is a congenial error A maple_ stick | of the human mind. It's your feelings | that get in the way of your thinking. | It would take not a chapter, but a volume, to describe all the varieties of impediments of thought. If reduced to a schedule they might read like this: sap sizzles at the peeled end, wrap the | Faulty observation, noticing the acci- dental, not the essential; ignorance, Allow to bake as rapidly | not knowing enough to form an opinion, vet having one just the same; just poor thinking, such as the testimonials to patent medicines; jumping to conclu- sions on slight evidence; prejudice, forming unfavorable opinions in regafd to those you don't like; wish thinking, believing what you hope or want to be l true; tradition, believing what has been believed, and so to the end of the | chapter. Add all these together and you begin for It Baby has little upsets at times. All your care cannot prevent them. But you can be prepared. Then you can do what any experienced nurse would do—what most physicians would tell you to_do—give a few drops of. plain Castoria. No sooner done than Baby is soothed; relief is just a matter of moments. Yet you h: eased your child without use of a single doubtful drug; Castoria is vegetable. So it's safe to use as often as an infant has | any little pain you cannot pat away. And it's always ready for the crueler pangs of colic, or constipation, or diarrhea; effective, too, for older chil- dren. Twenty-flve millions bottles were bought last year. CASTORIA perfectly delicious, your neighbors —millions of them—have selected as their favorite among all the bran cereals in the world Post’s Bran Flakes with other parts of wheat. You can count on the bulk in Post’s Bran Flakes to encourage your breakfast appetite, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, “Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. To- morrow morning is an excellent time to start eating it regularly. “Now you’ll like bran!”’ POST'S BRAN FLAKES WITH OTHER PARTS OF WHEAT [ Ordinary cases of constipation, associated with too little bulk in the diet, should yield to Post’s Bran Flakes. If your case is abnor- mal, consult a competent physician at once and follow his advice.

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