Evening Star Newspaper, February 22, 1929, Page 34

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WOMA N'S PAGE’ Care Reql;ired by Kitchen Utensils BY. LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. ‘The different processes by which kitchen utensils are cleaned are im- rtant to know if one would get the E:.; value out of such icles. Be- cause the correct way to cdre for one kind may be injurious to another, it is well to take account of the distinc- tions. Mild acids restore the luster to dulled aluminum and cleanse at the same THE LUSTER MAY BE RESTORED | TO ALUMINUM KETTLES IN THE | MANNER DESCRIBED. time. One teaspoonful of vinegar to a quart of water is a good solution. Sour milk may be used as a cleaning agent. Steel wool another factor helpful in also whiting. emp scratch the surface. should be avoided, as it tends to darken | the surface. Even with proper care| MILADY B BY LOIS Tee for the Face. is one of the simplest astrin- gents that ‘can be used on the face and neck to texture of the skin and fat. I do ating devices have i use for the dainty ice 50 easily in their | ¢t if they have not they instead of squares, it is handier to use for cosmetic purposes, since it will have no edges by a coating of face cream before the cold applica- tion. The skin must, be of course, aluminum tends to become slightly darkened after long usage. The quality is not necessarily at fault. When enamel or agate ware utensils are new fill them with cold water, bri slowly to a boil and allow water to cool before emptying. This tends to toughen the material. Avoid plunging hot eon- tainers of such subsances into cold water, as the surface is susceptible to | extreme changes and may crack. The porcelain surface of enamel or agate containers is not ‘affected by acids or alkalls, so washing soda dis- | solved in boiling water may be freely usad. To avold scratching surface, use brush or half of wooden clothespin to | remove foreign substances that stick. | Avoid steel wool and scraping with & sharp utensil, Before cpoking in glass dishes, temper them by filling with cold water, bring- ing slowly td a boil and allowing to | cool in the same water. This strength- ens the glass. Glassware for the table | should not be subjected to such changes of temperature, but the stouter kitchen ware will stand it and be benefited. Glass is easy to clean by a convenient process, and its surface is not affected by contents. Earthenware should be treated in the | same fashion as glass. If the glaze becomes cracked, wash container fre- quently in solution of soda and water to prevent the porous substance be- neath the glaze from absorbing odors and flavors to foods cooked therein. (Coyright, 1929.) A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN, You'll Pray Then. In my distress I cried unto |"—Psalms, cxx.1 Two Scotch fishermen, “Jamie” and “Sandy,” were caught out on rough water and began to fear lest they should never get ashore again. Finally Jamie sald: “Sandy, I'm steerin’ and I think you'd better put up a bit of prayer.” Sandy began: “Oh, Lord, I never asked anything of ye for 15 years, and if ye'll only get us safe back to shore I'll never trouble ye again, and—" “Whisht, Sandy!”" said Jamie. “The boat's touched shore; don’t be beholden to anybody.” & We smile at this, and yet it is not an uncommon occurrence for prayers to cease whem “the boat has touched shore.” With health and plenty and no peril in sight men become puffed up and feel wonderfully able to take care of themselves. But how quickly they change when adversity or affliction comes upon them or they find them- selves confronted with gdanger. Then they cry unto the Lord, even though, as in the case of Sandy, it has been many a year since they uttered a prayer. And then as soon as deliverance comes, as | soon as “the boat has touched shore,” they again forget all about the Lord. “In my distress I cried unto the Lord.” In time of distress or peril human frailty turns instinctively toward divine strength. Men who are indiffer- ent and even intolerant toward all things religious realize their helplessness in the presence of trouble and disaster is | and cry to God to save them. You may not think much of prayer. You may even deny that you believe in it. But wait till you are caught out on some rough sea and the breakers threaten ‘you. EAUTIFUL LEEDS. thoroughly cleansed before the ice is used. A good astringent treatment for fat, oily faces is given with a mask of cotton moistened in ice water. The mask is nothing but a plece of clean |- absorbent cotton about six inches square and an inch thick. Cut a_hole ¥et fout of the center for breathi Mold the cotton over the face and rub a plece of ice over it for about five minutes. Have your hair protected by is a towel and have another one around your neck to catch any drops of ice water that may escape from the cotton. After the ice rub, remove the mask, blot the skin dry with a soft cloth and pat on a skin lotion. A similar treatment may be given to fat necks. Instead of using a square of cotton, use a strip long enough to reach from ear to ear the chin. Squeeze out this strip the water and press it firmly inst the double chin. Lie down. Rub the piece of ice on the strip. Needless to | say, this treatment should not be given when one has a cold. The ice treatment for thick necks and heavy facés may be taken fre- quently, since the reduction of fat comes as the skin warms. ‘The fat is burned up to restore the normal tem- perature to the skin after the chill- . ‘The same principle applies when ing cold baths. Most women think that a reducing bath should be hot, but the loss of weight from cold bath- ing is more permanent than that from hot bathing, which only causes a tem- mrtylouo(nwrfmmthebodyn sweat, - An ice rub for two or three min- 'ilnt:' each night is h;lph':!o i& ll"educ- enlarged pores and o ring- ing natural color to the cheeks, (Copyright, 1929.) MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE By MOLLIE HOLLYWOOD, Calif., February 22.— It is always interesting to know what Hollywood thinks of itself. The Acad- emy of Motoin Picture Arts and Sci- ences has issued a series of awards for meritorious achievements publicly released during the year ending August 1, 1928. The village where movies are made considers Emil Jannings the best actor, giving him first award for his perform- ance in “The Way of All Flesh” and “The Last Command.” Richard Bar- thelmess came second. Janet Gaynor won he laurels from the other stars, beauties or actresses of cinemaland. The two alternates were Gloria Swanson and Louise Dresser. Frank Borzage won first award among directors, “Seventh Heaven” being the vehicle which carried hirth there. Herbert Brenon, for “Sorrel and Son,” came second, and King Vidor third, for “The Crowd.” Lewis Milestone won the comedy award. “Two Arabian Nights,” and Ted Wilde came second with “Speedy.” The award for the most interesting and best constructed story, according to judges of the academy, goes to Ben Jecht for “Underworld,” and Lajos Biro comes second, for * mand.” Adaptation honors go to Ben- jamin Glazer, Alfred Cohn and An- thony Coldeway. Joseph Farnham got the glory for titles, with George Marion, jr., and winning the mentions. les Rosher and Karl Struss, whgl did the cinematography of ‘“Sunris2 er> ths lacky cameramen. Willlam Cameran Menzies for art direction. Roy mer for engineering effects, In . which, if you remember, was ths first.picture to use the full screen and incorporate the sound of the air- plane engines into the dramatic mo- ments of the story. There’s always a possibility of argu- ment when an award is made, so when Hollywood 28 & body decrees that “Sun- rise” is its best picture, and gives an he Last Com-! MERRICK. old-fashioned silent picture, despite his | original _theories about sound and talkie. ‘This according to his studio plans of this week. But lth change often and radically in Hollywood. so by the time this is in print the dialogue for it may perhaps be written. Handsome trophies of bronze and gold are the first awards in these re - tions by the governing board of motion pictures. The foremost representatives of the profession in every branch are identified with this organization. Hence these prizes are of interest to the worid at larde as bein Hollywood's opinion of Hollywood. strictly family thing, the opinion of those on the inside. (Copyrizht, 1926, by North American News- ————ARCC ALlINRCE) Flflmn\mt - = “Thect fresh-roasted flavor” \\\\\\\\\\\\\\uuu mu///////// e i 7 A LTI h to your award for it, you can just hear the other producers go up in smoke. And a special prize for the “Jazz Singer” will maks & fow others squirm with fury. Another special prize was given Charles Chaplin for acting, direct- ing and producing “The Circus.” Gianiin by tha way, 8 making an ? table in the airtight lar s | Into the upper part double boiler she THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY BEAUTY CHATS BY EDNA KENT FORBES, ‘Teeth and Health. One axiom is that healthy teeth are always beautiful. Even when they are slightly yellow, they can be beautiful, for the milk white teeth we once ad- mired are usually frail teeth that go early in life. The tough ones that last are always yellowish. A dentist must keep your teeth in per- fect shape. Yet th> best dentist there is cannot counteract the harm you your- self may do by poor care. The best plan you can have is to clean the teeth twice a day after breakfast and before bed time, using a different brush each time. For the morning one will hot be dry enough, nor its bristles hard enough to use at night. The brush should be small and the surface irregular, either with a blob at one side or with bunches of bristles shorter and longer, alternating. This lets you get between the teeth. Clean- ing the surfaces is not much use if the teeth are not clean between. My dentist also insists on a quick massage of the gums with the finger, after the cleaning. I do it when I can, but like most of us, I'm careless, and this takes time. I use the brush well up over the gums though, for that mas- sages them and makes tgem stronger. ‘The modern dentist is little Short of a magician. A single tooth can be re- placed by pivoting, or by fastening it | | to.the two adjoining teeth. Plates are | only necessary if many teeth are miss- ing. The merest shell of a tooth can be filled and saved, and fillings can he made quite invisible. Crooked teeth | can be straightened miraculously. | Discolored teeth can be bleached, and | irregularities filed off. There is almost | no limit to the power of a dentist, or that specialist in the dental profession, the orthodontist. Go to the best one you can find. This is one instance | where money should not be stinted. A Reader.—The castor ofl in the tonic | would not have any effect upon darken- | ing the shade of your hair. If your light hair is getting darker, it is a nat- ural change and it likely will be a much more becoming one aftsr it has | settled into the shade of hair that goes | with the rest of your coloring. Flaxen bonde shades aways change to brown, but if the shade is lifeless, such as what is sometimes called “drab,” a henna shampoo will brighten it. You need not even do this, provided you get your scalp in a healthy condition as the hair will show =0 much vitality that there will be natural glints to the coloring, no matter what the shade may be. NANCY PAGE Prune or Chocolate Pie and No Brown Taste. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Lois had been experimenting with one-crust ples. She had learned how to make a lemon meringue pie and a butterscotch one. Now she was working on a prune pie and a chocolate one. She used a crust made in proportion of one cup flour to one-fourth teaspoon salt, four tablespoons shortening and one-fourth cup cold water. She lined the pie plate, built up a high rim. She pricked the paste all over with fork so that expanding air between crust and plate would not cause the crust to rise in bubbles. The fork holes allowed the air to escape. After the crust was baked she cooled it and put in the filling. For both prunes and chocolate filling she used a spread of sweetened whipped cream to which a drop of bitter almond had been added. SHe soaked one pound of prunes in one pint water overnight, cooked them with one and one-half cups sugar. When tender she removed prune pits, added juice of one lemon, grated rind of half lemon and a pinch of powdered ginger. To this mixture she added two tablespoons butter and one tablespoon flour stirred up with prune jujce. Cook over flame for five n;llnlllllts, stirring vigorously. Fill baked | shell. The chocolate filling was made thus: put one cup milk and one-guarter tea- spoon salt. She stirred one and one- half tablespoons cornstarch with a little cold milk and added it to hot milk. ‘This cooked in double bofler for 20 min- utes. She melted one-half square bak- ing chocolate and added it to milk mix- ture. She beat two egg yolks with six tablespoons sugar and poured hot milk mixture on to this. Then she added one teaspoon vanilla. This was poured into baked shell and covered with whip- ped cream. A dinaer with a rich dessert like this needs a salad. Write to Nancy Page, care of this paper, inclosing a stamped. s addressed envelope, asking for her Salad Leaflet No. (Copyrisht, 1920.) Motion pictures of the planet Jupiter were a novelty shown at a meeting of scientists recently. ATWOOD GRAPEFRUIT Tree-Ripened Wholesome and Delicious LOOK FOR THE NAME (| ‘Wholesale Distributors PARIS.—There is a tendency to get away from black for Spring dresses, but women who choice. lacing on skirt and corsage. The belt The Sidewalks refer it have the authority of big dressmaking names for their | Goupy shows a youthful dress of black fallle with shaped bands inter-| is placed at a nearly normal waistline. RITA. of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. “Give them time. They all come home to roost.” The speaker was a man who had parked his hat and coat in every known corner of the globe. Actually it was a | retort courteous to an observation that there was only one place in the world where life provided a generous bounty of pleasure. Europe, of course. Where galety was queen and abandon was crown prince. Where the achievement of frolicking is reduced to an art and tenseness of existence is a stranger to its people. . “But I still main- tain,” insisted the globerounder, “that they all come back.” He enun- clated a truth known to all who have precipitated themselves into the social cauldron abroad. They do come back. Listen to them— those folks who have crossed the Atlantic to stay. Listen and weep. Not long ago one of them almost wept as he v;v-lkeld down Pennsylvania avenue and declared that he would never roam again from the good old U. 8. A. Of course, he had just returned after eight years on the other side. America was a novelty. It is true, though, that few Americans remain to die in Europe. One of our g:cent American arrivals went to France during the war. He rose to the rank of a French colonel and in 1918 was engaged in the job of mopping up the enemy in the air. After the armistice, he remained in France, ac- quired the language and settled him- self, as he believed, for life. Occasion- ally he traveled to London or to the Riviera and saw folks from home. The young women with whom he associated were natives of the countries he visited and he raved over them. Now he is home again, where he married an Amer- ican girl. Shg:{ly after 1920, the chief mixer in a well known hotel sailed for Lon- don with his family. He sold his furni- ture and declared that he was through with the States. He could no longer earn & living at his trade and he didn’t yen to become a bootlegger. He had been offered a right good job in one of the British capital's finest hostelries, to shake them up for the tourists. After six years he wants to come home. “I'd be willing to pour sarsa- rilla,” he said sadly, “if I could go ck.” Three thousand miles and no Job keeps him abroad. A young man was appointed conti- nental manager for a great corporation, with headquarters in Paris. He made good. So good, indeed, that he has re- mained at his post for 15 years. Once & year he returns to the States, where he spends his vacation with family and friends. He would like to come back. We attended a farewell dinner given in honor of & ynun, foreign diplomat who was to leave for home, after a rather extensive residence in America. “It must be tough,” ventured one of the male guests, “for him to go back. ‘To leave a prosperous, progressive land like this and return to antiquated methods of living is a tough break.” Yet he was happy to go. The young fel- low had, by his affable disposition, won many American friends, but he was going home and that was enough. * K K ok ‘Two small boys stood toe to toe in a vacant lot and slugged each other for Piquant spices from the Indies give Auth’s that wonderful old-fashioned flavor. Ask for the genuine. { N. CHARLES NEITMULLER CO. 923" B Street N.W fare-thee-well yesterday. A crowd of young fellows and some older ones wit- nessed the hostilities without inter- fering. A woman passed and inquired why one of the men didn't stop the | battle. “It is a shame,” she said, reprovingly, “that grown men will let little boys hit each other that way.” There is something primitive in the soul of every man. The most ardent pacifist often pays the most to see a boxing match. He may not know the | difference between i an uppercut and a jab, but this in no wise destroys the pleasure he gets in watching a fistic encounter. One day a school- | boy returned home a half hour after his usual time. The mother be- came anxious and when the boy walk- ed into the house he was asked why he had tarried so long. He told his mother that one of his schoolmates had threatened to “lick him.” The mother, in turn, in- formed the father of the affair and ask- ed him to go to school and report it. ‘The father said nothing. ‘The next day the boy made a circuit- ous journey home to avold his enemy and was again late. That night the father took the lad to his room and closed the door. There they had a long chat. As they came out of the room, the mother heard her husband say: “And if you don't lick him, I'll lick you.” Three days later a small, disheveled kid turned up at the back door. His shirt was in ribbons and he exploited a black eye. “Well, mother,” he said proudly, “I licked him, I did. And he was easy. I ‘was afraid of him until today because T thought he was good, but I'm not afra’d of him any more. This is not intended as an indorse- | ment of fighting, but there is a lesson in it. Since the dawn of history man has fought. Constantly he has battled | nature herself and will continue thus to | probe his way into the unknown. Fre- quently the enemy we fear most proves to be nothing more than an illusion ; ’l;‘ho youngster mentioned discovered | that. THE MOST ARDENT PACIFIST OF TEN ENJOYS A BOXING Molasses Coconut Pies. quarters of a cupful of sugar, one and one-half tablespoonfuls of flour, half a teaspoonful of cloves, a pinch of salt, one cupfu of molasses and one cupful of evaporated or frseh milk. Pour into small pans lined with pastry, sprinkle moist coconut thickly over the tops and bake like custard pie. Aimerica’s Joremost Chiffon. Beat three eggs well and add three- ! 29 Sy 1929. This is a fofm of completion test. You are given a word from which one letter is missing and your problem is to list all the letters which could be used in the space to form an English word in_common. wsage. Example: B—T. The letters which should be listed in this case are A, E, I and U, because bat, bet, bit and but are all_words, . ‘Which letters can be used in the fol- lowing? Date or Fig Muffins. Sift together one and one-half cup- fuls of flour, one-fourth teaspoonful of baking soda, three teaspoonfuls of bak- ing powder and one teaspoonful of salt. Add one cupful of dates pitted and sliced, then two cupfuls of bran. Beat two eggs and add to one and a half cupfuls of milk, add three tablespoon- fuls of molasses, combine the mixtures, beat well and stir in a quarter of a cupful of melted butter or lard. Pour into well greased muffin pans and bake in a hot oven for about half an hour. For variety, occasionally add a quarter | of a cupful of chopped nut meats to the batter, especially for luncheon or sup- per muffins. Chopped figs may be used for a change. Wipe one and one-half pounds of lamb, put on to boil ‘with two quarts of water and cook slowly for one hour. Add one cupful of sliced onions and half a cupful of cut carrots. Add two teaspoonfuls of salt and a little pepper. Cook until tender and remove four cup- fuls of stock for soup. To the remain- der of stock in the kettle add two ta- blespoonfuls of flour for thickening and boil for 5 minutes. Boil, then mash one quart of potatoes, around the edge of an agate platter and the meat in the center. Dust with pa- prika and brown in a moderately hot oven. Sprinkle with two tablespoonfuls of parsley. . Good Biscuits, Sift together twice one cupful of flour with one rounding teasponful of baking powder and one saltspoonful of salt. Add one rounding teaspoonful of lard and mix with the tips of the fingers until thoroughly blended. Add half a cupful of milk, still using the fingers or a spoon. Work as little as possible to get into & smooth mass. Turn onto a slightly floured board, put into a smooth, flat cake, or roll lightly with a rolling pin to about half an inch thick. Cut with a small cutter and place in a floured or greased pan so that they do not touch, and bake in a hot oven for ebout 10 minutes. . OCTAGON place them | INAUGURAL PAGEANT Washington to Hoover BY ALEXANDER R. GEORGE. Benjamin Harrison. 'O THE cheers of thousands who stood in pools of water under drip- ping ‘red, white and blue umbrellas, Gen. Benjamin Harrison, grandson of President William Henry Harrison, rode from the White House to the Capitol March 4, 1889. one of the worst inau- guration days history. Decorations were sodden and rain- streaked, men wrung the water out of their coat- talls, and many a feminine bang, shingled especially for the inaugura- tion, was ruined. President - elect Harrison sat with President Cleveland and Senators Hoar and Cockerell in an open carriage ‘drawn by two seal brown and two sorrel horses. Gen. Harrison “smiled behind his beard” as Senator Hoar struggled to raise his um- brella, the ring sliding to the top and the umbrella collapsing. At the Capitol Gen. Harrison, disre- garding the advice of his assoclates, insisted on going out on the open por- tico to deliver his inaugural address to the multitude which had stood for hours in the rain to see the ceremony. One of the most picturesque figures in the parade was the chief marshal, Gen. Beaver, the one-legged and handsome Governor of Pennsylvania, who rode his horse, hat in hand, with the rain trick- ling down his powerful neck. Although the rain marred the parade festivities, the inaugural’ ball in the huge pension building was a grilliant affair attended by 12,000 persol Mrs. Harrison and Mrs. Levi P. Morton, wil» of the Vice President, wore brocaded gowns of American manufacture, and John Philip Sousa, leader of the Marine Band, composed a “presidential polo- naise” especially for the occasion. The thousands who poured into Washington were greeted at the depot by the howls of hack drivers, hotel run- ners and fakirs who gave to each pur- chaser of a box of corn salve a packaga of inaugural “jewelry.” Diamonds sparkled under the gas light, “their de- ceptive rays catching the eyes of the innocent.” It was the era of gas hghts, ginger- bread architecture, plush coats and damask table cloths. The stores were advertising special sales of. Modjeska seal coats, French robes de Chambre, muffs and boas. The last word in neck- ties could be bought for a dollar, grocer: were vending lamp chimneys and Washington saloonkeepers were boasting the “best lager beer in Americ: ERE'S a 2-quart size aluminum_double boiler that will give you years of service. Has highly poiished exterior. Interior the “sunshine” finish that is so attractive. Seamless. Strong, well-riveted handles with holes for hanging. The exact utensil you'd pay $1.25 for in the stores. Easy to own st is easy. There aresix Octagon Soap Couy Pmm each of which has a premium coupon. Every time you need soap of an; your dealer for “Octagon.” kind simply ask n." re you know it, you'll have a lot of coupons—besides the enjoy- ment of using the best of soaps. Begin your cou- pon saving today. added GIFT for you An > CLIP AND SAVE Here's a certificate worth 15 coupons to start you off. In order to redeem the cemificate you must have 10 coupons from any or all of these four Octagon Products: — Octagon Toiles Soap, Octagon Floating Soap, Octagon Soap Chips, Octagon Scouring }) This ) % Cleanser. The 10 coupons may be of one kind or mixed. Only coupons from the products named will count with the certificate. Note; with the 10 coupons described above and the certificate worth 13 :fny of the Octagon Soap Pt , - o get this you coupons, you need only 30 additional coupons from special premium. 8Ot use the certificate, you can get the special pre- mium for 73 Octagon Coupons. 'AGON N GON SCOURI ) OCTAGON SLp i ; “The 10 Coupons ma¥ Bob Pinkerton returned home from the Capital with another feather in his cap, claiming a large share of the credit for keeping the city clean of thieves ‘durlnz the inauguration. | . The men's fashion editor of the New | York World thus described the Spring | style trend: “Ic is evident that Ascot scarfs have | come to stay. A new shade is Spring derbies is smoke color—it is an exceed- | ingly soft and delicate tint. In vest the notched collar is stiil the favort | The dead, or unpolished, finish in co! lars is considered the proper cape: lfl\ghly glossed linen is looked upon 2 vulgar. “Some startling effects ate to be seen | among the recent importations of | hosiery, a pronounced design _being | bottle green flecked with golden buttsr- As an accompaniment to flannel fhes. shirts which will be the craze next Summer, four-in-hand flannel searfs are being manufactured.” | President Harrison was of a reserved | nature and his political enemies sa.l he was cold, proud and austere, He | was essentially simple in his tastes and delighted in playing with his children and grandchildren after methodicali disposing of the day’s executive routin=. | “He gave a birthday party at the | White House March 16, 1891, on the | fourth anniversary of his grandson, |Benjamin Harrison McKee. A co- | temporary account says: | _“The guests assembled in the Blus kRnnm to be led by the President and | his grandson to the dining room, where |at a round table were 15 high chairs. The centerpiece was a plat of ferns on | which were two flags crossed, while at | each’ plate were rush baskets of bon- | bons, the handles formed of tri-colored | ribbons. | *“About the table were big dishes of | beaten biseuits, especially made for the | occasion in the form of little chicks | with outspread wings. The menu in- | cluded bouillon, gakes and cream. The | Marine Band supplied music. The chil- dren were waited on by their mothers and nurses and the ladies of the White House. Then the President led the way | to the corridor with his namesake, and | they all danced the Virginia reel" Shrimp Pie. | Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter, add three tablespoonfuls of flour and | blend well. Add two cupfuls of milk ‘s‘.o!\‘ly, stirring until thickened. Bring | to the boiling point and add half a ta- | blespoonful of anchovy paste. Remove “ the intestinal veins from two cupfuls of | shrimps and cut the shrimps in pleces. !Add to the sauce, together with one | cupful of cooked diced white potatoes, |one cupful of p2as, half a teaspoonful {of salt and one teaspoonful of lt:?d | onion. Put in a baking dish, cover with pasiry and bake in a hot oven. N NG SOAP, FLOACLEANSER, be Present Your Coupons to Agents Listed Below Our offer on this unusual premium is limited to June 30, 1929. Note this date carefully. When you get the necessary coupons, take them to an agent or agents WASHINGTON, D. C. O Si tore i Tl MARYLAND BALTIMORE n_Premium Store 1 N. Eutaw St BRENTWOOD Max Hoffman's Store Bunker Hill Road & Hill 8t. HYATTSVILLE Max Deitz (Dry Goods) Maryland Ave. [ mium shown above. LAUREL Laurel Furniture Company Main St. MT. RAINIER Alice M. Pryor 3604 3ith Si. VIRGINIA ALEXANDRIA C. hga Wi King and St. Asaphs Sts. ULPEPER C Hudson & Thornhill (Furniture) Main St. sk There are six Octagon Soap Products with which you get coupons:— Octagon Soap for the laundry; Octagon Soap Powder for the sink; Octagon Scouring Cleanser for pots and pans; Octagon Toilet Soap for the wash basin; *Octagon ing Soap for the bath; . Octagon Soap Chips for the washing machine. *The coupen on Octagon Flosting Sscp bas dewble valwe! listed below. There you will be able to obtain the speeial pre- This special premium can be obtained only at our stores and agencies. It will not be sent by mail. FALLS CHURCH Clarence M. Sales (Dry go.ll and it Edwards Drug Store Kl 8, ORANGE Grymes Drug Co. 212-214 Main St OSSLYN

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