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'NE 7OLISH MOP FOR FLODRS MAKES BI§ RODMS “SMALL” Once over at regular periods with the O-Cedar Polish Mop keeps floors dustless, sparkling and clean Even the largest 0-Cedar Polish Mops are light as a feather. They glide swiftly over the floor. Yet they dust, polish and clean (in one operation) better than any other method you ever tried. Even the largest room seems small, so quick | is the O-Cedar way. | The improved triangular O-Cedar Polish Mops are stronger and more lasting. The handle connection at | mop is permanently attached to a solid steel center that can't break. The mop is detachable from the frame. It is easily washed or sent to the laundry—easily renewed with O-Cedar Polish. Buy O-Cedar Polish Mops and Polish before beginning your fall house-cleaning. Sold at hardware, grocery,drug, department and other stores. Mops, 75c, $1, $1.25. Polish, 4-oz. bottle, 30c; 12 oz., 60c. = g SPECIAL This Week eather Half L Soles, or (Composition Half Soles and Goodyear, O’Sullivan or Monarch Rubber Heels Attached for. . All work guaranteed o be the finest in 25 NATIONAL SHOE REPAIR 403 11th St. NW.. Sparkling Teeth | dith loved her things so! | that colleges require a course in cook- | table was a_delight to behold: it was Little Grains of Rice. HERE'S just no_doubt about L it.” said Judith to herself, “this free-and-easy type of living must stop. I'm sim- ply not going to have it said of me that I have a ‘delicatessen hus- band." " It was still a joy after four months | of housekeeping to keep the four-room apartment in immaculate order. The adorable Wedgwood china, the pieces of antique furniture—there was one chest of drawers and a_tilt-top table picked up in a remote Wisconsin vil- lage during the year of their engage- ment, which was also Judith’s senior year at college, that were almost too good to be true—the hooked rugs and the old oval mirror that had been shipped away from the Guernsey Is- lands because it had a certain senti- mental meaning to the two old aunts | living there, all helped to make the daily routine postively thrilling. Ju- But—the cooking! “Oh, dear,” mother when they were inspecting the intriguing blue and white kitchen a | few days before the wedding, “I do wish, since a diploma doesn't guaran- tee a husband who can afford a cook. ing before girls could get their di- plomas.” “Experience is the best teacher,” re- replied her mother sensibly. “Most of us have had to go through the experi: mental stage before coooks could be in: cluded in our budgets.” “Well, right now,” said Judith, * feel as if a cook were just as essential to- my budget as a gas stove.” The evening the Masons dropped in for a game of bridge Judith’s supper late—after 12—when they finished their | game, and the prospect of a cozy mid- night supper was most welcome to the ) guests who had a long drive hom: ahead of them. The brown mahogany table shone like amber satin, the deli- cately fine linen runners, an old Dutch silver bowl filled with red apples, polished to a scarlet glow, and the four tall Sheffield candlesticks made a truly soul-satisfying picture. ~Some way, however, things were not what they‘ seemed. “Do you know ,Judy” said Tom later. “I sort of wish we'd thought to have a rarebit tonight. salad.” The fact of the matter was that| every single thing she had served at the supper had either come out of a can or had been purchased at the too convenient delicatessen around the corner—that is—everything except the coffee, which was excellent, Judith did know both how to buy and how to make coffee to the queen’s taste; vari- ous college spreads had enlightened her as to that art. 2 “Hurry up and stuff the keyhole and open that window, somebody. Judy's coffee’s coming along,” used to be the frequent warning in dormitory days when disciplinary unpleasantnesses were likely to occur. “Anyway” thought Judith one day soon after the bridge supper, “I'm sure- ly not so dumb that I can't make a rice pudding for dessert tonight. It's the simplest one possible, and I'll sur- | !& prise Tom. I remember his saying that he liked rice pudding when it had lots of raisins.” The dainty, blue-bound cook book had been a gift from one of her class- hide behind Kolynos is the only tooth paste ‘Two coatings cover your teeth their whiteness, hiding their beauty. Two danger-laden coatings. One (the outer coating) moved by almost any dentifrice, for it is soft, gelatin-like. The other (the inner co: tough, felt-like plaque—so tenacious that the bristles of your toothbrush can merely scratch tiny furrows in it—so adhesive that ordinary toothpastes can- not remove it. It is the armor with which tooth-destroying germs surround them- Because Kolynos is double - strength you need use only balf as much—one-balf inch A The most economical dental cream you can use. THE EVENING STORY she had said to her|§ old John | didn't seem exactly to relish that cold “THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €., WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 712 1928, mates. Its recipes for rice pudding, however, didn't seem to state very clearly the amount of rice to be used or the length of time it should be cooked. She put the rice to boil in her brightly shining aluminum double boiler, beat up the eggs in a love of a blue deft bowl, added milk, sugar and | raisins and then sat down in the liv- ing room to wait for the rice to cook. An odious smell of burning sent her flying to the kitchen. Rice to the right of her—rice to the left of her—a per- fect deluge of rice met her horrified gaze Like Jack's beanstalk. miraculously grown beyond all bounds. She salvaged enough of it for her pud- ding added it to the mixture in the delft bowl and placed it in the oven to brown. “This pudding,” announced Judith proudly at dinner that night, “is war- ranted strictly homemade.” The pudding was beautifully browned; s0 was the delft bowl . it had | “It's wonderful, Judy,” said Tom, nobly finishing his dish down to the last grain. “I knew you could cook if you'd only try.” over the telephone, “is there such a thing in_existence as a cook book that really tells how to cook—I mean prunes and rice—and—and things like that?" “Prunes and rice? Why, you ridic- ulous child, you don't need a cook book in order to cook such ordinary things.” | “Don't I, though! Well, I'll say I do! Why, Tom's teeth fairly crackled on my rice pudding last night, but | the poor darling wouldn't so much as | hint that 1t was underdone, and I | actually suspect him of sneaking the | prunes from his dish into his coat pocket this morning, for when I cleared the breakfast table there wasn't a single | prune stone on his plate.” I “Did you soak your prunes over night?” | “Soak them!" sighed Judith, “why no, ‘I didn't. How in the world was I | to know that prunes needed soaking?" “Judy,” said Tom the next morning. “Guess I'll wear my blue suit today and just. send the gray one to the cleaners, will ‘There it _ E 3 Paper White Narcissus Plant at Once for Christmas Blooms 12 Bulbs, $1.00 Bulb Prices Reduced Plant at Once SINGLE EARLY TULIPS. Named varieties. . . .59¢ doz. Cottage Maid, White, Edged Rose; Fred Moore, Apricot, Rose Luisante, Pink; Yellow Prince, Bright Yellow. NARCISSUS. Named varieties. .$1.19 doz. SINGLE MIXED HYACINTHS. $1.25 doz. MIXED CROCUS.....29¢c doz. MADONNA LILIES and WHITE CALLA LILIES....25¢c each Palms and On Sale Thursday and Friday 2N F. W. BOLGIANO & CO. Ferns Another Fine Lot at 5 Prices A lovely Palm or Fern adds warmth 2nd comfort to your home - all Winter. i Makes an ideal gift. | Fine Kentia Palms 49¢ Each Great Big Palms, $1.25 FERNS Fine Large Ferns, 69c Great Big Ferns, $1.19 Fern Pans, containing a beau- tiful assortment of Table Fern Separa All varieti Holly and Asparagus Ferns ... .49¢ Rubber Plant; $1.00 Perennial Plants Dug fresh and delivered to you 25¢ each; 10 of a kind for $2 Phiox. pink, wl : Chrysanthemums. si varieties: Iris roots, fourteen ful varieties. Beatic Expert Landscape Service Scientific Spraying Expert Pruning Estimates cheerfully furnished Phone Main 91 danger—laden 915 E St. N.W. coatz'ngs that removes both/! —dimming selves—germsthatp: can be re- ating) is a millions of cause tooth-decay and soft, spongy gums. Kolynos removes this “double enve- lope” of danger. Its solvent action pene- trates and removes these coatings. Its germicidal action kills the germs which roduce theacidswhich And no pyorrhea. Name, lurk there — leaving your teeth bright, lustrous, clean—and safe! for Kolynos to reach. For when you brush your teeth with Kolynos it foams! It forces its way into every nook and crevice be- tweenyourteeth—placesyourtoothbrush aever reaches! It not only makes teeth sparklingly white, but it bathes and stimu- lates the gums— keeps them firm and healthfully pink, guards them against your druggist’s. Or mail the coupon for afreetube—enough for a two-weeks’ test. THE KOLYNOS CO., New Haven, Conn. Please send me, free, the two-weeks' tube .of Kolynos Dental Cream. spoton the teeth is too remote Try Kolynos! Get a tube at 14 ‘State———— i b il see what happened to it.” “Mother,” walled Judith the next day | $2 Both were listed under “Educa- tion.” ing will be just as well patronized The dogs wil chase electrically con- ‘THE END (Copyright, 1923.) The Electrical Rat. Electrical rat chasing for terriers is London's newest sport and a series of ENTERPRISE SERIAL EUILDING ASSOCIATION 7th St. & La. Ave. N.W. Issve of Stock Now Open for Subscription Fried, broiled or boiled tastes when seasoned well with LEA & PERRINS’ SAUCE Mceney Loaned to Members on Easy Monthly Payments nelly James F. Shea Secretary The Value of your estate fo your dependents is con- ditioned not only upon its size, but also upon the way in which it is handled. Do you know the advantages of having a strong financial institution such as the Union Trust Company act as your Execu- tor? We will gladly te!l you without ob- ligation on your part. UNION TRUST COMPANY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA SUTHVEST LORNER Fif TEENTH AND 1 STREETS NORTIVEST something sticky about the coat—can't | these contests is about to be started in trolled rats which will be sent along a great hall built for the purpose. Grey- | the course at great speed and always Besides the $2 cleaning bill, Judith's | hound racing has proven a very popular | just ahead of the racing dogs There budget for the week read: Cook book, | pastime and it is anticipated that rai | 1 ‘lnd second by mutuel macl are prizes for the owners of and © corvricRTED, 7. 1. 7., 1928 Only Climate Like It In America! Autumn but amiable! Cool but comfortable! Bracing but not depleting! A kind kind of climate! A public-spirited climate! Appetizing as a cocktail! Comforting as a cordiall Puts you to sleep like a log! Gets you up like a lark! And sends you home like new! Let the Atlantic get at you and it'll make you over! Who doesn’t remember the old kerosene lamp? You would get the old Kerosene lamp nicely adjusted and the next thing you knew it was smoking again. And there was more or less soot and smell. This cannot happen hard coal. . in your furnace—if you burn Fumes from imperfect combustion are a bad thing to have around the house all winter. well as warm air in your home. If you burn Cert-i-fide Anthracite and your furnace A properly handled Anthracite fire prov.ides clean as is not giving satisfaction, something is wrong, either with your furnace, or the way it is cared for. Ask your Cert-i-fide Anthracite dealer to show you how to get the most out of your furnace. He will gladly advise you free of charge. Anthracite HARD COAL -the unfailing fuel The undersigned companies pledge themselves to ship only Anthracite (hard coal) that measures up to highest standards. So they call their coal Cert-i-fide Anthracite. Back Run Coal Co. and Repplier C: " Thorne, Neals & B0 ' Coxe Bros. & Co., Inc. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Coal Ca. Haddock Mining Co. (Meeker & Co., Inc) Jeddo-Highland Coal Co. Hazle Brook Coal Co, (General Coal Co.) Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. Lehigh Valley Coal Co. ATLANTIC CITY N/ et NG 2 Write to cAny of the Following for Rates or Reservations < » GALEN HALL-A SHELBURNE-E GLASLYN-CHATHAM-4 STRAND-4-E HOLMHURST-4 T'B:YHO.I;M A ILTSHIRE-4 et AMBASSADOR-E BREAKERS-4-E MORTON-4 BRIGHTON-4 MARLBOROUGH-BLENHEIM-4-E CHELSEA.4.E PENNHURST-4 CHALFONTE-HADDON HALL.4 SEASIDE-4 DENNIS-4 [A—American Plan E—European Plan 4-2~Both Plans] < id Home of a Hundred Hotels Offering the Comforts of Home Madeira, Hill & Cos Northumberlnnd Mining Co.and St. Clair |Cos L T e Payne Pennsylvanic. _oalCo.and Hillside Coal & lren Cos Price-Pancoast Coal Co. and Wq Ceal Racket Brook Coal Ce. Susquehanna Collieries Co. and L (The M. A. Hanoa ‘Weston Dodson & Cow, Ines * FIDE Anthracite Coal Scranton Ceal Cou Coal Cas