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WOMA N’S PAGE. Latest Fashionable Couture Finish BY MARY Every season has its catchwords in fashion—that end by being bandied about rather carelessly without much regard for their original application. ‘When a dressmaker or saleswoman NAVY BLUE GEORGETTE AND TAF- FETA SILK COMBINED IN FROCK, UPPER PART OF WHICH IS OF GEORGETTE AND LOWER PART APPLIQUED TRIANGLES OF TAF- FETA. doesn't know precisely what to say about the dress under consideration she uses these catchwords. So that prac- tically every frock you see is said to possess the “new feminine effect” or MARSHALL. else it is said to have the “dressmak- er” touch or finish. In the very nature of things most women’s frocks are feminine and al- ways have been—even the so-called mennish ensembles that were favored a few seasons ago. The new femi- ninity T suppose refers to the ten- dency on the part of some of the de- | signers to use more frills and furbe- | lows. Longer skirts, more flaring skirts, slightly higher waistlines and more closely molded bodices—these charac- teristics are also pronounced “more feminine.” The dressmaker or couture touch should apply of course to the frock | that looks as if it were made to order by a dressmaker. In actual fact this aspect is often .found in frocks that are bought ready made and others that are made at home. Painstakingly made and carefully applied self trimming gives this desired “couture” aspect. | The home dressmaker is apt to make as simple a frock as possible and add finish by way of ready-made trimming. The frock in the sketch, inspired by a new French model, possesses this “couture” effect—and yet it really was made by an amateur. The upper part is of georgette and the lower part of chiffon taffeta—both in navy blue. Triangles of the taffeta painstakingly turned under at the edges and neatly sewed to the georgette provide the fashionable couture finish. It would be hard to find anything more misleading than one of the new crush shirred collars. They look com- plicated and they are quite the re- verse. You just need a straight piece of velvet or satin or broadcloth—and some lengths of dressmaker's cord. A few tucks in which to run the cords and there you are. If you would like a diagram pattern showing precisely how to make the tucks and do the shirring, please send me your stamped, self-addressed enve- lope and I will send it to you at once. (Copyright, 1928.) Savory Stuffed Potatoes. Peel six large potatoes and cut them in halves lengthwise. Take each half and scoop out as much of the potato as you can without breaking through any- where. Now take a cupful of cold mash- ed potato, add a cupful of sausage meat, and pepper, salt and grated onion to taste. Mix all well, fill the holes in the potatoes, fit the halves together again, and then put them on a tin with lots of dripping and brown them well in the oven., Have the cases quite thin, OUR CHILDREN By Angelo Patri Not for Today. Perhops your child, a perfectly good child until this happened, has begun to practice a bad habit of some sort. You|pe d are greatly distressed, and in your fear and tribulation scold and threaten and punish. You create such a storm of emotion within your own heart, you are so verv unhappy, so shaken to the depths, that you feel that this can never happen again. Such suffering need not Tepeated. But you forget that the emotion and the suffering and the other indications of the storm were your own and not the child's. He was a little uneasy, a bit disturbed. Perhaps he even cried and *xomhed you he would not do this hing again. And then in a very short time he did do it again. And you were surprised and greatly hurt. That child knew better. Hadn't he told you he wouldn't do it again? Hadn't you wept and pleaded, and hadn’t he wept also? ‘True, all true. But in one particular the idea cannot hold. It was you who knew better and not the child.” Within him was"some old instinct, some deep- seated desire that drove him to express it and he did so. He will continue to do so until that expression is satisfied or until it has been'met with other ex- periences that quite discourage it. That is not done in a minute or an hour of talk and tears and .promises. It is a longer, slower process than that. When a child does what is wrong instead of losing your self-control, in- stead of giving away to fear and anger, try to hold on to yourself until the storm passes. Then think this over. stances did he do it? . Where is it wrong? What can be done to let him have the true weight of the experi- ence without harming him? What can lone to render the occurrence of the same circumstances impossible? ‘What can be done to change the asso- ciations of the wrong idea? How are you going to proceed to correct and adjust and train this tendency either to good or to nothingness, as its value determines? Training & child is a long, slow and complicated process. The more you know about it the less you know. But caution is the way of wisdom. Study each step before you take it and keep saying, And what then? Do not expect that because you gav: a child one good lesson, one good talk- ing to, one strong experience, the child knows better. He will know only when experience, repeated and varied and interpreted experiences teach him. When you give a lesson it is not for today; it is for tomorrow, that far| away tomorrow in a child’s life, in which the teaching of years is going to bear fruit. Not for today. But day by day, line upon line in the fine old way, teach and interpret and teach egain. Quietly in the inner silences of the child his soul is forming, and in that hoped-for tomorrow it will come forth, strong and sure. But not today. Teach today so that the tomorrow will be certain. Teach in faith, There is no other way. (Copyright, 1928.) Mr. Patrl will give personal attention to inquiries from parents and school teachers on the care and development of children. ‘What did he do? Under what circum- him. in care of this paper. inclosing stamped, 8odressed envelope 10¢ repl: KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY JOSEPH Are People Honest? Mr. Samuel Crowther, speaking in the Saturday Evening Post and pre- sumably for and of its million readers, says that they are. His evidence is that certain banks now lend money to borrowers without demanding collateral and with only slight requirements as to character and earning power, and yet lose but one dollar in a thousand on their loans; that autos, pianos and furniture (even clothing) sold on the installment plan, show no more loss than is regarded as a legitimate com- mercial risk. These people are honest; with few exceptions they pay what they promise to pay. Does that prove. “aen, that people generally are honest .il the way through? Let us see, 1 look upon honesty, as d--; every- body clse, as an indisper- .ole con- venience for running the wc id and an acid test of one phase of als, but as a psychologist I regard it as an index of mental fitness. To be honest indi- cates that you have yourself well in hand; that you don't have to be watch- ing yourself to se: that you don't get into trouble. It is far more than that honesty is the best policy; honesty is the best habit. It saves you thinking about a lot of things that cost time and money; it removes temptation; it sets you free to go about your business. It sets your face forward toward reality and no evasion; it makes you a re- sponsible citizen. further than repaying debts that you have Jegally assumed, knowing that there are definite legal provisions to enforce payment if need be. Naturally, we are all glad to know that even under these circumstances, which leave quite a loophole for dishonesty, people | are as generally almost universally honest as the banks and installment houses find them. But it will take a far more widespread distribution of Thonesty on both sides, on the part of those who make and sell, and on the part of those who buy, to make a com= Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “I could of told the teacher how many pecks in four bushels, but I couldn’t remember whether you sub- tract or divide,” So my notion of honesty goes much { i JASTROW. fortably honest world. The bank state- ments tell one story, but the returns are not all in the bank statements. Mr. Crowther tells us that about 5 persons in 100 borrow money; honesty among this 5 per cent of the popula- tion seems established. How many more than 5 per cent buy on the in- stallment plan is not told. Many, many more buy on credit. The ordi- nary losses on unpaid accounts is re- ported to be so large that it is often cited as the main cause of business failure in small retail business. We should like to hear from rent collectors; people who pay rent form a far larger and more representative part of the population than those who borrow money at banks. Collecting is an enor- mously costly and difficult occupation. ‘There are certain obligations that we put more or less in a class by themselves, as legally entered into with the idea that these must be met. Bank loans, life and fire insurance, rentals, installment payments fall more or less in this class. The experience proves that geople are honest enough to per- mit this type of business to go on with slight loss, though by no means equal in each of these items. There is a scale of honesty. It would be interest- ing to know how bank loan honesty and small shop credit honesty compare. But the overwhelming evidence on the other side is the enormous amount of money spent in looking up things, in millions of tons of steel used in making vaults and safes and locks and bolts and bars. The whole world is padlocked at night, and much of it during the day. Guards are on duty at every point. Think of the salaries paid to these vast armies of guardains against dishonesty. Walk a mile in the center of New York City and you'll meet more than one armored truck. 1 Of course, this means only that a very small proportion of people are profes- slonally dishonest, and we, the honest folks, have to pay millions to defend oursclves against the few. There fis, however, an enormous amount of petty i thieving and shoplifting, and quite as much in imitation and counterfeits and shady transactions generally. Despite pure food laws and a great improvement in business ethics, you still buy considerably at your own risk. Further, you are hampered in coming and going by the fear of loss, because gchle generally haven't the habit of nesty so ingrained that you can let up on the eternal vigilance in caring for your property. This isn't a pessimistic view of the human race by any means; it's just an honest facing of the facts. It's an emphasis on honesty as an everyday, all-day habit, practcied without effort and bred into one’s behavior, for until you have that kind of honesty prevail- iing in the population generally, you won’t have the ccmfort and convenience of an honest world. To be morally and mentally fit im- plies that hcnesty is a part of your make-up; that you don't have to police yourself, not mercly that you feel at ease when you pass the policeman. In 2 world in which property and money mean so much the temptation to dis- honesty increases. Let us try to be- lieve that people are as honest as they ever were, despite the fact that it is harder to be so. The only salvation is to make honesty the best habit for everybody. 6 THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, SIGHTS WE’LL NEVER SEE. THE HENPECKED HUSBAND WHO FINALLY ASSERTS HIMSELF—AND GETS AWAY WITH Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Habit Breaking. Of all the names for behavior pat- terns that psychologists use to de- scribe when and how we do what we do, habit takes the first place in the lexicon of terms. Habits are personal acquirements, based on a set of native reflexes which suggest what were once the customary ways of getting on in the world. In forming a habit, you merely built an addition to this ancient foundation of reflexes. Habits save time, insure accuracy and preserve the nervous system generally. ‘We can’t get along without them. On the other hand some of them, especially those that are harmful, se- cure all too permanent hook-ups in our neuro-muscular equipment. They have a way of creeping in upon us, robbing reason of its rightful work, and causing some of us to fall victims to or that automatic burden of monotony. The big problem is to get rid of the burden. And how? No one takes much interest in habit breaking until he is forced by necessity to change some habit. The motive must be impelling. New Year resolu- tions are not worth much. Unobserved as they usually are, they only serve to strengthen the chain they are supposed to weaken. ‘The second step in habit breaking requires what is called “determined effort.” A person needs to look forward to a battle with his nerves. A good resolution well advertised among your friends will come in handy at this sec- ond stage. The third step is the avoldance of exception. Don't experiment with a habit, even after you imagine you have conquered it. Habits have a way of their own of getting satisfaction and revenge. Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND, If one has a chaise longue, of course one should have a really beautiful cover to use with it; but lacking a chaise longue, there is still the possi- bility of having a covering which may be used on the bed for comfort during the afternoon nap. In the accompanying illustration are shown a robe and pillows, all of which have been fashioned from embroidered net over satin. The net and embroid- ery are in a light shade of ecru, the satin beneath the robe and large pil- low is peach and that beneath the circular pillow light green. The two small pillows have a mauve lining. For the chaise longue, the robe should be fitted so that it will show the shape of the piece. The ruffle should be placed along the sides and the foot. For a bed the robe should be square with the ruffle all the way around. Taffeta or satin may be used for robes of this type, the only decoration being a quilted design, and basket weave wool robes bound all around with tive. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. toof, but I ain’t goin’ ter pt et; not by no meansi satin ribbon are practical and attrac-: D. C, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1928. By JOHN CASSEL. Yo THE WIVES OF THE PRESIDENTS Julia Dent, Loneliness for Whom Led Gen. Grant Into the Only Mishap of His Life. BY J. P. GLASS. A ~A Cudey Byl “GRANT PERSUADED THE BROTHER TO RIDE HIS HORSE AND GOT INTO THE CARRIAGE.” Julia Dent was not at home when her brother Fred's West Point room- mate called. Louis, 10 miles away. Lieut. Fred Dent was not at the plantation, White Haven, either. He had been ordered West. 4 Ulysses Simpson Grant found Fred's father to be a large man, proud of the size of his estate, the number of his slaves, and his importance socially. Mrs. Dent was very kind and mother- ly. Two other girls, Emma and Ellen, were pleasant and attractive, and he liked the boys who completed the large family. ~Nevertheless, being a little shy and reserved, he wished that his chum were there. He wondered about Julia Dent. Fred often had spoken of her. She was 17, lively, strongly bent toward gayety. Lieut. Grant was stationed at Jef- ferson Barracks, not far distant. It was an easy ride to the plantation on & good mount, and Grant was a famous horseman. It was not long until he was at White Haven again. This time Julia Dent was at home. He fell in love with her. Again and again he returned. But he did not propose. ~He needed to have his natural shyness dissipated by the force of circumstances. Julia was not long in losing her heart, too. Grant was only 5 feet 7 inches in height, and he weighed only 117 pounds, but he had a military carriage, and was good looking with his straight nose, firm jaws, sandy brown hair, gray eyes and clear, fresh complexion. He had an invariably thoughtful and courteous way with women and girls that pleased her, too. She was wondering when he was go- ing to ask the all-important question, when events conspired to bring mat- ters to a focus. The Mexican war clouds .gathered. Lieut. Grant was ordered South. He couldn’t leave without knowing if Julia loved him, and hastened to White Haven. Julla and a brother were in a carriage just starting off to a friend’s wedding. Grant per- suaded the brother to ride his horse and got in the carriage. Crossing a bridge over a flooded creek, the girl took hold of his arm. “If we go down I'll cling to you.” she said. She was visiting in St. | his He had been wondering how to ap- proach the subject in hand. Here was s cue. “I wonder if you would cling to me all my life,” he rejoined. It developed that she would, though Col. Dent raised some difficulty about it. Small, easy-going Lieut. Grant didn’t impress him much. Julia nt Grant was of a sub- stantial family. Her schooling was re- ceived in a boarding school before she was 17. She was, in fact, a simple Middle Western girl, just as Grant was a simple Middle Western boy! As a woman and wife, she had splen~ did qualifications. The only moral mishap of Grant's life occurred when he had to be away from her and was lonesome and depressed without her. He fell to drinking, while stationed on the Pacific Coast, to which he could not take her, and he left the Army. He dropped drink when he rejoined her in Missouri, She was glad to have him back, but his civillan days, when their family grew without his fortunes advancing, were a trial to her. Both her own and Grant's family were critical of him. He was a failure, Inconceivably, the Civil War came and made a world figure of him. After that peace ahd the presidency. She entered the White House a plain, motherly woman, simple in her manners, but with powers of adapta- tion that enabled her to meet all so- clal contingencies with dignity. She loved parties and receptions with child- like enthusiasm. She enjoyed her position as mistress of the White House. When Grant, in 1875, told her he had written a letter renouncing a third term, she exclaimed: “But you must not send it.” “I have, though,” he replied. “Well, go get it back instantly.” The general was wiser than she. “It's in the hands of Uncle Sam now,” he said. Before she got through, she had a greater social experience than any of the Presidents’ wives. She toured the world with Gen. Grant and met the sovereigns of every nation. Through the long illness that finally destroyed him she was his falthful attendant. (Copyrigit, 1928.) DIET AND HEALTH: BY LULU HUNT PETERS, M. D. Remedies Applied to Warts. A—~There are many simple things that can be applied to remove warts: Common baking soda, lodine, boracic acld, sal ammoniac, lemon juice, etc. The warts should first be thoroughly scrubbed with soap and hot water. The technical name for warts is verucca. The common type, such as your little boy has, is verucca vulgaris. The type of wart in which there is one or more distinct thread-like projec- tions, is verucca filiformis. This type of wart is soft and occurs mostly on the face, eyelids and neck. The brown- ish wart, which appears mostly on the trunk, arms and neck of the elderly is known as verucca senilis, Causes: It is not fully known what causes warts. The ordinary type may be due to some sort of germ, as this seems to be auto-inoculable; that is, one may cause more on the same per- son. Precaution: Warts which are in posi- tion to be irritated, especially around the age of 40, should have the atten- tion of a physician, for it is possible that the frritation may cause cancer- ous changes later in life. For the same reason the verucca senilis should not be home treated. Food Idiosyncrasies. L.—When certain foods cause a rash or other disagreeable effects habitually, one has what is known as a food idiosyncrasy or food sensitization. Strawberries, sea food, coffee and eggs frequently disagree in this manner with some persons. It is believed that the protein part of the food is not digested properly, and some of its products get into the blood stream before they are quite prepared. It is possible in some cases that this sensitization can be over- come by eating very tiny amounts of the food daily and very gradually in- creasing them. M. has a movable lump in her breast. Can it be treated without resorting to the knife? There is no pain. I think such a lump as M. describes would have to be removed by surgical methods. If it is freely movable and unattached to the skin, the chances are it is a simple tumor of fibrous or glandular tissue, and the operation will be very slight and not d ring. However, if allowed to grow, there is a possibility of its becoming ' can- cerous, Vaccines for Colds. “Will you please give me your opinion as to the use of vaccine or inoculation for colds? I find that some of my doctor friends recommend it and others say its effects are uncertain. The thought has always occurred to me that if the origin of colds is un- known, as the papers tell us nowadays, how can inoculation be effective? E.” The vaccines are usually made from mixed strains of the types of germs that are found in colds and, as some of your friends have told you, they seem to work charms in some and have no_effect in others. When one is subject to colds, there is undoubtedly something wrong with the hygienic program, which lowers the resistance, My Neighbor Says: To remove grease from a sink rinkle generously with a cleansing powder, then wipe off with a newspaper or soft paper. Grease will not then be washed down the drainpine. Instead of warming roast beef over in gravy try putting it on a small tin pie-plate, and placing it in the steamer over boiling water. In about half an hour you have a fresh, juicy roast. To mend a broken doll quickly, bind the pieces tightly with strips of adhesive plaster. It will hold the broken parts firm for quite a while. Flannel should never be used for needle books. as it is often prepared with sulphur which will Tust the needles. A piece of fine linen or chamois is better. Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. November 5, 1861.—The Federal Gov- ernment, it was announced today, has engaged the whole of Minnesota row— the splendid mansions of the late Sen- ator Douglas, Senator Rice, Senator John C. Breckinridge and Mr. Corbin— for military hospital purposes. Their cost of erection was about $130,000, exclusive of the value of the square on which they stand—said to be worth about $30,000 additional. The rent paid by the Government is at the rate of about $7,000 a year for the entire row of houses. All of these fine homes are bounti- fully supplied with heating apparatus, bathing rooms, aqueduct water and other modern conveniences. They are declared to be the best buildings for the purpose to be found anywhere in the District of Columbia. Two steam fire engines, with com- panies of men experienced in handling them, have been ordered to come to Washington at once as a result of a meeting of the cabinet this morning. ‘They will probably be brought here from Philadelphia, although details of the order have not yet been made public. = Citizens of Washington who learned of this action during_the day expressed their gratitude to President Lincoln and his constitutional advisers for coming to this determination. The large number of new structures, many of which are of a temporary character and quickly inflammable, erected here since the beginning of the War Between the States, and the in- flux of so many soldlers and strangers to the city, are believed to have in- creased the danger from fire here. It is feared that a fire, once it is started, might do great damage to valuable Government and private property, un- less it can be put out quickly at the beginning by modern fire-fighting ap- paratus, The Mount Vernon, one of the vessels of the Union flotilla on the lower Po- tomac River, has arrived at the Navy Yard and reports everything quiet there for the present. From another source it was learned that smallpox broke out recently on the vessel Harriet Lane of the Potomac flotilla, and it has be- come necessary to bring to this city for treatment the sick men, and some wounded soldiers on board. Everyday Law Cases Is Personal Service of Process Secured by Fraud Valid? BY THE COUNSELLOR. Harold Spencer was indebted to Charles Thomas in the sum of $1,000, repayment of which was long overdue. The difficulty in suing Spencer was that he lived in an adjoining State, and Thomas did not wish the trouble of having the trial anywhere else but in his home city. In an effort to get Spencer to leave his State and visit him, Thomas wrote his debtor, inviting his over on the pretense of entering into a profitable new business arrangement with hira, ‘The proposition was appealing to Spen- cer, and he informed Thomas when he would arrive. When Spencer entered the office of his creditor he was met by a sheriff, who served process on him in Thomas’ sult for the recovery of the $1,000 debt. Chagrined at Thomas’ action, Spencer filed a motion in court asking that the service be set aside on the ground that hce‘ was induced by fraud to come to the ctiy. The court granted Spencer’s motion, stating: “Where a person residing in another State is inveigled, enticed or induced to come into the district where the plaintiff resides by false representa- tions or deceptive contrivances for the purpose of serving legal process on him, process served through such improper means is invalid.” Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. ‘Words often misused: Do not say “The boy with the overcoat is him.” Say “Is he.” Often mispronounced: Alfonso or Alphonso. Pronounce last syllable “so,” not “zo,” accent second syllable. Often misspelled: Laryngitis; note the “yn.” Synonyms: Ability, capability, ef- ciency, strength, energy, aptitude. Word study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word, Impracticable; not capable of being put into practice, or done. “His suggestion was scorned as an impracticable iheory.” Cn; I;mi'. Arrange lettuce leaves on the plates for serving. On the lettuce put as much crab as you wish to use for each por- tion. On this sprinkle a little finely chopped green onion, then the sauce. Over all sprinkle finely crumbled hard- boiled egg and on top a dash of pap- rika, For six portions you will need one large crab, two green onions and one hard-boiled egg. ‘To make the sauce, mix one cupful of plain mayonnaise with one cupful of catsup or chili sauce, one teaspoonful of granulated sugar and one teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “These folks that drop remarks about wearin' sllk pajamas is the very ones that slept in their underclothes until they was grown.” (Copyright, 1038.) - FEATURES. 33 Pure and Fresh a_gush nce of the All the fragra tea-gardens comes to you in the sealed package of "SALADA” Plate Gl ass Toj waxers— Outfit, special Regular $29.50 rder Our Contribution to Practical Gift Hints Any home-loving woman will appreciate the Christmas spirit that prompts the gift of a Johnson’s Electric Waxer It insures beautiful floors with- out effort on the home-owner’s part. A limited supply of these $24.50 Paints, Varnishes, Stains, Enamels, Furniture Polishes, Floor Finishes, Brushes, Etc., at Specially Low Prices. HUGH REILLY CO. | PAINTS AND GLASS 1334 N. Y. Ave. Phone Main 1703 | So easy—with Clorox! Cleanses, de- odorizes, disinfects—all at once. Quick Just one of a hundred and more AT ALL GROCERS bleaches removes staing The Limit Had Been Riached With Older Varieties . we had you a more delicious corn to develop this new breed DEL MAIZ You know your- self the limitations that even the best brands of _canned corn have. No need to tell you that. Though many are tasty, they leave you wanting something better—a closer ap= roximate to the gest quality of fresh, sweet corn on the cob. As packers of the finest brands of sweet corn, we found there was no way to better these old-established va- rieties. The only answer was to develop an entirely new and dis- tinct breed. We did it. After 12 years of intensive seed breeding we at last attained the desired new variety — a generic breed—DEL MAIZ. It's tall, tender kernel per- mitted a deep, full cut with- out including the unpleasant Breeding the Deb Maiz seed in corn—and what real appetizing morsels are those big kernels, em- bedded in the rich corn cream. Still more—the delectable fresh corn flavor so unusual in a canned corn. No_wonder DEL MAIZ has become so popular. No wander that children who always disliked canned corn now call for “second helpings” of DEL MAIZ. Leading grocers handle DEL MAIZ. Get your can today and a FREE booklet of a dozen deli= cious DEL MAIZ recipes. DEL MAIZ is groun and packed only by the MINNESOTA VALLEY CANNING COMPANY Le Sueur « » Minnesots For sale at all Sanitary and Piggly Wiggly Stores, Many people, two hours after eating suffer indigestion as they call it. It is usually excess acid. Correct it with an alkali. The best way, the quick, harmless and efficient way, is Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. It has remained for 50 years the standard with physicians. One spoonful in water neutralizes many times its volume in stomach acids, and at once. The symptoms disappear in five minutes, You will never use crude methods when you know this better method. And you will never suffer from e: cess acid when you prove out th easy relief. Please do that—for your own sake—now. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia prescribed by phy- sicians for 50 years in correcting ex- cess acids. 25c and 50c a bottle—any drug store. “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U. S. Registered Trade Mark of The Charles H. Phillips Chemical Com- pany and its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875, GLEAMY WHITE TEETH and a Sweet Breath Try Phillips' Dental Magnesia Toothpaste just once and see for yourself how white your teeth be- come. Write for a free 10-day tube. Address The Phillips Co., 117 Hudson St, New York, N. ¥, A