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VOMAN'S PAGE' Gingham for Winter Resorts BY MARY MARSHALL. ‘Without ever really going out of fash- n, gingham has a way of coming back into fashion with a vengeance every so often. For children’s school and play frocks and for the practical house or garden frock for young girls and ‘women, gingham holds its own in sea- son and out. Once in a while it steps out of its accustomed sphere and sur- prises us by mingling with silks and fine linens for more pretentious wear. S0 no one has been really surprised over the high favor accorded gingham in recent showings of frocks for Win- PALM BEACH FROCK IS OF FINELY CHECKED RED AND WHITE GINGHAM, WORN WITH A WHITE LINEN JACKET. ter resort wear. Gingham frocks min- gle on equal terms with frocks of silk crepé and linen. Especially important are the checked ginghams—red and white check, blue and white, brown and beige, green and white. these frocks are accompaniéd by short jackets of pique or linen, white or in the color of the check. Very trim are these new gingham frocks designed for sports and resort weer. There is nothing about them to suggest the hurriedly made and more hurriedly selected ready-made house frock. Collars and cuffs fit with ad- mirable precision. Often there are nar- row belts of black patent leather or colored kid. Narrow collars and cuffs Frequently | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1929, of pique or linen or the trimmest of pipings give finish at neck and wrists. It does not take much courage to predict a revival of interest in all sorts of cotton materials for the coming Spring. Organdie frocks for evening have already made their appearance; cotton point d'esprit is a close rival of tulle for the ruffled skirt flounces, and there are all sorts of light-weight, gauze-like materials of the sort used in Midvictorian days pearance for evening wear. An imported linen frock from Assisi, Italy, provided the inspiration for this week's circular, consisting of a pattern diagram for a eross-stitched Assisi chicken. You can easily reproduce t | chicken design by following the dire tions for the cross stitch, and three or four of these chickel with the con- necting stitches traditionally used with them. furnish charming decoration for | a frock, jumper or linen lunch cloth or bridge cover. Send stamped, self-ad- | dressed envelope for the desfgn. | (Copyright, 1929.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes. Hominy with Cream. Creamed Codfish on Toast. Doughnuts, Coffee. LUNCHEON. Corn_Chowder, Crackers. ‘Waldor! Salad. Tea. Cinnamon Buns. DINNER. Cream of Spl Stewed Tomatoes. Beet Salad. French Dressing. Baked Rice Pudding. Coffee. CREAMED CODFISH ON ‘TOAST. Pour cold water on shredded salt fish, let it come to a boil and drain. Pour on milk thick- ened with flour, butter and yolk one or two eggs. Just before serving fold in . stiffly-beaten whites of eggs. Serve on toast. CINNAMON BUNS. Sift with one pint flour one | | heaping teaspoon baking powder, | | one-quarter ~teaspoon salt, one teaspoon cinnamon, two table spoons sugar. Rub in one table- spoon butter, add one cup milk, one-half cup seeded raisins. Cut with biscuit cutter. Rub milk over top. Sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon. Let stand one hour before baking. RICE PUDDING . ‘Wash one teacup rice, put in deep dish or baking pan with two tablespoons sugar and one quart milk. Stir these ingredi- ents together, then add butter cut in small pieces. Grate nut- meg over it and bake in moderate oven two hours. KEEPING MENTALLY FIT By Joseph Jastow. What Is Nerve Weakness? 1 would be extremely grateful to you | if you could give me some advice. I have b eading some of your articles and Rave “enjoyed them and feel that you could help me, because you write 80 briliiantly and seem to be able to get to the root of things so well. I have | been a very mervous young man. I| feel exremely restless and tired all the ‘time now and canot finish anything ‘time I start. I am 25 years old mow. Is this a mental condition? I see people aeround me who are full of “pep,” suc- cessful in business, and how I envy ! Yet I know that no mater how hard. 1 there is something always handicapping me. I was studying pharmacy and was more than half through with my course and my merves began to.affect me so badly that I had to give up the course. I had neither energy nor the power of concentra- 30 that it was impossible for me to finish the course. Do you think if I joined a gym it would build up my nerve force? I will try anything to ovércome this mervous —weakness, but I do mot know what to do about it. yHoping that you will give me some advice. M.F. .. Three years ago I suffered a mervous breakdown. The most alarming symp- tom was & pounding of the heart which I have failed to overcome. Some of the Jeelings I have come over me just about drive me mad and cause much worry and fear. After three years of suffering and visits to various doctors, with the assurance that nothing is wrong, I find myself broke, but not cured. Nothing interests me and I feel so weak and ezhausted all the time that I am unable to work. My stomach has tortured me for siz months now, and medicine has Jailed to hélp. Th:y say that due to my nervous tempercment the merves of my stomach are thro.ing off too much acid, therefore I have an acid stomach. On arising in the morning after sleep- tng eight or nine hours, I am ethausted and feel irritable and offensive most of the time." I am 24 years old and should be in perfect health. Perhaps you may know of some routine I may foilow that would regain my health. D. W. M. Reply. ‘These two cases are typical of two dozen or 200 that make the same plaint and plea. So central is this symptom of nerve weakness that it has given the name to one great division of sufferers from nerves; for neurasthenia is only a Greek way, of saying nerve-weakness, Nervous exhaustion and nervous pros- tration are other names for this dev- astating incapacity to live fully and rightly. ‘The word “neurasthenia” was suggested two generations ago by Dr. Beard, an American physician; and it was referred to as “Americanitis,” as a characteristic malady of a strenuous people who, since then, have keyed to a higher pitch the tense rush of life. Reducing the many aspects and symp- toms of the neurasthenic condition to the least number, they would read: (1) Excessive mental and motor fatigability; (2) excessive sensibility to aches, mis- ery, emotions; (3) an overattention to bodlly symptoms and depression; (4) fears and anxieties. The picture shifts 2s one or the other dominates, but the features are the same; for all this is how a depleted nervous system reacts. JABBY /i3 “It ain't fair the way the biggest gfls always pick on the littlest dogs o pull ‘em around.” (Copyright, 1929.) ‘When you are tired, abnormally tired, every step is a mile, every pound a ton, every slightest movement or task & huge effort, every demand on the attention a_strain, every molehill s mountain. The days become a weary round of list- less resting and gloom and exhaustion. You are afraid to do a lest "you make matters worse; you watch yourself incessantly; there seems no way out; your increased sensitiveness makes every pang an agony. If with a heroic effort and with much misgiving you break through the resistance, work an hour, you're on your back two hours before you can even open your eyes or sit up and take notice or nourishment. Every- thing upsets you, is too much for you. ‘You just aren’t equal to it, and your interests fade out. ‘With this understanding of how deep- ly and comprehensively nervous weak- ness invades the entire range of activi- ties, those who suffer from it will realize how inevitably the cure is slow and long, with stages of recovery punctuated with periods of relapse. Most neuras- thenics, however, recover a fair portion of the energy that is in them, and after months or years function on a renewed and normal level. ‘Those who have to take care of, live with and help to restore nerve weak- ness will thus appreciate the magnitude of their task and be tolerant and pa- tient with their patients. The umglm of recovery is a remaking of the indi- vidual, cutting off bad habits, cultivat- ing good ones. Neurasthenics have to learn to live, and that can't be done in 20 lessons. Each sufferer must find a wise tutor to set him on the right road, | then he must learn to travel on it. (Cepyright, 1020 Your Baby and Mine mefYIERST REG. U. §. PAT. OFF. “What must I have to raise my partner's bid of one heart or one spade?” 'This is a question I have asked me more frequently than any other. And tie answer is definite. How to Play Contract Bridge BY MRS. FORTESCUE. Contract Bridge Card No. 6. SUPPORTING ORIGINAL BIDS. One in a major suit bid by part- ner, raise to— Two with two quick tricks WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. §. Patent Office. FEATURES.’ MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE By MOLLIE HOLLYWOOD, Calif., January 17.— “Her voice was ever sweet, gentle and low—an excellent thing in woman.” This is from one of the poets who died before the Hollywood scramble be- gan. Poets today collect large salaries MERRICK. clasped about the center with a thin thread of platinum. I advise against them unless one has the neck of Bonnie Annie Laurie with its swan-like proportions. They are best suited to the owner of an obese bank roll. that make their ap- | The STYLE POST is the marker on the road to being smart. Ski-Suit, The modern sportswoman who golfs the year round, plays tennis and swims in season looks forward eagerly to the Winter sports which provide even more thrilling activities—skiing, skating and tobogganing. If the environs of her own home are not suitable for them, she steals a week to go to a Winter resort. The ski-sujt is of waterproof gabar- dine—black, navy or beige—brightened by contrasting scarfs, or vivid green with accessories. . (Copyright, 19! NANCY PAGE What Better Way to Spend Than in a Jan. White Sale BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. “It's a good thing that grandmother sent me that check for Christmas be- cause I have seen so many linens on sale in all the January white sales that I would be most unhappy if I couldn’t get some.” “Didn't you have enough in your trousseau, Loi ‘““Yes, but you see, Nancy, I didn't buy any of the new sets of bedding in color, nor any of the smart looking bath towels. And “More than he expects to hold.” You, and three trumps. for not writing captions or not appear- | :is the equivalent }as partner of the original bidder, have ia right to hold your share of high | cards—one ace, one king and one queen—and your share of trump cards—three. In other words, you | should hold an average hand, top cards [to the valus of one and three-quarter quick tricks (an ace being worth one ‘qulck trick, a king half and a queen | one-quarter) and normal trump ex- i pectancy, that is, three cards of the ill‘ump suit. If you hold better than this strength, you have a raise for your partner's bid.” Holding 2 quick tricks, you will raise your partner's bid. For each additional one-half quick trick you have.one additional raise. | In the declaring hand the only | values ‘are high cards and length in trumps. In the dummy hand, however, there are quick trick equivalents. Lacking one suit is of no value in the declaring hand. In the dummy hand lacking cards of one suit enables that dummy hand to trump the first round of that missing suit—therefore a missing suit-is the equivalent of an ace. Holding a singleton In a suit means the dummy hand can trump the second round of the sult, therefore a singleton of a king. Four or more trumps In the dummy hand is gnur length than normal expectancy, erefore four or more trum) in are equivalent to one-half quick . The queen of trumps in the dummy hand is also worth one-half quick trick. Let me repeat once more—in the declaring hand there are no quick trick equivalents. There the only values are quick tricks—that aces, kings and honor combinations—and length in trumps. In the assisting or dummy hand there are quick trick equivalents. These are: Four or more trumps....15 quick trick Queen of trumps guarded, !> quick trick Missing suit . 1 quick trick Singleton .. quick trick To raise any bid of one, whether it be a major, a minor or a no-fump declaration, requires two quick tricks or the equivalents of two quick tricks. The gutut losses at Contract Bridge, and Contract the losses are great, for the penalties are so much more than in Auction, arise from the weak raises given to original bids. Stop and ask yourself the question — “Does my hand contain greater strength than average?” If the answer s “no” your bid is “pass.” If the answer is “yes,” then raise your Karr.ner'n major suit rst two quick tricks dummy trick. bid once for the and once more for each additional one- g T T rs—— each of ollow] inds, ner having bid “one spade,” the sup- porting hand should bid “two spades”: 8—x x x H—AKX D—Xx X bolth of those are offered in the white sales.” Lois looked at the sets of sheeting in pale pink, in orchid and yellow. For her guest room she chose sheets in pale green for her Summer visitors, and pale pink for her Winter guests. One looked cool and the other looked quite warm and cozy. She also chose a set with nprlled colored hems, and looked I ly at the all-white ones with dots, Greek keys, and conventionalized rosebuds em- broidered in color on the hems. With her next windfall of a check planned to buy some sheets and in a good quality round-thread linen. In towels she was interested in the ensembles. She saw bath mats, wash she cases cloths and towels which were thick and fleecy and decorated with light- houses, and animals, like marmosets and sea gulls, These came in lavender, green, blue, yellow and pink. ‘There were towels which looked like frosted mint juleps. The ground work of the towel was pale green, but the loops of thread which made it a Turkish towel were in white, so that only the plain lines of the border were green. rest looked as if it had been touched with hoar frost. Lois also invested in one‘of the huge batn sheets which are used in so many con- BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. L. D. B. writes: “I have profited 50 much by your advice to others that I should like to ask g few questions. | My son is 11 months old, has 8 teeth, weighs 26 pounds, walks and says half a dozen words. When should he be | able to drink from a cup alone? When should he feed himself? Does he need cod liver oli this Winter? - He doesn’t like it. How can I disguise it? I am fact, t he Someev B he least Bit ot & cold: | He has been having undiluted milk for over a month. How much sugar should he have? I am_so afraid of givi him too much. He loves to eat an h‘u never refused any food offered him. Answef—This spiendid boy ought to be drinking from a cup right now and making an effort toward feeding him- self. Use a small, light cip with a | handle and show him how to grasp it with both hands and lift it to his mouth. It might be well at first to put only a little milk in the cup so that 1t will be easy to handle and he won't spill it on himself. Just be patient; he’ll learn the trick. Let him use an ordinary long-han- dled spoon. This has been found by experiments with many children to be easiest for them to handle, and not the curved-handled type. Show him how to grasp it close to the bowl and put his food in a plate with an edge. Then, by pushing his spoon toward the edge and trying not to overioad it (his comes with practice) he will find that he can push up food onto the ! spoon and then bring it to his mouth. Keep the ideal of small mouthfuls be- for him, but let him make his own kes. If a child gets lots of air and sun- shine, and perhaps sun baths outdoors or before an open window, this Winter, he doesn't need cod liver oil the sec- ond year. If he is lving in a very cold climate and gets very little sun- shine he should wve it. Have you investigated the concentrated cod liver {0i1? One drop of this is equivalent to 1112 teaspoonfuls of the plain oil. One drop can be taken in almost any way. Use one small teaspoonful of sugar with his cereal, or leave sugar out en- | tirely. A child gets sweet puddings {now and other sweets and plenty of | bread, cereal and vegetables, so that he shouldn't lack for carbohydrate | foods. | Mrs. W. H. H—Thank you for your nice letter. I agree perfectly that chil- dren must be trained early. We offer |a leaflet on that and it contains the exact method of training very similar to yours, so I am not repeating it here. tinental hotels. (Copyright, 1920.) . Christmas Cakes. Cream one cupful of butter or sub- stitute with two cupfuls of sugar, then beat with the mixture four eggs, beat- ing in one at a time. Sift three cupfuls of flour with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and add alternately with a cup- ful of milk and half a cupful of well cleaned currants, added a few at a time. When well mixed, flavor with half a teaspoonful each of lemon and vanilla extract, and bake in very small cup cake tins greased with lard or clarified drippings, but not butter. Tip out onto a sieve when done and when cool ice with a fondant icing made as ml(’ani: lowl, d of ook very slowly a pound of graiuu- lated s and a half cupful of water until a little drop) from the tip of a spoon spins a hair. t cool to luke- warm, then stir steadily, always in the same direction, and add little by little a teaspoonful of almond extract. Whon creamy, spread quickly on the little cakes. With candied or maraschino cherries cut in strips make a poinsettia flower on each cake. . FACE BADLY DISFGURED Red Pimples Lasted Six Years. Cuticura Heals. “My face was badly disfigured with blackheads and pimples. The pimples were hard, large and red, and festered and scaled over. They itched and burned so that they caused me to scratch, and scratch- ing caused eruptions. I could not sleep well at night on account of the irritation. The trouble lasted about six years. **1 tried lots of different remedies without success. I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and in one week’s time I found great relief. 1 continued using them and in four months I was aompletely healed.” (Signed) Mrs. C. S, Marks, R. 1, Tallapoosa, Ga. Use Cuticura to clear your skin. Soap 2 Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 25c. Sold everywnere Sample each free Address : Gt Laboratories, Dept. B, blalden, Mass." EDEF~ Cuticura Shaving Stick 25¢c. x X In each of the following hands, part- (Advertisement) HOW DO YOU LIKE HOUSEKEEPING,ALICE, NOW THAT YOU'RE MARRIED ? Three with two and one-half quick tricks ‘and three trumps. Four with two and one-half quick tricks and four trumpe, Five. Overbid game only when holding slam prob- ability. ‘Two in a major suit bid by part- near, raise to— Three with one quick trick and three trumps. Four with two quick tricks and three trumps. ‘Three in a major suit bid by partner, raise to— Four with one quick trick. Four in & major suit bid by part- ner. Raising any game bid shows slam probability. One no trump bid by partner raise to— Two with two quick tricks and even distribution. ‘Three with three quick tricks and even distribution. One, two or three in a minor suit bld by partner, raise only if unable to shift. Four in a minor suit bid by parte mer, raise to five with one quick trick. ner having bid “one spade,” the sup- porting hand should bid “three spades”: QuE®m QuEn apE® H¥ o xX M [=] b » » » ‘The major suits—spades and hearts —are the game-going suits. The minor suits—diamonds and clubs—are non- game-going suits. Therefore, if part- ner bids a major suit, raise his bid whenever possible. If partner bids a minor suit, shift the bid whenever pos- sible. The old saying, “Major suits are bid to be played, or suits are bid to be taken out,” has never been liter- ally true, yet in its essence it is true. Minor suits are always bid with the hope that partner will improve the bid. This question of take-out bids we will take up in my article next week. (This is one' of a series of articles on Contract Bridge by Mrs. Fortescue, Bridge Editor of The Evening Star. Mrs. Fortescue radios over WMAL every Thursday at 10:30 under the auspices of The, Evening Star. R Ice Cream Cake. Cream one scant cupful of butter with two cupfuls of sugar and heat. Add alternately one cupful of sweet mlik with two cupfuls of flour, one cup~ ful of cornstarch and two teaspoonfuls of baking powder that have been sifted together 12 times. Fold in the beaten whites of eight eggs and add one tea- spoonful of vanilla. Bake in a slow oven in a pan which has been well :zmud and floured to keep from stick- ing. ‘When five hundred and bridge parties were not so mpular, but seven up and casino were the real card games? Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. 1 School Psychology. Once the school teachers assumed that one sort of training was better for the mind than another. For example, mathematics was supposed to be more | cultivating in_all questions of training the pupil to think, than say history or geography. This was in the days of “formal _discipline,” an educational shibboleth which many teachers still emphasize. Little by little “formal discipline” has been discarded. The teachers began to say that one subject was just as im- portant as another for all mind-train- ing purposes. The curriculum was broadened and the pupil was allowed to choose any subject he “liked.” The idea that one must “like” a subject got under way and now holds first place. The parents who send Johnnie and Sue fo school would like to know some- thing about the truth of these two edu- cational points of view. Human beings are costly things with which to experi- ment. Parents dislike to make mistakes about the education of their children. There is really nothing to worry about. I can find very little real differ- ence in the products of school training as a result of differences in educational philosophy. Look at the successful men and women in the world who were called “dull” in their school days. And what has become of the “brighter” b:g and girls? What their teachers ht about their school ‘minds was so often erroneous that one is convinced that teachers quarrel over accidentals rather than over fundamentals. Mind stuff runs dufnr than subject matter stuff. This real mind stuff seems to be unin- fluenced by - such passing external things as school subjects. philosophies are t sand unimportant. pupll, f allowed to choose what he “likes” will choose nothing. No subject in school any ‘“carry- over” advantages in mind training. In- telligence is neither made nor unmade in schools, (Advertisement) NEXT WASHDAY INEVER SAW WHITER CLOTHES, DAUGHTER! HOW YOU MUST HAVE SCRUBBED SCRUBBING'S OUT OF DATE. 1USE RINSQ NOW, IT MAKES WASHDAY EASY-GREAT FOR DISHES, TOO It's all you need in tub or machine for a whiter wash FINE,ALL BUT BLUE MONDAY —— SCRUBBING CLOTHES JUST WEARS ME OUT $ rp! —yet all I did was s pecause the « cleaning. 1 and lasting. . E. FORTUNE, 422§ MRS. This famous 8 Because it’s 2O ulated gives more suds washi ng——thl lightweight, An ing cl v nothing equals Rinso- Rinso can g1V _ Guaranteed by the mak( | to be the very T N THEN USE RINSO~IT SOAKS.CLOTHES WHITER THAN YOU CAN SCRUB THEM «This way savest “No wonder everybody Rinso. I'll never |1ng at the studio. Therefore, this line had nething to| “do with Clara Bow at time of writing. | Nor will it ever. She had one word to | say in the opening talkie sequence of her new pfeture. That exclamation was Clara sald it with so much concen- trated “It” that she shattered the sen- eitive recording apparatus and held up work a considerable time. Bearch for eight beautiful whoopee girls has made the last week. The girls are supposed of youthful zest and charm. And for proportions the casting office has fallen back on the old Annette Kellerman formula, which proves that a few things have not been the exclusive property of the movie colony, after all. Clara Bow will have the distinction of being the first star to whistle for the screen. have screaming women, women, ordinary 8 women and extraordinary ones. ut ‘whistling girl is an 3 ‘There is o lot of whistling done here, but it is mainly done by or for the police. Hollywood is busy tryinhw square its latest triangle since Jim Tully names Marshall Neflan as the heavy villain in his_cross-complaint for divorce. The Tulleys have been warring on and off for some time, a previous suit for di- vorce having been brought by Mrs. Tully in June, 1928, and subsequently dropped. Margaret Myers Tulley states in her complaint that the author claims he recognizes no obligations and is a man of no conventions. Tully, Hollywood's literary bad boy, is frequently in wrong with colony members due to his writings, which his wife says net him $2,000 monthly. Mar- shall Neilan is husband of . Blanche Sweet and & prominent director. Adolphe Menjou and Catherine Car- ver (his wife) at the Russian-American Club last night represented the per- fectly dressed man and woman. Menjou has made a fetish of clothes ever since the purchase of 12 suits—on credit, when he was penniless—carried him into the ranks of stardom. At that time Menjou did little else but wear the suits impeccably and lift one languid eyebrow. Today he is one of the auto- crats of movieland, and autocrating so hard_ that there are whispers he will stand no longer for the silly stories he has been playing, but will take his crown and scepter elsewhere. The actor has a leaning toward the Continent and the Eurcpean type of pmdlucuun with regard to story require- ments. The failure of the European thing is generally in the direction of check re- quirements. Movie stars grow accus- tomed to Hollywood salaries, the largest in the world. Catherine Carver, who is a blond with an intriguing type of Celtic beauty, is affecting a string of crystal balls, almost large enough for a soothsayer to con- centrate in about the base of her throat, They are not plerced, but (Advertisement). (Thousands write us he clot rs. L. ays 4 : around hei’el'ls et the first time ‘°§' wash was white a8 oak and rinse! back to old-fashioned the scrubless Do good it is to mY rises. T'll never g0 1 can see clothes. And how o e Y i for dishes, anc o ‘I{T&oe tl'?e suds—they’re sO th Street N.E., 0ap is so mpact, gran= e cupful of Rinso —does more n two cupfuls of puffed -up $0aps- soap, on c and stains mes to wash- white — For only e Rinso whiteness. d when it co! othes snowy-= ors of LUX—Lever B y @ e village lively during | tried it. And s safe! evenyourfinest gentle care. No clothes an No wonde Jeading wash “Use R|n70 nd safety? A Get the BIG package! And now to blast that last fond illusion that you've been holding on to like grim death. Greta Garbo, princess of exotica, weird enchantress of the un-un- derstandable, the fourth dimensional and the intangible, has a hobby for snapshots and a love of sending picture post cards, highly colored, of the favor- ite arch, the’city hall and the village church. Most of our remote and intriguing public personalities are all a delusion and a snaredrum. (Copyright, 1929. by North American Newspaper Alliance.) DAILY DIET RECIPE LEMON CARROTS. Diced carrots, two cups. Minced parsley, one teaspoon- ful. Plgfln. one-half teaspoonful. Butter, one tablespoonful. ml.mn Juice, three tablespoon- SERVES 4 OR 5 PORTIONS. Scrape carrots, cut them in H er in small amount of salted water until tender 18 or 20 minutes); drain; add other ingredients and shake over fire until carrots are well heated. Be careful not to burn them. DIET NOTE. | Recipe furnishes fiber, A iron, vitamins A, B and C. If paprika were omitted, could be given to children of 6 years and over. Can be eaten by normal adults of average, over or under weight. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Baby’s 'termined to wear the coal bucket fer a hat, an’ muvver al'ers tellin’ me to humor her—! (Copyright, 1929. (Advertisement) _WELL, THAT SOUNDS WONDERFYL-: GET A BOX OF THAT -ILL SOAP TODAY Jetters like this) hes,tOO" E. Fortune 22 5th St. N.E talking about alking <ol white can soaps again— Rinso way saves ds, t00* all household thick, creamy Washington, D. C. economical You can trust linenstoRinso’s scrubbing—dirt soak out. NO wondu" d hands are spared! r the makers of 3 ing ma_chmts say, for whiter washes » rothers Go., Cambridge, Mass- nso THE GRANULATED SOAP