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WOMA Fashions in Night Clothes BY MARY Grandmother, who went to bed when she was a girl wearing a long-sleeved flannel nightgown buttoned up to the neck and a substantial nighteap, strikes the girl of today as having been rather amusing. Of course, the girl of today thinks that she would never have consented to such an unbecoming hight ensemble. But she—the girl of todey—when she decides to sleep on THIS NIGHTGOWN CONSISTS OF A SKIRT PORTION OF PLEATED CREPE. DE CHINE EDGED WITH LACE. AND AN OVERBLOUSE LACE EDGED AND WITH LACE MEDAL- LIONS IN THE FRONT. THERE IS A TIE BELT WITH BOWS AND ENDS AT THE FRONT. an open sleeping porch through the Autumn, and perhaps all Winter, rather proudly displays her new sleeping gar- ment, made like a bag of hcavfy wool with a smaller bag at the top for her head. Compared to this, grandma's nightgown and cap were the embodi- ment of grace and daintiness. “But gradma didn't sleep on a sleeping porch,” says the girl of today. And it's no use telling her that grandma’s bedroom was probably near- KEEPING ME BY JOSEPH In some quarters you won’t find much _indulgence for the psychology of indulgenc Smoking and drink- ing are physical indu'gences. They produce agreeable mental states by way of a drug habit. Some regard all in- dulgences severely as vices—some worse than others—but all bad. Mental vices, like betting and gambling, are consid- ered more serious as temptations to pernicious ways of making money. But 80 many persons indulge in this type of sport that on this,” also, opinions, and certainly practices, differ. Of all the habits looked upon most indul- fimly is_moderate smoking—a libation Lady Nicotine. Strictly speaking, smoking does no- body any good; and I write these words between puffs of a cigar... But since men generally cannot be held to do everything solely for their health's sake, it seems reasonable to leave a place in our scheme of living for the mildest indulgences, yet take account of what we get and what we pay for them. Certainly the economic bill of support- ing Lady Nicotine in a huge one: but the bill of Lady Saccharine for candy and sweets and ice cream and sodas is bigger still. Cost aside, and dis- regarding whether the price paid is worth it, there is an interesting psy- chology in the practice that goes up in_smoke. First as to mental efficiency. There has been considerable pressure placed upon _scientific investigation to show uo the harm of the baneful Lady Nicotine. Of popular denunciation from a moralist point of view there was an abundance, but this is hardly convincing. Medical evidence was con- clusive that smoking is harmful to those not physically mature: and it was also clear that excessive smok- ing was especially harmful to those with weak hearts. Nicotine is a depressant, not a stimu- lant; it quiets, docs not excite. But €0 much depends upon the dose and the manner of taking it and the in- dividual susceptibility that it takes accurate studies to show any effect. | This means that its effect on the mental processes is very slight, so slight that suggestion comes into play. 1f your mental powers are tested be- fere and after smoking, the very fact that you know you have smoked may change your effort enough to influence i the results. So Prof. Hull had the ingenious idea of blindfolding his sub- Jects and sometimes give them real tobacco to smoke in a pipe; and some- times the subject had an electrically heated pipe tn his mouth while an as- sistant did the smoking and blew the emoke in the direction of the subject’s face. The subject knew nothing of the trick and had the impression that he was always smoking. Of the five mental tests which he used, it appeared that in crossing off designated letters there was no differ- ence; in speed of reading a slight in- crease under nicotine, a slight loss in memory span, no effect on the accu- racy of adding and a slight loss in memorizing. The only marked effect Wwas an increase in the speed of adding. ©On the whole, Lady Nicotine is ac. DAILY DIET RECIPE CHEESE PUFFS. Butter, two teaspoons. Milk, one-third cup. Flour, one-half cup. Grated American cheese, two-thirds cup. Balt, one-half teaspoon. Cavenne, one-sixteenth teaspoon. ‘Worcestershire, one teaspoon. Eggs, two. Deep hot fat, two cups. SERVES 6 OR 8 PORTIONS. Melt butter in a saucepan. Add milk and bring to boiling point. When mixture boils, add flour, quickly remove from fire and beat until smooth. Then add American or Parmesan cheese, salt, cayenne pepper, Worcester- shire, Return mixture to heat until 1t is slightly warm, stirring all the time. Add one egg, beat- ing well. Then add other egg and beat thoroughly. Drop by teaspoons into hot fat and fry until the puffs swell and turn § golden brown. Drain, sprinkle with more grated cheese if de- sired or serve plain with any kind of salad or as protein part of a luncheon. Puffs are best eaten warm, DIET NOTE. | of peace, an art which they learned | from the only authentic Americans, the | Indians; women puff the cigarette of N*S PAGES MARSHALL. ly as cold as a sleeping porch, even if it wasn't so well ventilated. Fashions in night clothes change as much, though not quite so frequently, as fashions in day clothes. High necks come into favor and go out again. Sleeveless nightgowns are the fashion, | only to give way to long-siceved pa-| jamas. | At present the idea scems to bel | that if you intend to sleep on a sleep- | | ing porch, then do the thing in a! THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 1928. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. l(homuzhgumg manner and wear the garment that looks as if it were. part of an Arctic explorer's troussea I you are going to pamper yourself and ' sleep indoors—though, of course, with | windows left open—then wear a dainty | nightgown and try to arrange to have | the windows closed and the heat turned | on by the time you need to rise from | your well blanketed nest. Half-way | measures in the way of long-sleeved outing flannel nightgowns make little appeal to the girl who wants to be up to date. | | In the meantime the trend toward | what the fashion writers call increased femininity brings a revival of the use of much lace, ribbons and fine em- broidery in many of the new night- gowns. The sketch shows one of the new two-piece models made with a sep- arate skirt. i All you need to make the smart new frimming for your sweater is a crochet hook and some woolen yarn to match, the sweater or in desired contrast. These new ornements are attached to the sweater at the shoulder, and if you want to know how t» make them. please send me your stamped. self-addressed envelope and I will send this informa- tion to you with a sketch of the fin- | ished “bouquet” as worn on the sweater. | | (Copyrizht, 1028.) My Neighbor Says: Frosting will more easily ad- here to cake if a little flour is dusted over the top of the cake before the frosting is put on. Grease stains on leather may be removed by applying benzine or pure turpentine. Wash the spots afterward with the well beaten white of an egg or good leather reviver. When basting a turkey, chicken or roast do not swing the oven door wide open while you baste. Open the door only part way, cover your hand with a {gwel, slip the hand in, baste the Toast quickly and shut the door to keep the heat end steam in. When cake has been stowed away in the larder for some time and becomes dry and hard, try the following plan: Soak it for a minute in cold milk and rebake it in a rather cool oven. It will taste almost like new again. Stale bread may be treated in the same way. NTALLY FIT JASTROW. quitted of the charge of reducing your mental powers. But she does make your hand tremble; so does Lady Caffeine, though coffee is at first a stimulant. The attempt has been made to show that boys who smoke have poorer grades. The two moderately go to- gether, but it may be that boys inclined to smoking and all that goes with it may be slightly less able mentally than those not so attracted. Much has been said in word and song | in praise of tobacco. Hymns to Lady | Nicotine abound. “A woman is only a woman, but a good cigar is a smoke.” The pipe is a soothing comforter; the smoke incites charming castles, a pipe- dream. Much creative work has been done by those who use tobacco and by those who don’t. Naturally, if you are accustomed to tobacco, as you are to your desk and your usual surround- ings, smoking enters into the total picture of your most favorable mental adjustment. Men smoke for sociability as well as | relaxation. The after-dinner cigar is the culmination of a good meal and | agreeable company; it goes with coffee, also a drug. Psychologically, the gentle comfort, the purr of content, may_ be that of relaxation and reflection rather than the direct action of nicotine, | There is no doubt that it creates a habit and its absence makes a restless void. Some are readily prevented from smok- ing too much, for their immunity from | the digestive upset of tobacco doesn’t | go very far. Some are made uncom- fortable by a heavy cigar and many cigarette smokers cannot smoke cigars. Me and Tommy had a dandy fight 'bout who's muvver could lick the hard- est. I winned the argyment, ‘cause I offered to take his lickin' he was sure to get fer fightin' if he'd take time. (Covyright. 1928.) Home in Good Taste BY SARA HIL, Of the many types of occasional tables, the one shown in the illustration nas, and always will, be a favorite among the furnishers of homes in good taste. Sheraton in design, it lends itself to rooms of the Georgian period, and due to the fact that it may be used in so many different parts of the house it is one of the most practical tables which could be included in the household. ‘To the hall it lends the dignity of the | eighteenth century, and in combination | with a mirror above it and a vase or sil- ver candelabra on it, creates a most at- tractive setting. In the living room this table would be effective if placed between two windows, with a long narrow clock above it. The decorations for the top may consist of a pair of candlesticks or candelabra and a low flower bowl. Another use for this table in the liv- ing room is for cards. When desired for this purpose, the l2af may be let down flat and the entire top shifted to a posi- | tion at right angles to the base. The| base supports the leaves, and by lifting these it will be found that there is suffi- cient space beneath them for the keep- ing of cards and other game supplies. ‘These tables may be used singly or in pairs in the dining room, mirrors or floral pictures in soft tones being com- bined with them. (Copyright. 1928 THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Wednesday, September 28. Benefic aspects dominate in tomor- row's horoscope, according to astrology. The rule is favorable for most activ- ities on the planet Earth. There is a fortunate rule for women, { who should make the most of every It is a time to push|Students will be more industrious than fleeting hour. business matters and to arrange do- mestic affairs. Theaters should benefit, for the sway makes for favorable public opinion and for desire to pay for amusements. Under this direction of the stars whatever pertains to dress is of spe- The cigarette habit comes nearer to a_ restless craving for a momentary } “kick” and its American popularity has | grown enormously. The boy declares his manhood by the ceremony of smok- ing: but the virility of the emancipa- tion is now a little dimmed, though the companionship is increased, by the still | more amazing growth of smoking by | women, limited to the cigarette—a more | delicate and esthetic object. | Men still in a sense smoke the pipe | agitation. They are relieving a differ- ent type of tension. Indulgences follow the psychology of sex, and men are more given to indulgence and crave the relief of letting themselves go. There is a legitimate psychology of indulgence. Modern life is full of ten- sions and Lady Nicotine is looked for relief. - VWillie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “The reason I'm wearin’ a sling is because I showed Mary how the hero in t};‘e movie busted a door open with St Beauties and Society Leaders the World over secure that bewitching, attractive touch to their complexion cial interest, and for that reason manu- facturers and merchants should profit. The planetary government makes for the stressing of whatever is feminine and charming. The vogue of the girl who represents sports is waning. According to ancient lore this should be an auspicious date for the wearing as well as the purchase of new gowns. All constructive work is subject to stimulating influences, and engineers as well as builders are assured of much public work. The seers foretell the construction of a bridge that will be one of the new Fruit Powdered DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Straight Talk to Woman Who Wants to Monopolize Her Husband—When a Husband Would Be Merely a Luxury. EAR MISS DIX: Iam a woman of 40. My husband is 50. We have been married 21 years and have two daughters, both married. I have been quite happy until T discovered a short time ago that my husband has been interested, in & rather harmless way, in several women whom he has met while away on business trips. He has told me that the interest went no farther than a golf game or two, some conversation and the exchange of a few letters, and I believe him. I am not in love with my husband; in fact, I don't believe I ever have been, but still this worries me. Doesn't it scem silly for a middle-aged. prosperous man to spend his spare | time when away from home talking to the kind of women who are just waiting to nab some other woman's husband? shall I do? What do you think of it all, and what AN OLD-FASHIONED WIFE. Answer: I think you are making a mountain out of a molehill, and my earnest advice to you is to drop the subject and never mention it to your husband again. Don't nag him about it, and pose before him as a spurious martyr until Pe fleesr rrtom you as from a pest and you drive him to some other woman or comfort. I can't see that your husband has done anything to which you have a right to object. According to your own account, ke has only amused himself when he was away from home by playing a few harmless games of golf with some women, and has exchanged a friendly letter or two with them. What is the crime in that? He hasn't had a love affair with these women. He hasn't sacrificed you in any way to them. In these days when women swarm all over the place; when they are in every business office, and on every golf links and tennis court, there is no way you can keep a man away from them unless you lock him up in a monastery. He is bound to meet women at every turn, and if you are going to be jealous of every one he speaks to, or does business with, or plays with, you have certainly got a nice, green life before you. There are lots of wives like you who want to be all-in-all to their husbands. The woman who has this monopolistic complex resents her husband's affection even for his mother and sisters. She has conniption fits if he Is even decently polite to his dinner partner, or any old woman friend, and she is filled with deep, aa’rll( suspicions if he dares to say that his secretary is such a nice, pretty, young girl. Believe me, dear lady, no human being can be all-in-all to another. None of us can satisfy another's whole desire for companionship. A man may love his wife with his whole heart, yet enjoy talking with a woman who is entirely different from her. The wise woman knows this and she doesn't try to segregate her husband from other women. On the contrary, she makes his woman friends her friends, and is glad to see him innocently entertained and amused. The husbands who have to meet other women on the sly are the ones who are in danger of getting into sentimental affairs with them, not the ones who are chaperoned by wifey. In your own particular case I should say that you are fortunate that your husband has only a platonic friendship with other women, because if you do not love him and have never loved him, he must have gone heart-hungry all of these years that he has been married to you. DOROTHY DIX. e e DEAR DOROTHY DIX: Is any man neccessary in the life of a business woman who has a good position and can provide well for herself? . MARY JANE. Answer: In such a case I should say that a husband was a luxury and not a necessity. . Certainly the bachelor woman who has a good job has many of the elements of happiness in her hands and escapes many of the hardships that her married sister has to endure. She has, to begin with, financial independence, and no one, but the woman who has had to corkscrew every nenny out of a tightwad | husband knows what a blessing that is. If she is at all successful, she has much more money to spend on herself | and can have many more luxuries and indulgences than the average wife ever enjoys. She has her work to fill in her time and give her a never-: i interest. She can have her own home in which shi can do as sh: ‘;figfl;‘f "_n:er; 151 no :rtx‘an wm:i T'llgs a le‘salhnght to knock her faults, and tell her how at she is getting, an say to her rude and impolite t| 3 woman in the world is the unmarried woman. = HEER A s (e But, on the other hand, she misses all of*the tender human ties of wifchood and motherhood, and if she can do as she pleases it is because nobody cares what she does, and if she can spend all of her money on buying herself pretty clothes it is because there is no talented boy to scrimp to send through college, no lovely young daughter for whom to buy pink party frocks. Implanted in every woman's soul is the desire to love and be loved and the yearnirg for her own man, her own child, and no woman's life is fully rounded and complet> unless she has them. Often she pays for -them a bitter price. Often the husband is a brute who mistreats her and drags her down to poverty. Often the children are ungrateful and unloving, and whether these are worth what they cost her only the individual woman can say. Undoubtedly the happily married woman is the happiest woman in the world, and a good husband is to be preferred to a good job. But happy marriages and good husbands are not drawn by every woman who takes a chance in the matrimonial lostery. So to the business woman who has a good position and can provide for herself T would say that whether she should marry or not depends on whether she prefers the luxuries to t}l‘\' gec::?me:nug life. Shtei &mfi" really need a t sband an ny ave aroun e house. husband, but a husband is a y g e hix domiacl S his WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Rexistered U. S. Patent Office. FEATUR ES. WHY WE DO WHAT ‘WE DO BY MEHRAN ‘We often laugh when we feel more like cryin®. The outward laugh not infrequently stifles an inward groan. We do this to keep up our courage. Quite unconsciously we feel that we cannot afford to give in to our emo- tions. By pretending that we do not feel bad ‘we put ourselves in a better frame of mind to withstand shock and disappointment. . Laughing when the joke is on our- | selves is a form of sour grapes psychol- ogy, in which we try to convince our- selves that we are not so badly off, atfer all. It is an effort to make the | best of a bad situation. We put up a bold front not merely | for ourselves tut also for our friends. | We don't want others to feel bad on our account, and hence we pretend that | we are not hurt, and smile to prove When pie-eating contests brought out Washingtonians of great talent and ca- pacity and no excursion or picnic was | complete without such competition? MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Bananas Dry Cereal with Cream Shirred Eggs Muffins Coffce LUNCHEON. Oyster and Rice Scallop Baking Powder Biscuits Lemon Tarts Tea DINNER. Celery Soup Roast Pork Brown Gravy Baked Potatoes Creamed Cauliflower Tomato Salad French Dressing Baked Indian Pudding Coffee. SHIRRED EGGS. Butter shirrers, cover bottoms and sides with fine cracker crumbs. Break eggs separately into cup and slide carefully into shirrers, Cover with seasoned buttered crumbs and bake in moderate oven until whites are firm and crumbs brown. Shirrers should be placed on tin plate that they may be easily removed from oven. OYSTER AND RICE SCALLOP. Carefully remove all bits of shell from one quart oysters; add three cupfuls boiled rice, one and one-half cupfuls milk, one-half cupful butter, melted, two tea- spoonfuls salt and one-half tea- spoonful pepper. Stir with fork, turn into buttered pan, cover with buttered crumbs and bake about one hour. BAKED INDIAN PUDDING. Scald one pint milk. Stir into it two heaping tablespoonfuls cornmeal. Let stand until cool. Plece butter size of egg, one- quarter cupful molasses, one-half cupful sugar, one teaspoonful salt, one teaspoonful ginger, one egg. After all are mixed thor- oughly pour on one pint cold gllk, but do not stir. Bake one our. wonders of the world. This probably will be somewhere in the West. Again banks and banking come under the rule, or rather stay under the rule, that encourages development and ex- pansion. Many new branches of busi- ness or public service are indicated. Education is well directed under this | configuration, which makes for renewed earnestneses in pursuing knowledge. formerly, it is prophesied. ‘Tomorrow is held to be a rarely lucky wedding day, and they who marry under these stars may expect marvelous pros- perity. It is also a favorable sway for those who plight their troths. Suitors may expect favorable answer if they risk their fates tomorrow. Persons whose birth date is tomor- row have an augury of much happi- ness in the coming year through rel tives and friends. These subjects of Libra should do all possible to improve the practical side of their characters. Children born tomorrow probably will Be artistic in all their traits. The sub- jects of this sign are often musicians or painters. They are extremists, for the scales are likely to tip definitely either toward the material or the spiritual side of life. I " JALK There’s one for every purpose Granulated . . Tablet . . Brown Powdered . . Confectioners (Copyright. 1928.) advance. ‘Washington. large scale. the reach of all. ) FROST CANE SUGAR in the Blue Box You will like it because it is always uni- formly fine. Insist upon it by name. You can secure it \ in convenient size packages, 1,2,or5pounds as you prefer. For SaleBy AllStores That Feature Quality Products The N.t(ktfl'“!d" Refini o0 ooty " Chicago. T is probable that many in the East have never seen such peaches as these. Never before has the harvest in California been large enough to offer them for general sale. For years these big, golden halves, selected out of many, have been a rare luxury. Famous restaurants have placed their orders long in Now, the first great shipment of I‘,ibby.'s DeLuxe California Peaches has just arrived in Last year in the rich valleys of Califomia, new trees came into bearing in ‘the Libby orchards. For the first time in history real DeLuxe grade peaches were harvested on a And today Libby’s DeLuxe California Peaches can be offered at a price that places them within Big halves of tender gold! So firm, so deli- cately ripened! Just to see them moist and gleaming on the table is a feast for the eyes. To taste them, may be for you and your family a wholly new delight. Leading grocers can now supply you with Libby’s DeLuxe*California Peaches. Libby, MSNeill & Libby, Togetchoicevarieties of allfruits: Hawaiian Pines apple, Bartlett Pears, Apricots, Plums, Cherries, eic. as well as Peaches, be sure to ask for Libby's Califora® De Luxe that all is well when all the while our heart is breaking. To smile when we should cry is a brave thing to do. We all admire grit and courage in ourselves as well as in others. Another motive for laughing at our misfortune is to hide our feeling from our enemy. We hate to give him the satisfaction of knowing that he is hurt- ing us. It is hard to take a licking, but it is much harder to admit being licked. The slang phrase, “Laugh that one off,” shaws it is the expected thing to do when one is up against it. intimates that there are some blows that are mighty hard to laugh at. We laugh when we should cry because we want to be strong, to hide our fear and injury from friend and foe and to bolster up our morale. ‘The human desire for entertainment is a strong one. It is evidenced by the enormous number of people who flock to the movies and other places of amusement. Rare and unnatural in- deed is the person who doesn't seek some form of entertainment at fairly regular intervals. The obvious motives for this uni- versal human desire are diversion, recreation, change, etc. However, there are at least two other important mo- AUTUMN BY D. C. PEATTIE. To those who love butterflies, the first days of Autumn are the last days of delight. The ornithologist is practically as busy and as interesting in Autumn and Winter as in Spring and Summer, To the really enthusiastic botanist, too, the world does not go quite dead at any time of year. But Indian Summer will see the last of the bright dancers in the sunlight, and I, for one, watch them flitting about in the orchard grass, where the wasps drone drunkenly amid the rotting fruit, with a touch of melancholy. In the everyday world it is considered a bit disgraceful to be an entomologist— a student of insects. One of the great- est entomologists we ever had was named Smith, and to his neighbors in New Jersey he was merely “Bugs Smith,” though in London or Paris he was the eminent Dr. Smith, to be greet- ed respectfully. And so, within the cir- cles of entomology, to be a lover of butterflies, a lepidopterist, is also a bit disgfaceful. The other entomologists will say—"“Oh, one of those fellows!” Meaning that he is a gusher and a crank, not a serious-minded scientist. Without myself being an entomolo- | gist, or a lepidopterist for that matter, | I will confess myself a (quite ignorant) lover of butterflies. It is no more than natural that they should be every- body’s favorite insects«-so devoid of the monstrous instincts of other insects are they, so enchanting, gay and evanescent. They are Autumn’s ballet in its far well performance. It also | K. THOMSON tives for wanting to be entertained which are not so obvious. One of these is that in being enter- tained we are relieved of the necessity of thinking for ourselves. We place the responsibility in the hands of others and sit back to be worked upon. It is a real diversion, because it saves us wear and tear. ‘The people, therefore, who have the least energy and mental resources are the ones who seek entertainment most. Left alone, they are lost for want of knowledge and thoughts and ideas with which to occupy their minds. It is much easier to_let some one clse do your thinking. It takes energy and wit to entertain one's self as well as to entertain others. ‘The easiest way to entertain guests is to hire professional entertainers or to take your guests to the theater, where the professional entertainers are to be found. This is proper at times, but is not the highest type of hospi- tality. The true host and hostess are people of imagination and mental re- sources sufficient to furnish the guests with homemade entertainment. Another important reason why we like to be entertained is that it appeals to our pride and self-esteem to sit back and secure some talented person to do his best to please us. We applaud to show our good judgment. and the artist bows in humble acknowledgment of our valued patronage and sound ecritical ability. e 1 Tl'le Grcat Bards ¢ R e The poets of the olden days tuned up their harps and chanted lays of fabled beings, god and myth—and not of Jones and Brown and Smith. I have a |cheap and common mind, and small amusement do I find in reading tales of warlike ghosts that scrapped with other phantom hosts. When I was young my teachers wrought to so improve my dome of thought that I could see the beauties high that in those masterpieces lie. But I would rather read of Brown, who circulates around the town, and struggles, in a human way, to pay his debts and bale some hay, then read a yarn of Hercules, whose labors badly sprained his knees. He never lived, and 50 his toil conflicts with all the rules of Hoyle; the hero of a poet's dream, he never peddled milk and cream, or nailed the hinges on a gate, or put some squashes in a crate. But Brown, he has his little shack and quite a garden at the back; he trots around on tireless legs; he raises hens and sells the eggs: he pays his taxes on the dot, and is an aseet large, I wot; and what he does means vastly more than fabled deeds on fabled shore. I wish that Homer had set down the doings in his ancient town; the daily life of gents and dames, and how they played their humbled games; the schemes the merchant princes sprung to get the trade of old and young; the wiles of ancient candidates when rounding I‘lg the village skates: the arguments, the nolse and sweat, what time the city council met. He could have written of such themes, but he must write his lurid dreams, tell mighty tales in trumpet tones, and so he passed up Brown and Jones. And what such common critters do, as their small errands they pursue, means more to me than any wheeze concerning ghosts like Hercules. L WALT MASON. (Copyright, 1928.) AUNT HET BY ROBERT QVILLEN. ] “I hate to feel this way. I feel so good I'm ashamed to set an’ do nothin’, an’ feel 50 bad I hate to move.” (Copyright, 1928.) - Just arrived from California -the first great shipment of Libby’s DeLuxe Peaches . .. Recipe furnishes protein in great amount, some starch and very little fat. Lime, iron and vitamins A and B present. Could be eaten by adult of normal di~ gestion who is of averaj or under weight. If you are unable to get Libby's Peaches from your grocer, write or telephon. our Baltimore plant—526 Light Sireet. Phone ~Plaza 1441 Biz, luscious peaches ripened to delicate Jfirmness in the oichards of California! The ickof ihe harvest—Libby's DeLuxe California eaches! Until this year, only the fortunate Jew could have them CANE SUGAR Made {n White - Flesh - Rachel In use over 85 years Kend 10c. for Trial Size T. Hopkins & 8o JACK FROST PURE SWEETNESS