Evening Star Newspaper, January 21, 1929, Page 29

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WOMAN'S PAGE. Ensemble Scarfs to Match Frocks BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. t=iL THE ENSEMBLE SCARFS MAY HAVE ARM SIZES OR NECK SIZES. Scarfs are playing an even more im- gorr.am part in costuming than ever efore. One may transform a simple evening frock into a handsome ensem- ble. In this case it is made of geor- gette, chiffon lace, net, or any sheer textile that matches the frock under- neath. The same trimming occurs on both. Or it may be of silk gauze net to match the tone of the frock. Maline is not suitable; it is too perishable for ensemble scarfs, though not for the voluminous billowy scarfs that are mere lengths of the material thrown about the neck and shoulders. The ensemble scarf may be likened to a drapery. It may have a neck size that is nothing but a straight slash in the center of the scarf, or it may be cut square, round or oval. The scarf is slipped on over the head and falls in soft lines about the shoulders and arms, the bodice and part of the skirt, the distance being determined by the size of the scarf. Another style has no neck size, but two arm sizes instead. Such a model is put on like a jacket and not a slip- on, as is the first model described. The arm sizes should be cut far enough from one side of the square forming the scarf, or be correctly spaced, if the scarf is rectangular, so that the sheer goods falls in soft folds about the neck and down the front of the frock. The scerf having the neck size falls over the arms, while the one with the arm sizes leaves the arms exposed and free. Also the front of the frock is not covered. In either style the scarf is held securely and is not continually slipping ‘and sliding, as is the case with ordinary scarfs. The idea in these ensembles scarfs is not protection against cold so much as ornament for a costume, although there is a certain slighu protection. This varles according to the weight of the material, Nor are the scarfs neces- sarily made to match. costumes. Quite as often they are separate accessories. ‘They may be black or some dark col- or and be worn to tone down a bril- liant frock, or they may be light or gay and transform a simple frock of some inconspicuous shade into & dressy gown. Such a scarf is a delightful addition to a traveler's wardrobe, as it makes one dress do the service of two. The ornamentation of ensemble scarfs may be embroidery, applique, or paint- ings, or a combination of stitchery with either of the other two trimmings. It the fabric is very thin and stritchery or applique is used, baste the portion being ornamented to tissue paper and sew through both cloths. Selvedges may be left unfinished. Picoting, hem- stitching and rolled hems are other finishes. An extremely narrow silk binding adds strength and a smart finish. Narrow fancy fi;fl?fl and also fringe are other orname edgings. (Copyright, 1929.) The Daily Cross. Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1929.) 1. Mountains in Europe. 5. A vexation. 10. Flat piece. 14, Fuel. . Poems. . White crystalline compound. . Idle wanderer. . Large tub. . Seventeenth century vehicle. . Change to former condition, . Practical. . North-African plant, Genuine, . Spanish title, . Small part of & machine. . Secret movement, . Edge. . Snare, 5. Utter wildly. . Keenly sensitive. . Goddess of the moon. . End terms of a proportion. . Four days before the Ides. . Liable, . Goes. . Bedaubed. Leave out. Newspaper edition. . Walking stick. Source, Approaches. 5. Ancient Italian family. Periods. Small bay. . Imitated. Down. Minutes of an ecclesiastical meeting. 2. Weaving machine, Part of the hand. 4. Arm coverings, . Characteristics. 6. Trumpet, 7. Peculiar. X Balliff. . Minor. ANSWER TO YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE 10, Spurned. 11. Mother of Castor and Pollux, 25, Disentangles. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. nab cJulia Boyd THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Tuesday, January 22. Menacing stars will rule tomorrow, according to astrology, which finds in the horoscope many sinister aspects. Money is the ruling power while this configuration prevalls, and many who covet wealth will attempt to obtain it by bad methods. Business transactions should be car- ried on with the strictest caution, the seers warn, for there will be much crookedness and lack of high ideals. Speculation again is subject to the most thregtening rule, and the stock market will prove capricious. This is a time when heavg losses in speculation will overbalance big profits, and women are especially warned to ignore the get-rich-quick temptation. Farmers may find new cause for dis- couragement when weather conditions may cause loss, and there will be troubles of many sorts in various parts of the country. It is an unlucky day for romance, and they who plight troth under this direc- tion of the stars may find themselves deceived. Warning is given that crimes, espe- cially robberies, will increase at this time when it is imperative to avoid dark streets or perilous places, ‘Women who select this date for shop- ping should be careful to know their own minds before selecting merchan- dise, for they are under a sway of the ?t:lrs making for uncertainty and vacil- ation. Astrologers prognosticate, as a result of the visit of a strange orb in the solar system, great and mighty wonders on the earth. A period of testing that must prove the attainments of civilization is near, it is foretold, when nations will Bave supreme chances to demonstrate spirit- ual as well as material power. While Mars and Saturn rule the Winter months, corruption will continue in high places, it is forecast, and great financial institutions will gain the con- fidence of the people, whom they will protect. In England a strike is indicated, and it may bring to a crisis more than one 26. Declaims with needless vehemence. 217. Have effect. 28. Essential to life. 29. Extent. 31, Judicial assembly. 32. Concur. 33. Cripples. 36. Man’s name. 40. Famous operatic soprano. 41, The sword that Hermes lent Perseus to cut off the head of Medusa. 44. More household gods of the Romans. 47..The cete, an order of mammals. 49. And not. 51, Most docile. 53. City in Germany. 55. Cupola. 56. Turkish nobleman. 57. Silver amalgam in cone. . Certain. . Grate. . Rounded, pointed or wavy: Heraldry. Act. . Salf. Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. the form of a Words often misused: When two or more personal pronouns are connected by “and,” the second person precedes the third and first, the third precedes the first. “You and she and I are go- Often mispronounced: Directly. Pro- nounce the i as in “it,” not as in “die.” Often misspelled: Baron (nobleman), barren (unproductive). Synonyms: Idle, indolent, lazy, in- inert, slothful, unemployed, and 1t is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Contrive; to plan ingeniously; scheme; plot; invent. “Their plans were cunningly con- trived.” e Potato-Nut Croquettes. Add two dozen chopped walnuts to two cupfuls of mashed potatoes into which have been beaten one-fourth cup- ful of milk, two tablespoonfuls of but- ter and one teaspoonful of salt. Add the yolk of one egg and beat well. Sea- son and cool, mold into croquettes, roll in crumbs, then in egg, and again in crumbs and cool. Fry in deep fat. Serve with a cheese dressing made wil half a cupful of grated cheese mixed with one cupful of cream sauce. Heat over hot water, L A mgeumm problem, the seers prognosti- cate. Persons whose birth date it is have the augury of a year that brings numer- ous trials, or dangers. They should avold all hazards and should be wise in all important matters. Children born on that day may be endowed with complex personalities that are difficult to understand. These subjects of Aquarius often seem to court difficulties, and should be taught stabil- ity and poise. They are usually most intelligent, (Copyright, Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. 1920.) “Mary ain't like other girls. She don't giggle an’ make you wonder if your patch is showin’” (Copyright, 1929.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Witcheraft. If one takes the trouble to read up on the history of witchcraft, he is at once impressed with its age, frequent outbreaks and prevalence. Witchcrafl is something of a universal pest. Witchcraft is a delusion. The de- luded imagine that their bad luck is due to the presence of an evil spirit, embodied in a lock of hair, a dish towel, an animal, a tree, or anything that heafsay suggests. Phychologi- cally speaking, you may call it pro- jection. The deluded projects his weakness on some unrelated object or on_some person. ‘The whole ¢ untry needs a witch: ex- terminator. .ork, Pa., is merely a place where abject ignorance and its companion, superstition, have forces to consummate an outrage against the social order all too feebly protected by education. Our boasted education in America is merely a veneer without sub- stance. Witcheraft is hard to root out because too many people resist the in- fluence of science, are too incapable of recognizing common sense. ‘The nggfl -has not red ““mw dangerous ignorance and su) n are. Muchgor; the effort in g:lnu of enlightenment is wasted on a stratum of soclety which hardly qualifies for a lace among the strata capable of tak- g on education. . One thing seems certain—there are no personal beliefs. What a man be- lieves is bound sooner or later to emerge as a social fact of some sort. (Copyright, 1929.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Apricots Farina with Cream ‘Baked Eggs, Bacon Curls Bran Muffins Coffee LUNCHEON. Cheese Fondu Stewed Tomatoes Clover Rolls Banana Pudding Tea DINNER. Boiled Squash Pineapple and Cream Cheese Salad Cottage Puddié\ghchncvhte Sauce offee BRAN MUFFINS One cup wheat bran, 1 cup whole wheat flour, 134 cups milk, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 egg, 1 table- spoon sugar, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 2 tablespoons melted but- ter. Mix dry ingredients, add milk, well-beaten egg and melted butter. Bake in hot oven in well Fashio by Is Love Or Money More Influential? DorothyDixl MONDAY, le Folk Argues Importance of Aflection, If a Girl Marries for Love She Has Something That Grows More and More Precious as J the Years Go By. . YOUNG woman asks: “What should a girl marry for, love or money?" Love, because if you are willing to work you can acquire money, and then if you have married for love you will have both love anr} ‘money. Love is a gift of the gods. you try. You cannot make that, no ‘matter how hard No effort of the will can make you thrill at the touch that is repulsive to you or give flavor to kisses that are dust and ashes on your lips. So, if you marry for money and lose it, you have nothing left. v If you marry for love you have something of which you never tire, something that keeps your heart alive, something that keeps your interest in life fresh and vivid and alert, something that grows more and more precious as the years go by. No woman ever grew satiated with love. and being loved. No woman ever grew weary of loving If you marry for money you will find that its joys soon pall upon you. You will find that one dinner is like another, one frock like another, and that there 1s not much difference among automobiles or country houses or town houses, and that you can be just as much bored in one place as another. The very knowledge that you can have everything you want will keep you from wanting anything. If you marry for love you will have romance, the glory and the circling JANUARY 21, 1929. Today in Washington History. BY DONALD A. CRAIG. January 21, 1877.—As the time draws near for the inauguration of a new President of the United States, and there has yet been no determination as to who was elected last November, the general apprehension of the people throughout the country, and especially of Members of Congress and Govern- ment officials in Washington, continues to increase. Various “peace” plans are belng proposed by persons anxious to prevent a recurrence of the horrors of civil war, which has so lately been ex- perienced by the American people. It is still uncertain whether Gov. Til- den, the Democratic candidate, or Gov. Hayes, the Republican candidate, has been elected by the votes of the people in the various States. In any event, the vote in thie electoral college is likely to be a very close one. A canvass of the popular votes in Florida gives a majority of 94 votes to Tilden, according to the latest dispatches received here from Tallahassee, but the Republicans declare this canvass was unfair to them. The situation in Louisi- ana and several other States is similar, and charges are being made by both sides. Chairman Changler of the Re- publican Natoinal Committee continues to claim the election of Hayes, although by a narrow margin, as he has done since a few days after the election. Meantime the dangerous situation into which the Nation is drifting is almost the sole topic of debate and lobby gossip in the halls of Congress, where the opinion seems to prevail that some means, not foreseen by framers of the Constitution, must be resorted to in order to settle the present diculty be- fore March 4, when the term of Presi- dent Grant will expire by constitutional limitation. The electoral commission, which some propose shall make a new canvass of the disputed votes, while sitting in Wash- ington, may not finish its labors until & day or two before the time for inau- guration of a new President. The ques- tion, of course, has resolved itself into a partisan one, but there is a disposition on the part of both sides to avoid ex- treme means, of which most persons admit the people have had enough since 1860. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “Ella has got the kind of religion that makes her love the heathen in Africa an’ hate folks that is close enough to keep her from havin’ her own way shout ever'thing.” (Copyright, 1929.) wings. You will have companionship. You will have sympathy and understanding. You will have somebody to laugh with and cry with and play with. You will 't | have something that calls out everything that is fine in your nature and that joined | g) greased gem pans. One-half cup of stoned raisins may be added to this recipe if desired. BANANA PUDDING Put 2 cups milk in double boil- er, dissolve 3 tablespoons corn- starch in 15 cup milk and pour into the hot milk. Add % cup sugar, a little salt, and lastly beat in the well-beaten whites 3 eggs, then mix in 3 sliced bananas and pour in a mold. Serve cold with a boiled custard sauce made of the yolks of the eggs. PINEAPPLE CHEESE SALAD Cream together 13 pound American cheese rubbed through gx‘;nur and 1 generous tablespoon lled salad dnulnLumn very smooth. Roll into balls. Place balls in center of pineapple slices. Sprinkle slightly with paprika and serve on lettuce. - may be aded if desired. makes you a better and a nobler woman. If you marry for money you wul-hnve the poor things that money buys, and that will be all. You will have duty instead of love. Being a good sport and playing the game instead of being part of your husband. And you won't have much self-respect. S OVE satisfles a woman. But money never does. Notice the faces of the women who have married for love, how soft and tender and beautiful they are; then look at the faces of the women who have married for money, and see how hard and bitter and cynical they have grown. You will find many happy women who married for love, and who have never had much else. roor1s into palaces. They have always had to live in poor homes, and wear hahby clothes, and do their own housework, but love has turned their rented It has made their hand-me-downs royal robes, and every dinner they have ever cooked has been done with the sacred joy of a priestess ministering before the altar. But you never see a woman who has married for money who is happy. Invariably she is peevish and fretful and discontented. She may live in a hous that has cost a fortune and 'that is furnished with the belongings of kings, but it is no home, no place where her soul can rest and be at peace, because there is no love in it. She may be clothed in silks and velvets and diamonds d furs, but they cannot put warmth into her cold heart. She may have a chec! account that will enable her to buy everything she wants in the world except the things she wants most of all—love and the comradeship of two hearts that really beat as one. You see, my dear girl, marriage is a very queer business. And then some. It isn't just a trade in which one gives so much and gets so much and in which one is justified in making the best bargain one can for one'’s self. It is an affair in which it is literally more blessed to give than to receive, where one must give without counting the cost and in which those who put in the most get out the most, Nor is there any way by which a woman, however astute she may be, can protect herself against the hazards of matrimony. Money won't do it. are sacrifices of personal tastes and inclinations that the millionairess and the pauper. Rich husbands are hard to get along with as poor husbands are. . e 0w e There have to be made alike by just as cantankerous and THE only thing that makes marriage worth while is love. It takes love, and lots of it, to sweeten the inevitable sacrifices that marriage demands of every woman, It takes the magic of love to blind a wife to ‘her husband’s faults and see in them nothing but adorable peculiarities; to keep her belleving that a mediocre man is an oracle whose every utterance is worth repeati t in some bay-windowed, bald-headed, middle-aged husband p: nhngfka?gato :fi: belleves every flapper is trying to steal away from her, It takes the miracle of love to prevent any husband from getting on his wife's nerves and keep her out of the divorce courts, It would even seem that Heaven prospers the love curse upon the mercenary marriage. a start in the world. They had love, you know who marry aged, and they are poor the memory of love to comfort them. 8o, my dear girl, don't be afraid to marry for love. man and work with him. That is the grent"Aymerlcsn romance. (Copyright, 1929.) Everyday Law Cases May Landlord Evict Original Tenant For Sub-Tenant's Breach? BY THE COUNSELLOR. ‘Thomas Stern leased a property to Charles Bennett, who in turn subleased the property to Thomas Banks. One of the clauses in the original lease read as follows: “The lessee shall keep said premises clean and in a sanitary condition to the satisfaction of the board of health of the city, and to the satisfaction of the, lessor, and sald, premises shall not be used or permitted to be used for any illegal or immoral purposes, nor shall and that gilded their hardships, and th Joy to the battle they fought shoulder to shaulder.p!mne-tenf‘.finl for money have lost even that by the indeed, because they have nothing. marriage and puts a Half the prosper lemow will tell you that they married on a shoesiring, and pow ey Tien you and saved and worked together and lived on bread and and how they scrimped cheese and kisses to get oo‘kut:lck with of e women time they are middle- They have not even Marry your poor young DOROTHY DIX. gambling or the use of h qufn be J}lowl“l glerein"' Diioithe ern, the landlord, learn t] Banks, the uuhleuee?'m pelnri.nltt.)(‘n‘: gambling on the pre , notified the latter that the lease had thereby been forfeited and requested him to leave the premises. Bennett, however, the origi- nal tenant, demurred to the landlord's declaration of the forfeiture, as the rental he had been recelving was much in excess of the rental he in turn was paying to the landlord. Bennett's con- tention was that, as the original lessee, he was guiltless of any wrongdoing and was entitled to obtaln possession after the subtenant had been evicted. The court ruled, however, that the landlord was entitled to the premises, stating: “In the case of a sublease, the act of the subtenant, if in violation of the lease, has the same effect as the act of the original tenant, in enabling the head landlord to enforce a for- feiture,” “Guess the only ones who fall by the wayside these days are pedestrians.” (Copyright, 1920.) NANCY PAGE Room in Silver, Black, Apricot and Green BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Nancy's sister brought home with her some descriptions and snapshots of her room at college. “It really is ador- able,” she said. “And the nice part of it is that it does not look like a bed- room. In the dorm two girls have a study which they use together, and then each girl has a bedroom. This makes what we call a suite. But most of us uy to make our bedrooms look like anything but a bedroom. Often we want to entertain some of the gir's in our rooms and not disturb our com- panion who is using the study. “My color scheme is silver, green, apricot and black. The day bed is covered with a hand-woven spread that my great-grandmother made. It is green and white. At the bottom of the bed is a folded blanket of hand-woven stuff in apricot and on the bed are two 10-inch pillows. One is covered with green and the other with apricot satin. “The rug is that old rose one wnich I had dyed black. The pictures are family photographs framed in simple wooden frames, silvered. The bookcase is painted jade green inside, with sil- ver on outside and on edges of shelves. ‘The lamp has a green base and parch- ment shade, with silver paper pasted on after the silver was cut in irregular shapes. There is a tiny table, an old . chest of drawers with a doll's chest of drawers on top. This holds powder, beads and so on. A brass candlestick, a mirrored box are the other scces- sories. The big chair has an apricot slip cover, and the small footstool has gay flowers on black petit point back- ground. tell you it's a good-looking room.” A bridge lunch 1 ight PR e Sl FPlCaddressed envelope, SSEing. for her Jeat: let on bridge luncheons. 1920.) (Copyri ere are some important weaving Peru. The nllh-m'mlllllrl’cfllurluh FEATURES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Weak Feet. The average woman’s aversion to taking walks out-oY-doors is largely due to the condition of her feet. Walking is no pleasure unless the feet are com- fortable and suitably shod, yet this form of exercise is one of the most con- venient and beneficlai. Foot troubles may be due to a variety of causes. The wearing of poorly shaped shoes is the leading one. When the shoes are too short, too narrow for the foot and with heels excessively high, milady must pay the penalty in de- formed, painful feet. Other causes of weak feet include incorrect posture, the habit of walking with toes turned out, a general, poor tone of the muscles due to ill health or old age, overweight, pro- longed standing on hard floors and, in the case of young people, rapid growth that makes the body too heavy for the undeveloped feet to support. Whatever one’s foot troubles may be, the advice of a foot specialist should be sought. An orthopedic surgeon or a pediatrist can prescribe the kind of treatments needed to restore the feet to normal. It is a grave mistake to try to prescribe shoes and foot correction devices for one's self without scientific guidance, Flatfoot occurs frequently in differ- ent stages of development. It begins with a weakness of the arches. Pains are often felt in the feet, legs and back. Oftentimes pains that are mistaken for rheumatism or some sort of kidney or spinal trouble have been traced to weak feet. Treatments for the condition begin with the use of special shoes with broad toes and low heels. The inside cdges of heels and soles are built higher than the outer edges so that the weight of the body may be thrown on the outer sides of the feet. Correct posture is also important. Feet must be pointed toward the front, not outward. Some- times it is necessary to strap the feet or use a cast or other device under the doctor’s direction. Exercise also plays a part in strength- ening weak arches. Stand with toes pointed inward and slowly raise the heels. When lowering the heels the weight of tne body is on their outer sides. Picking up marbles with the toes is another good foot exercise. Walk- ing pigeon-toed on a thick, sponge-rub- ber mat is helpful if at each step the toes are curled under and the weight is kept on the outer borders of the feet. One of the principal objections to tight | shoes is that they prevent this curling |motion of the toes, which gives elas- | ticity to one's tread. In speaking of foot troubles we must not forget the part played by stockings short in the foot. They cramp the feet almost as much as short_ shoes. Stockings should be at least a quarter inch longer than the foot to allow for the spread of the foot in walking. (Copyright, 1929.) PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM It Is Cri, Walrus Said. It is a striking fact, and comforting to know, that the individual who fears he is going insane isn't, whereas the real psychopath, the actually crazy or demented individual, never for a moment suspects his own condition, whatever he may think about the men- tal state of the rest of the world. I am more certain now than ever be- fore that I am right about the so-called “cold” question, and all physicians, health authorities and laymen who be- lleve exposure to cold or wet has any- thing to do with the respiratory dis- eases associated with “taking cold” are wrong. I state this baldly, not, as some critics insinuate, merely to be sen- sational and different, but because I think it is the most important principle of public health education that con- fronts us today, and I assure you I do not take such an arbitrary stand on such a vital question without long and thoughtful consideration of the respon- sibility one in my position as teacher or expert owes to those who place confidence in the health teachings they find here. If, as I am certain, exposure to cold, wet, drafts, changes of weather, insuf- ficient clothing and all that, never causes actual illness (except frost bite), although trifling changes of this kind in the environment unquestionably do bring on snuffling, st up of the nose, sneezing, coughing and perhaps sudden increase of secretions in individ- uals who have some chronic nose, throat or chest disease, it follows that the familiar term “a cold” is a mis- nomer, if you mean by that any actual iliness or indisposition. ‘When I set out on my long cher- ished avocation of showing these mys- tery story writers how scientific mur- der should be done, I'm going to select lmb':x my earlier victims people who Shakespeare's line about a rose ' 2; BRADY, M. D. by any other name at this juncture. If it were merely a matter of nomen- clature I should be the last to_com- plain about the “common cold.” But it is infinitely more serious than that. I would rejest the use of this term be- cause it is misleading, because it tends to put people off guard, because it isa grave obstacle in the way of prevention, particularly the prevention of the res~ piratory infections, which class or group of diseases, statisticians find, are re- sponsible for three-fourths of the ill- ness physicians attend. There are a score or more of diseases recognized as common respiratory in- fections — coryza, measles, epfiemlc meningitis, to name typical instances— and ;s a ge;l&nl rulelwl;:n one is com- lown with any of these respiratory infections neither he nor nupl;‘uwr can tell just which it is going to be— if any. What makes the situation worse is that all of these infections are most readily communicated in the stage of invasion, before the actual 10818, is made. Well, what are you going to c-lél your mncfi én thulsuge. nding a diagnosis? Not “a cold,” ungl are eriminally inclined; 2nd it is anything as innocent as that give your friends and associates no fair wa . 'You pepper everybody within range with whatever you have. That is a contemptible to do. Be f and square about it. Call it the “cr! (kree); that is an honest acknowledg- ment that you suppose it may be com- municable but as yet you don't know just what you are developing. That glves your friends and associates fair warning, and 'y may keep beyond range or not, as they see it. Yy you play fair. (Copyright, 1929.) e Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcass heef in Washington, W for week ‘ending Ssturdas. Jangary o, ig5s on Shipments gold Out. anked. from’ 115 cents to 26.50 cents per pound and aver: 1.66 cents per pound.—Advertisement. ELFAND’S is a jgreat mayonnaise, made with full knowledge of Vapex kept laboratory workers im- mune fo in- fluenza dur- ing the war. DuriNe the war, with influenza raging all around them, certain English laboratory workers re- mained immune. Tests proved that chemicals with which they were working were responsible. Here | was an important discovery. The | new product, Vapex, has come into general use in England and America. The treatment of colds has been modernized. Bothersome dosing has been done away with. Vapex is simple and pleasant to use. Put a drop on a handkerchief, breathe the vapor. what is finest for topping salad. By the makers of Gelfand’s Relish Sandwich Spread. Distributors THE CARPEL COMPANY Washington, D. C. GELFAND’S MAYONNAISE Fight that cold the modern way! It reaches the innermost areas of infection. Vapex is refreshing and actually kills cold germs. Vapex will stop a cold before it becomes deeply seated, or leads to more serious disease. Get a bottle of Vapex from your druggist. Each dollar bottle cone tains 50 treatments. Make it a habit to place a drop on your folded handkerchief every morn- ing. Its frequent use will help pre- vent contagion. Vapex is guaran- teed and distributed by E. Fougera & Co., Inc., New York City, A drop on your handkerchief 'VAPEX Breathe your cold away Reg. U. 8. Pat. OF. lwalhmnmywblmu&wmflmhm uullhmlrlmla-‘...nlwhupfldnbwflc A

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