Evening Star Newspaper, November 4, 1928, Page 67

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Sleeve of Modern Design Has Proud, Long Lineage The earliest types of sleeves worn clbow than above it, remained in fash- | by our European ancestors were loose, shapeless . extensions of the gown, usually coming only a little beyond the elbow. For greater warmth among Northern Europeans longer sleeved tunies were worn at & very early date. These were provided with what we =hould ¢all mousquetaire slecves, They were made narrow and so long that i'n!'_v in wrinkles from elbow to wrist. might be drawn down over the hands to_supply the want for gloves the ecostume usually consisted of an inner tunic with the long sleeves and the overgown with looser sleeves some- sometimes made very wide and long, so that eventually they trailed on ground or were tied up in knots to keep them from doing so. Later, . to take the place of these absurd and troublesome sleeves, women | wore long tippets or streamers from the elbow. About the time that the fashion for Jong. trailing sleeves and streamers went out, the fashion for.deep. turn« back cuffs of fur or velvet came in Thi¢ was some 500 years ago. Full, puffed sleeves were devised and many times came into fashion and then went out again. Often they were slashed so that the fine material of the sleeve beneath might’ be seen. And so elab- orate and costly did these sleeves some« times become that the fashion arose for separate slecves that were fastened to the body of the gown by means of nar- row ribbons or jeweled buttons. A single pair of gleeves migh be worn with dif« ferent frocks and a very gorgeous pair of sleeves sent from Italy to France or from France to England wes enough to set any lady’s heart in a flutter. A satirist in the days of Queen Flizabeth wrote of the gowns worn by ladies of that reign in England that “some have sleeves hanging down to the skirts, trailing on the ground and cast over their shoulders like cow-tails; some have sleeves much shorter, cut up the arm, drawn out with sundry colors and pointed with silk ribbons and very gallantly tied for 80 they call them.” ion, with some alight variations, throughout the elghteenth century. Sleeves of this sort are those that we find in style éu in Prance and worn by Martha Wasi pre ington and other ladies of the Revolu- la:;n‘;:erlps. 8he notices the windows and e straight, | visits, tionary period in our country. Then followed the ulmgr, | long sleeve or the very short, slightly | puffed sleeve of the Directorre period, The simple, straight the extravagances that had gone fore. onlv the fingers were to be seen. the short elbow weather or evenin) long, close-fitting greater protection was needed. Then, to quote Maschel | Boehn, wear, every description bein, | surpassed everything that | seen in the way of sleeves before | eircumference became enormous. | ‘leg of mutton’ sleeve only appeared to be immediately replaced by the ‘ele: | phant,’ and so, after women had been | striving to make themselves look as | €lim and tall as ible, this being considered the ideal of taste, they now went to the other extreme, and for about 16 yeats succeeded with their | glgantic sleeves and large berthas in making themeselves look almost as broad as they were long." Such were the sleeves in the year | 1830. Finding it impossible to make {them any larger, fashion apparently | decided to 1ake them amaller. The | framework of whalebone was discarded, and by 1844 sleeves that fitted closely from shoulder to wrist had again come into fachion. Between 1850 and 1860 the pagoda sieeve reigned supreme. This | began narrow .t the shoulder and ex- | tended in a bell shape to slightly below the elbow. Lower arms were '>ft bare of covered with a gathered under- | sleeve. These undersieeves grew and wore steel hoops to hold them out. st before the revolution | for the time being. At one time she ia 1a; Fre advantage of sleeves of this| which a few years later in the Empire | the window drapery departments in the sort was that in cold weather they| period became fuller and more elaborate. | stores when she has a little time to close-fitting | spare. Thus, more or less saturated with sleeve of the Directoire period came as| window drapery, she is able to come to For centuries during the middle ages ' part of the general protest against all|a satisfactory solution of the problem be- of her own windows. This was sometimes so long that | The | in the problem of bedspreads and for times extending only to the elbow and | year 1818 is set for the introduction of | the time being she never enters & bed- uff which was made |room without first observing the way the | with the rest of the arm bare for warm | the bed is covered. and with |linen becomes & hobby for a time and jower sleeves when ' later she becomes especially interested and Von | “fashion grew quite delirious | home lover with a taste for 1urn||h|n?s over the sleeve, shapes and sizes of and decorations becomes interested in worn which | the spacs of wall over the fireplace. had been | AS & woman sits beside the hearth on T’l‘:s the first cool days of Autumn when the e | ith love-knots. | grew until by 1860 fashionable wnmeni This About 1670 came the fashion for bal-{was the type of sleeve that prevailed | looning sleeves that came only a little below the elbow, and poets sang the prajses of lovely arms. Twenty-five y-ars later the elegant full sleeve was Teplaced by a tight one. with a . cuff below the elbow in imitation of the| coats of gentlemen, from beneath which fell a profusion of lace in the shape of ruffies and leppets. And this type of sleeve, with fullness greater below the Throwing Awa BY ALLENE SUMNER. It is not at all the thing, according ® both the code of youth and its elders these days, to have any use for yout family. Of all the old “thou shalts” and “thou shalt nots” tossed on the dump, none has been tossed so far, wide and mighty a8 the “Honor thy parents” one. The conversational code demands that you laugh gibaldly at any and all men- tion of grandmothers and grandfathers, aunts, uncles, cousins, nephews, nieces, brothers, sisters, even unto the fifth and the sixth generations. The average flapper would no more think of wearing black stockings and forgetting her rouge than to neglect to call_her parents “old bean” or “good old eggs” or refer to them patron- izingly by their Christian names. The conversational code @demands, too, that one must give one's friends the “low-down” on all the crasiness, ridiculosities. crudities, “boners,” the everything of one’s family which years ago would been consil skele- tons in the family closet, bBut which today are tossed into the hopper of spicy conversation. There was a time when a very, very daring son or daughter might criticise parents or’ brothers and sisters and quote the bromide o6f the time to the effect that “God gives us our parents; but thank God we can choose our own Iriénds.;; i dasio ut it's today & very g you person who deighs admit that any lll‘!‘l' ily sentiment runs in her or his vein or that the family individually and cols during our own Civil War period. ‘ Full sleeves quite naturally went out | with the passing of the hooped skirt, and by 1870 the straighter, more slen- | der silhouette was again in favor. Your own family photograph album | will supply the rest of the history of | the sleeve until your own memory of | fashion changes can pick up the thread | and bring it down to the present.day. the “‘Stuff” | lectively is worth anything except as it furnishes grist for wisecracks, Modern fictlon recognizes this truth with its heroines in the way of deb daughtera either insisting on living away from home or having a suite of rooms in their parents’ homes where they may entertain their friends sans the listening ears of mere parents and other household pests. Of course, not all of today's debu- tante daughters have the yen to live in private quarters—and the majority of those who do have the desire do not realive their ambition—but there are plenty of callow maids who crave such privacy and freedom. Nor 18 it only youth which is in- clined to laugh at “all this family bunk.” Because the individual and his of her needs is atressed in this modern world, we are all inclined to go seeking our individual needs in the way of friendship, companionship, understand- ing, outside the home circle. It takes catastrophes, cataclysmic happenings sometimes, to make boti youth and its elders realize that wheths er it has been recognized or not, there i8 a family solidarity which defles any- thing, if the family is at all normal. real tragedy is when before such happenings come one has shuffled oft the family ties, has put miles between family and self and is utterly unable 0 oD the benefits of this family soli« darity realized all too late. etimes, however, the realization comes. before it 18 too late, when the atonement in gratitude for escape from “messes” which only family solidarity could achieve. Icings That Are Uncooked Last week we spoke a little about successfully making cooked cake icings. I hope if there are any questioins in segard to the directions given them that you will write and ask me about them. Today I am going to talk about un= cooked leings. se are mich simpler 1o make, butb a ceftain amount of care must be used to make them success- fully. A properly made, uncooked icing should be creamy, smooth, firm on the outside, but soft within. Unfortunately most of the ones we find and éven some of the ones we make ourselvés do not fit into this category. They are likely 10 be hard or brittle so that they crack off the cake when cut, 6f else they are so soft and watery that they sink into the cake and disappear from sight leav ing sort of a sticky smear behind them. The things that m&ke an uncooked icing successful are, first, the use of confectioner's sugar rather than pow- dered sugar; and long and thorough beating. Confectioner's sugar 18 finer and less gritty than the powdered sugar, ;vhereiore it makes & smoother, crea lcing. For a good uncooked fudge icing, mix one tablespoon of top milk or undiluted evaporated milk with one-half cup of confectioner’s sugar and one teaspoon of soft butter, beat this until smooth; it will be quite a thin mixture as the milk will largely dissolve the sugar. ‘Then stir in three squares of unsweet- ened, melted chocolate, another half« cup of sugar, and a teaspoon of vanilla. Beat this mixture again until smooth; the chocolate will stiffen considerable as you beat it. Gradually add another tablespoon of milk and the third half cup of sugar, making one and one-half cups of sugar in all. Beat this for about two minutes and then spread on the cake. Tt should be thick enough to spread in switls without running; it will harden on the outside so that it can be easily cut and will stay soft and creamy within for several days. If & plain icing is desired, leave out the chocolate and add any flavor desired. Good orange loing of the same type i made by using one egg yolk, two tablespoons of orange juice, one tem 8poon of lemon juice, the grated rind of one small ofange and about two 6ups of confectioner's sugar; a little Moreé sugar may be needed. Beat eg yolk lightly, add the frult julces an ‘ated rind, thetlllmbtirbmutm sugar one- cup at a time beating the hi; be:ween eackhauddmnn. P n uncooked icings long beating will give better results than the Exccss mmmt]nt;: ar. Too much sugar and e beating makes a h: brittle icing. T edmade etarwuow Have E;;ning Wenr In Special Place If you dress for dinner every night, then the dressing problem probably | solves itself for you. 1f you go to & really dress-up evening | party only once in two ot three months, | then, too, the dressing problem probably takes care of itself. The event is of time to plan and prepare your clothes and give yourself time to put them on in_leisurely fashion. But if you are a busy woman in busie ness of at homme and yet get into eves ning elothes onhce or twice a week throughout the winter for some patty or other, it 18 a great convenience to have things in special readiness. A buteau drawer devoted to the things your will need is helpful. Therein ean be always & fresh set of whatever lingerie You Wear, a couple of pairs bf stockings suitable for evening, and a little box ot dressing case of some sort holflln{l cosmetics—and hairpins if you wear them. And hlmdkmchretu. Don't forget always to have half a doven nice ones ready to call on for eveniny sufficient importance so that you take | | times the solution consists of some lines | THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €. NOVEMBER 4. 192%8-PART 3. Fireplace Motif Dominates Room BY BETSY CALLISTER. | O the housewife interested in the decorations of her home there always seems to be some one problem of furnishing which takes her thoughts and attention eoccupied with the problem of window draperies in other houses she she catches Interesting glimpses lof window draperies as she walke | through residential streets, she goes to At another time she may be absorbed Sometimes table | in floors, Sooner or later I think almost every fire has been kindled to take the chill away, her eyes are more apt to focus | inquiringly at this space in Bum- | mer time. ‘Then the question of the | treatment of the wall above the mantel | becomes absorbingly interesting. 8he | may seek far before she finds precisely | what she wanta to use in this way. | 'The conventional large mirror has | much to be said in its favor, only there are rooms where it doesn’t seem to be- long. sually it looks appropriate in the room furnished with colonial ma- hogany and white woodwork. With a middle or late colonial setting it is quite in perfod. But with the earlier zy{w of colonial furniture the llf,fl glit framed mirror is somewhat out of place. So would it be with the room furnished in old Spanish style. In the sort of nondescript rooms with which most of us have to content ourselves it frequent- ly takes considerable searching and scheming to get just the right arrange- ment, ‘hat wouldn’t do at all In a| | room furnished in the colonial spirit, And often a mirror Isn't the thing| needed. A large picture or a number of smaller ones may answer the question. Some- | written in large letters over the mantel | —and these may be quoted from a | favorite author, a quaint proverb or | adi or lines composed by the owner | of the room. { In reading the recently published | biography of Gene Stratton Porter, en- titled “The Lady of the Limberlost’— written by Jeannete Porter Mehan, the daughter of the auther—I came across & reference to the way the Limberlost Lady had solved this mantelpiece probe lem. It was in a letter to & correspon- dent, to whom she was sending her photograph and & copy of a recently published book. She wrote: “I am going to teli you the lines that I have fashioned for over the fireplace of & new workshop that I am bullding out in the Santa Monica hills on a tiny baby mountain, with a little canyon of its own running down each side, six miles from the ocean, which is close enm&h to see the wi breaking white at the feet of the Pal sades and, on clear days, Catalina Island, where I am going to have a Summer workshop.” . Then she gives the lines she had composed for the space over the fires place— “Mother Mary, seek the King, Ask of Him a wondrous thing: 8end to this my working place, A wealth of wings and flower grace.” Sometimes a large framed picture is Attractive in that position. An old family portrait if really good enough to please your guests as well as_your- selves may occupy this place of honor. That is the sort of thing that one looks for in the stately Jacobean room. have seen large landscape and sea- acapes that left nothing to be desired in this location. One woman I know pondered and ndered and tried firat one thing and hen another. Finally she acquired a railway poster that a friend had got for the asking in her European travels, and this proved to be precisely what was needed. Sometimes a colorful map makes an excellent doeonu&\‘ for the space over the mantel. In library or bookish living room you might like to place one of those charming new maps show- ing the sites famous in literature and romance. A strip of batik or Persian print may solve your problem or you may even find that a strip of printed silk or cretonne does precisely what you want to have done to that bit of wall pace. One woman that I know has ar- ranged what I think is a very Inters esting mantel decoration. The shelf itself is of oak, a plain, heavy board, set rather low over a brick fireplace. ‘The walls are finished in a stippled cream plaster. Along the wall, stand- ing on edge at the back of the mantel, is a row of sm'uh“mphs framed | in light brown we frames. They are photographs of various place of interest this woman has visited—Bermuda and Paris, Marblehead and Canterbury. Too small to hang effectively, but de- cidedly interesting as they are placed. ‘The frames are all of the same size, but hotographs are wider than igher than wide, and this difference of height gives sufficient va- riety to the decoration. (Copyriaht, 1998.) . firesenting prizes at a girls’ school Bru" Bishop of Bradford. Eng- , Perowns, admitted that he W In recen land, both Modes are original and indi: vidual, reflecting the charms of youth. BERNARD CREATES TO YOUR INDIVIDUALISM. Formerly 15 vears with H. Zirkin & Sons 1508 Conn. Ave. 4 Doors Above Dupont Cirele T MR AT (T AT AL Succession of Scents Makes Garden Lovely Are you planning your garden for next Summer? Most garden lovers do as much gar- dening in the Winter as in the Sum- mer. Only they do the cold-weather gardening largely on paper. And that is the kind of gardening you may be doing now. Planning fol next Summer. If you are, just think about this idea: “a garden that i§ not only & succession of . bloom, but & succession of smell. We most of us plant our gardens so that there $hall be flowers from early Spring to late Autumn-— from crocus time to the last days of chrysanthemums and cosmos. But not many of us think of having a succes- sion of smell in our gardens. In China, it is said, a gardener who has not mastered the secret of having something sweet scented always in bloom in the garden he tends cannot find employment with a rich family. This secret must be part of his knowl- edge. 5 Bt would be an interesting_experi- ment to work over for next Summer, planning a garden where somethins sweet smelling was always in bloom. Why don’t you try it? Go through the Winter collecting data on the blooming time of all the sweet scented flowers you know, and then work out your suc- cesslon, first on paper, then in your beds and borders. Buch standbys in the blooming suc~ cession as phlox and roses serve help- fully also In the succession of sweet smells. And rose geranium and lemon verbena, though their flowers are in- consplcuous or lacking, have a place in the garden of sweet amells. Here Is Unusual Kind of Apple Pie The old-fashioned cook does not sweeten her apple pie until after it is cooked—at least many of them do not and they insist that the results are better. This method prevents the {ulm from soaking into the crust. The claim is made likewise that the flavor is bet- ter since the sugar is not allowed. to cook with the apples. le in this way ‘To make an_apple the pie tin is lined with &utry. then the sliced apples are put in and then the top crust is added in the usual way. -The pie is then baked until the apples are soft and the crust 18 browned. Remove from the oven and carefully run a sharp knife around the edge of the pie, loosening the top crust. Lift it carefully off and place on large plate. Now to the hot apple mix~ ture add sweetening and what spice is desired. Some cooks add a pinch of salt with the sugar. It is sald by some that the best or I8 produced in & ple to which no spice is added, and that nutmeg, cinnamon, grated lemon, or any -of the other seasonings usually added, detract from the delicacy of the flavor of the apples themselves. Put the crust back immediately and serve the pie_hot or col EC7ENA, TTOHED AND BURNED On Face, Neck and Head. Healed by Cuticura. —— ‘‘Eczema broke out in blisters on my face, neck and head. It itched and burned and the blisters would dry up and scale of. My hair fell out and became lifeless and dry. I leep at night on account of it. 1tried several remedies but they & few days I got relief. I continued using them and in completely healed.” Lou Acl.. Elrod, R. 5, e of Cuticura Boap, with Caticura Ointment as required, keeps the skin fresh, smooth and clear, Cuticura Tal- cum is an ideal toilet powder. Roap the, fl\l"én! 25 and b0¢. Taleum 26¢. Sold whers. 10 oach " free. Address H, Malden, Mamn" Cutleura Shaving Stick 25c. MAP, PICTURE AND MIRROR EFFECTIVELY MANTEL SHELF OF THREE FIREPLACES. /- LACED ABOVE THE French Apple Pudding Good Stir together one cup of flour, six tablespoons white sugar and one tea- spoon baking powder. Siightly warm two tablespoons butter, beat to a cream and stir it in, also adding one beaten egg and two tablespoons of milk. Beat well and then stand on one side while you prepare the apples. Peel, core and cut up sufficient to half fill & buttered pudding dish. Pour the batter over and bake in a moderate oven for about 40 minutes. Bl 8 ‘Woman engineers are being employed in.a Paris automobile plant to test.cars, it being held that their keener sense of hearing enables them to locate engine defects more effectively t! me Figure with New Figure Control! AKE your figure lovely, youthful, attface A aoth, Sracemu. in r-.m.-rm“.vlld‘l( just the correct pro. ses any Ag X ions .mh. stylish lines. S, den abdominal belt gives tireless ent and wonderful comfort b in natural position—phys i abdominal support. new ne-K-—combines coraet, brassiere, hidden abdominal belt, and dia- phragm reducer—alladjustable. Givesgreater freedom than old style clumsy garmen: Featherweight—only 7 to 15 ounces. And it's priced 0 reasonably—only $6.00 and up, Now you can see for yourself how amasingly Katherine-K will improve your figure, Just phone or write today and our tral nlist will call for demonstration—no obligation to buy. Katherine-K is not sold in stores—it ls ftted to your figure in the privacy of your own home or our salesroom—that's why it's s0 com+ fortable, so flatteringly stylish, LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE Frone Franiiin 45 English Sandwich { " That Is Unusual| Cut slices of white bread and toast on one side. Cut the pleces in squares | about two inches across and spread the toasted side With stiff whipped | cream. Now to half of the squares | | add a spread of strawberry jam and press pieces together cream sides in. Another English sandwich is made by spreading brown with cream | | cheese seasoned with salt, pepper and | BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON. “Mother, I won't go to the movies with George. Me looks like a tramp.” “Qeorge, go and wash yourself up and put on another shirt. I dont wonder that Janet won't go out with W}f[ did wash mysell just before And this shirt ain't dirty. it on bran clean this morning. : how, 1f T ook like a tramp why doesn't | Janet get a beau to take—" “That will do, George. Here you are , 15 years old and you're as careless as you were five years ago—worse, I do believe. Qo wash. and wash right— ears and all—and puLhon .tmm" shirt. You might tie your shoe, t00.” Oeor‘:z shuffied off grouchily and res appeared th about half an hour in no mood to draw enjoyment from an eve- ning at the theater in the company of & lady. be a good one to send for | hed his mother. “Here he r hat on agaih. Get my bag in the side- No—no sodas. A dol- spend. Come straight up- 1 put! and go out with the ladies it takes—" Here his sister ”al\-! him & and :(I;'mmbl died away as front To tell the truth, his mother was worried and honestly discouraged. She bought him good clothes, dut he looked about the same in the new ones as he did in the old. As she said—hopeless. One day about finished a tie. shirts lost their buttons so rapidly that she accused him of cutting them with a penknife. His hands didn't stay clean five min- utes, his handkerchiefs looked as though he had wiped the floor with them. And no doubt he had done a little wiping on his own account around the eylinders of the car. Handkerchiefs and cleaning rags were all the same to_him. | That was George. awkward, ol 3 rowdy. Hopeless, his mother consid- | ered him and said so with emphasis | on_every occasion. Poor George! And with few excep- tions all his kind of the same age. It is one of the seven unescapable | ages of man, the age George is going through just now. At 15 a boy enters that skyrocket stage in Which he does most all of his growing. His bones grow faster than his_muscles. He not_only loses part | Felt Velour Silk —and hats of every de- scription cleaned and re blocked in the new styles. Attractive styles in FELT HATS at reasonable prices Felt Hats moulded to the head Flowers, Feathers Ornaments & Materials Sold on the Bias Ladies’ Capital Hat Shop Be Sensible About Boy in Rowdy-Growing Stage balance and control dut ve In & manner that mflnl to his the best, - can, but penchant for acting hina shop. Fastidious« one of the things fi i £ o 1 : won’ Any- | ment, and help it is a growing boy between the ages of 14 and 18. Colored Shoés- Gain in Vogue There is no longer any doubt as to the desirability of colored shoes for day= time wear. All the smartest shoe are showing them and the best di women are wearing them. There s really nothing at all striking abeut 'm for they are of soft, dark coloring. ‘The blue shoes for street wear are of dull kid so dark as to be very nearly black. Then there are dull, dark green shoes to wear with the fashionable y | Bunter's green ensemble and others of deep Burgundy tone to wear with the new wine tones. Sometimes these colored shoes are pumps with small or very wide metallic colonial buckles, but it seems thai quite the smartest sort are the oxfords. Brown suede shoes are much admirea and may be worn appropriately with the afternoon gown of brown velvet or #atin or with ensembles in beige. There are even brown suede slippers trimmed with just a suggestion of gold that are appropriate to wear with the evening frock of brown or beige. Beige or very transparent brown stotkings are worn with the brown shoes, and with the new midnight Blue sheer silk stockings of dust blue. We Specinalize in Fitting Wide ab Well as Extremely Narrow Feet AAAA to EEEEE ANY women are sutprised to know hee admire come o Coon shate 8§ n 3 (5L Shoes we know ronEse. the for wide feel Alse the extremeis " & srage i Custom-Made Stylish Stouts Complete Line of High Shoes g oot $7.50 to $11 ‘ MR. H. 0. BRUBAKER 2 e, oo St e MR. J. T. NORRIS Seld sxtlusively im Washington by 808 11th St. N.W, Phone Main 8338 enough currsnts je:ly‘ l:n m‘nt:e it ";p ::fl- cided pink. prini W el | chives and press together. | is the time to get the Cast Your Vote for Health First ¥ vital issue to you is Health. Now is the time to get a FosTEr IDEAL SPRiNG. Now HERE may be many issues to be de- cided at the coming election but the better sleep, the better spine support, and the steadier, healthier, better-nourished netvesthatthe Ipeavgives. If youare open to sincere con- viction on this important topic drop us a post card requesting our pamphlet, “The Common Sense of Sleep". It tells some- thing about sleep and the Foster IpeaL SerinG that every sensible man or woman should read. The Foster ldeal is made of guaranteed tempered spirals and sold at most furniture and department stoves Foster Bros. Mfg. Co., Utica, N. Y. Western Factory: St. Lowis, Mo, The Distinguishing Marks of. The Genuine Foster Ideal Spring (1) The Foster trade matk on the side railof the spring, (2) 120 super tempered extra tall spirals, (3) flexible band centet supports— not tie wires,(4) a swedged bar foundation— notcutbars, (5) aninterlocked lateral spring: tied top, (6) a handsome enamel finish. FOSTER IDEAL The *Buy” word for Quality when you Buy Bedsprings * Day Beds « Beds + Toe Trip Cribs * Upholstery Springs Upholstery Spring Constructions and Inner Spring Mattress Fillings TULSDAY NOV. 6% 7\ 7.30PM. ~—~ Election Returns by divect Western Union line and Radio Diner Parfait $2.50 Also A-Le-Carte Fun Makers Wardman Park Orchestra s » “THERE is no substicute for quality | ) in knitted elastic; no substitute for service in Corsets . . . Look inside the corset for the wavy blue line , that guarantees the supreme uality of Kenlastic, the life of fine Corsets ©roah JomuRuKendrick Ova lnta Philadeiphio Now Torh ’ 1407 H SIREET Main 3707 Baltimore Warehouse Baltimore Spring Bed Co., 751758 West Pratt St.

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