Evening Star Newspaper, April 15, 1929, Page 36

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Patchwork Pillows and Cushions - BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. A “DOVE AT 'I:HE WINDOW"{% Patchwork porch pillows are smart this season, especially when made of glazed chingz. These pillows also make excellent chair cushions. If one has a canoe or a boat of sufficient size not to be drenched with spray frequently, the cushions are just the things to have aboard. Whether made of glazed or soft-finished surface, these pillows and cushions are delightful for old-fashioned rooms. They are used also with mod- ern furnishings. They are a bit con- servative and conventional, however, to be put with ultra-modern furniture. ‘There is beauty of tradition ip most patchwork. An interesting pattern is given today. A patch with a square in the center and spreading djamonds on the four sides goes by the alluring name of “dove at the window.” By using one’s imagination it is not hard to discover that the diamond arrangement suggests the wings of birds, while the large and smaller squares typify panes of glass. Pillow covers are made by joining as many of these squares together as the size of the pillow requires, using the The Sidewalks A rNCeA A irum A QUAINT OLD PATTERN, WELL SUITED THE USES GIVEN. diamond pane strips for joining and for the border. One square will be suffi- clent for a pillow 18 inches square. The patch is 10 inches square and the strips of diamonds measure 4 inches. As the strip is used all about the patch, the finished size is 18 inches. The best cushions are called “box cushions.” The front and back are Jjoined with a narrow straight band of whatever size the cushion requires. This band forms the sides of the “box.” A 2-inch band gives a good width. Fin- ished, it will be but 115 inches, so if a 2-inch finished band is needed cut the band 217 inches wide. Sew the band straight around the top portion. Allow no fullness at corners. The material must come around them as straight as at any place on the 'sides. Sew three sides of the lower poition to the band, being careful to have the cor- ners come in the same way and the same size. Blind-stitch the lower por- tion to the band, so that it appears to be stitched on the wrong side as all other seams have been. (Copyright, 1920.) of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. ‘This is National Sewing week. “It's & good thing,” writes D. B., “for I have a pair of pants that needs two sus- pender buttons sewed on and three shirts that need attention. If any- body wants to darn my socks during National Sewing week, she can have my address and telephone num- ber. * k% % A Washington resident who trav- els extensively us- ually carries his golf clubs with ¥ him." In distant cities, when. he is & asked what club he is a member of, he tells his inquir- ers “the Potomac Park Country Club.” He plays on the Washington public courses. ] * ok ok % Several . years ago a well known writer who had just attained the age of 35 told this scribe that until he had reached that ripe old age he was afraid that every time the telephone bell rang he would not be invited to a party. At 35 he was afraid, he said, that when the bell buzzed he would be invited to a racket. In other words, the path of ftzlvg;gy and night life ceased to appeal ‘This was not pose. He was just be- ginning to scale the.heights and suc- . cess was around the corner, Like the slow and unsuspected process of falling hair, the average man .loses the zest for adventure, whether it be of drawing room conquest or the search for un- known land. Youth plunges precipitately forward. ‘There is a thrill in new races and every new experience is seized eagerly. He can meet a strange young woman and snap into a clever line at once. It may be the latest story that he tells her, but he is not at a loss for a subject. As he grows older ‘and his breadth of wisdom and vision expands, he dis- SR tena S e en nge people. len- ty of material at hand, he finds gflm- self unable to compete with youth. The other night & man in his late thirties attended a social function and was introduced by the hostess to a charming young woman. Had he been several years younger he would probably have swept her with wise cracks.,. " Nt THIS IS NATIONAL. SEWING WEEK. “Nice day, to- day,” he mumbled. “Isn't It “Yes, quite,” re- plied the young ‘wom! an. “You live in ‘Washington?” he asked “Oh, ' no” she sald. “My home is in Baltimore.” “That’s & nice town,” said the man. ‘es,”. she replied, “we think it is.” “Live there long?” he asked search- ing for something to talk about. “All my Iife,” she responded sweetly. ;g you visit Washington often?” he asked. “Quite frequently,” the lady said. There was a pause, during which the man began to think of a dozen things he would rather be doing than trying to be agreeable. “Traffic is pretty bad in Baltimore,” he said. “Not when one becomes accustomed to responded the lady. Another " pause. Here was a man ‘who had traveled about the world and had had some harrowing ces during the war, and yet he was non- plussed. He would have wele cry of “fire.” Anything to get out of the situation he was in. Among olq {riends he,would have been a “wow." ‘With a stranger he was a flat tire. He hoped that some one would join them and horn into the conversation. His hope was not in vain, for the hostess soon apeared with another young fel- Farr died in his 121st year. He had 144 descendants, all of whom he sur- vived and left $50,000 to charity. Can you imagine this old fellow burying 144 children and grandchildren and left alone in the world?” * x % * Another reader informs us that he (or she) once heard of a man living to be 169 years of age. The reader adds that there was another man, a Briton, who lived to be 105 years old. As a young man he was a soldier attached to his majesty’s troops and stationed at Wind- sor castle. One night, while on guard, he was accused of sleeping on post. He defended himself by stating that he had heard St. Paul's clock strike 13 instead of 12, which, upon investigation, proved to be correct, and he was ex- onerated. A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN B. GUNN. Health and Happiness. ‘Text—"“A merry heart doeth good like a medicine.”—Prov., xvil.22. “Here’s to your health and happiness” is a toast we often drink to our friends. But how many of us ever stop to think how closely these two things are related and how surely they usually go along together. One may possess happiness in spite of poor health, though health is a wonderful contribution to happi- ness. But without happiness one can ‘s:.nArlcely hope at all for good health. 1 things else being equal, where you find a merry, joyous heart you are likely to find health of body. There is no better health tonic than cheerful- ness. Modern medical science has dis- covered that the emotions of the heart have & very direct and decided influ- | ence upon the functions of the heart, lungs and kidneys. But it did not re- quire the experiments carried on by research workers to prove this fact.| ‘Thousands of years ago Solomon said, i':: merry heart doeth good like a medi- | cine.” * This is something we have all ob- served and experienced. We require no scientific proof to be convinced of the close relation between a happy frame of mind and a healthy body. Yet this fact is one that many ignore. . We go on dosing ourselves with medicine when what we really need is only a good dose of mirth. Indeed, instead of cultivating & mirthful heart some of us seem rather ; to cultivate the most miserable, sort of | moods possible. In vain do we wish for health until ‘we learn to put into practice what both science and experience teach us—that :’&e&g’?fl‘:yn must be happy. And ere’s wishing you again— health and happiness. Prices on Swift & les_of carcass i on shipments sold out, ranged Everyday Psychology Systems of Complexes. When_ Should a Wife Divorce Her Husband?, DorothyDix; <5 According, to peychownalysls, each| Should Decide Whether He Is Worth Forgiving, and Probable Consequences of Such Action to Herself and Children. xes all together and ‘you known -as pe T, ‘mental corhplexes are it that you :can detect them iately. For instance, you may tell from a stranger’s conversation what his profedsion or politics is. School teachers, ministers and traveling sales- men seem to be unable to conceal their identities as such. They possess a com- plex of attitudes, expressions and even bodily habits that betray the entire trend of their visible personalities. The complexes that make up the visible &e. sonality are really nof other n the habits that person in question has acquired. But the visible complexes are after all the smallest part of any individual. Beneath the visible part of personality there lies hidden from ary ob- servation a vastly more important group of complexes. These complexes are so well concealed that the individual who has them is really not very well aware that they constitute the essence of his real self—1. e, his’character. In fact, if you point them out to him he is pretty likely to take offense. No one really’ wants to see himself as others see him. No one really wants to see his real char- acter, which is composed of the hidden complexes. ‘These two-systems of complexes exist in every individual. There is no escape from them. When you refer to some one’s personality, you refer to what's on the surface, and to what he is con- tent to display. When you refer to one's character, you have in mind a system of complexes which you know only after having been acquainted with the indi- vidual over a long period of time. Perhaps you have had to adjust your estimation of some individual from time to time. You have then learned that first impressions are unreliable. That all came about because you confused at first the two systems of complexes. (Copyright, 1929.) NANCY PAGE Dresses for Jogn Are Smart and Sensible BY FLORENCE LA GANKE, A nursery school had opened in the Pages’ neighborhood, and Joan was now having the experience of going to a place where there were many other children of her own age. Aunt Nancy her own way. She had been growing just a little selfish and self-willed. Nur- sery schools do much to make children better members of their community, Nancy found. The only drawback to Joan's going at this time was the fact that she needed a few more clothes, and Nancy was deep in housecleaning, gardening, tting her own Spring wardrobe and ;‘,'.,m"g, on plans for the new home. But children’s clothes are so simple thay an experienced needlewoman can make them in little time. One dress was made of English print. It had bloomers to match. The full skirt was shirred in three parallel rows just below the short, plain yoke. The small turnover collar was plain organdy, the kind which retains its stiffness even when laundered. A dress of handkerchief linen in a plain color was embroidered in scallops around neck and bottom edge of skirt. This dress did not have panties or bloomers of the same material, but & plain white slip. Nancy copied this from one a'he 5aW dthn m:“ '3:';3‘:‘1‘: good weight crepe de chine. e! that linen was better for so small a child as Joan. (Copyright, 1920.) ‘The nursery school practiced many funds- mentals of child care. Write to Naney Page, care of this paper, inclosing fllm seif-addressed enveiope,- asking for her leafi on“ Child Care.” This is a test of calculation or recog: nition of numbers. Follow the instruc- tions in each case. Allow four minutes for the entire test. sl beef in Washii . O, for woei endian Saturday ABFL- 1. o5, from 19,65 cents to 34.00 cents und and avers 25716 cents per powuna--Advertisement Abe Martin Says: (1) Cross out every number divisible by both 3 and 6. 12, 28, 24, 82, 51, 9, 70, 13, 30 27, 11 3 ), 76, 88 28, 35 90, 102, 10 (3) Oross out every number divisible by both 3 and 7. 18, 14, 20, 28, 21, 42, 96, 63 8, 77, 56, 65 45, 12, 22, 17, 19, 61, 34, 44, (3) Cross out every even number di- visible by 3. 19, 27, 30, 36, 170, 88, 80, , 70, 80, 3, 12, 43, 28, (4) Cross out every number divisible by 3 and 9. 10, 20, 30, . 35, 66 27, 80 , 36, 44, 91, 101, 2 93 34, 18, 23, a1, a8l “ed 53, 54, 67, 56, 88, Answers, (1) 12, 24, 30, 42, 90, 102, (2) 21, 42, %3, 54. (3) 30, 36, 18, 60, 90, 12, 42, 120.(4) 99, 27, 36, 63, 72, 54. CIGARETTE SMOKERS _ ; MODERNIZED TOOTH POWDER FOR CLEANSING THE TEETH AND MOUTH ¢QHALL I divorce my unfaithful husband or shall I forgive him?” is ql one thiat hty Wisdom alone is i pr is one that far reply that is always on the tip of my t; Yankee fashion by asking another quest! S0 many men are not. who are lazy and shiftless and who loaf estion that is asked me oftener than ‘There are so a single weakness, but men who are nathing who are as spineless as jellyfish; men who have the morals of “al any other, and the answer to it sl my to solye, but ‘m; wite? 1 10 answer. the query in : 1s he worth forgiving? men who are not men with t-hmchofwnlnnte': cal in poolrooms while their wives work around home. support the family; men who are surly and grouchy When a man gdds infidelity to any or all of these disabilities as a husba; 1t is the last straw that breaks loss anyway and it is a good riddance of ‘There are many other men, howev having a wandering foot, are admirable the camel’s back of his wife's justified in chucking him out of the house and out of er, who, e tience and she is bad rubbish, husbands. A their families. They are generous and kind and understanding and considerate. They are many little attentions and courtesies. amiable and pleasant at home and very often shower upon their wives Indeed, the ver{‘qullluu that make a man a philanderer very often go to make him a deligh ul husband. Because this type of man is bound to be admired by women he is meticulous about his personal appearance and is always shaven and shorn and dolled up, even _rar_l-u. wife's eyes. CURIOUELY enough, the flirtatious husband's flirtations very often do not affect his devotion to his wife. He may have a hundred light loves, but deep underneath is a steadfast love for his wife, w] he considers as far above other women as the stars are above the earth. He roams away from her tl;‘;:euu he is a spoilt child whose fickle fancy calls continually for new tays. an who forsakes his wife for one woman is ho) b but the husband who is 1 by every pretty face is this other woman to her, really in love with none of them. He is y, monogamous after 20 centuries of Christianity less because he prefers dnly, as Mr. Howells said, “imperfectly and civilization.” In deciding whether she shall forgive her erring husband or not, a woman must take her own feelings into consideration. She must decide whether she will be happier if she completely severs the bond between them and goes where she never sees or hears of him any more and where what he does is no concern of hers or whether she will find some sort of bitter happiness in being near him, even if she is tormented by his preferring other women to her. Sometimes a woman finds a solace in clinging to even a hopeless hope. Sometimes & woman loves a man so much that life is meaningless to her without him and she is better off with him under any conditions than she would be without him. There are material things, too, that a woman who is debating whether she shall take her wrongs to the divorce court or pocket them must consider. Especially should the middle-aged woman, whose staid and domestic husband has suddenly jumped ghe bars and gone side of the question. : I alimony to live on she is accustomed. If chasing after flappers, look well at this she divorces her husband, what does she get? If he has property, enough jence she will know better how far she l;.:gssfl:ly. but never enough to live on in the style to which is a salaried man or a poor man, she is thrown out into the world to earn her own living and probably to take care of her children, and decided the experience was good for her, | she finds tnat there is no market for the labor of an unskilled, untrained, middle- for she found Joan was less apt to want | aged woman who has never done anything but keep house. Divorce doesn’t bring back her husband's love nor heal her hurt heart. It doesn’t restore her youth., It only brings her added misery and poverty. Finally, when a woman faces the problem of whether she should divorce her unfaithful husband or not, she should think of her children. They are the in divorce, and a woman may well forgive much for the sake of l?e:l 1::‘.' ;’:r"lwme together and giving her children a father's support, a father’s guidance and the start in the world that & father can give them. But when a wife makes up her mind to forgive her husband, let her make a full job of it and 4 her 1 as well as forgive. o;:'u!:hnd ‘with ther‘hulu that she has condoned. Better Let her wipe the slate clean and ra of the bones in the family skeleton closet. the continual rattling A Bk (Copyright, 1929.) Our Family. A certain feeling of family pride is a very fine force for good. Used wisely it helps to carry adolescent children over meny a critical place. "uo&hefm. the cl‘-nu ;muwwmhlve a 3 're an "y. dmf:yer lfi dgun:en Can I go?” “That means a dinner and dance at a hotel? In town? And how are you to get there and back?"” “The boys will take us in their cars. Of course, their fathers will lend them the cars—four of us in a car. Do let me go, mother. All the girls are going.” “My dear, that's a mistake. Our out until they are graduated h ulthn:\. at lzl:dt. md‘ tmnlxyn;o perly chaperoned parties. - E;odoun't do that sort of thing.” It is hard to be denied the good times ‘other girls and boys have, but & touch of family will soothe the It won’t hurt at all if the girl on being asked if she is going assumes & haughty air, turns up her nose a trifle and says snootily enough, “‘Our family doesn’t do that sort of thing.” It will be a very good thing if she does. ‘There is such a thing as social stand- ing, and the right touch of hauteur, the pu'vccr amount of chilling pride will see a girl through many a trying hour. It is far better to have an air of aloof- ness and dignity than to be hail fellow well met with some crowds. Even the boy responds to the call of the family honor. When he wants to wear a fur coat that makes him look like a wild animal, wants to take the car to_high school and load it up with the fellows, wants to go to the gay party with flasks and smokes ‘and ddg“(\rls, the family ancestor may well be hauled ;rom out the cobwebs and made to do uty. “That will scarcely do, my boy. You are a Smith, and the Smiths have a name to live up to, a responsibility to society. I have no doubt that some of the parents will ask, ‘Is Smith going?’ !m:‘ilm your feelings if your name should lead people to send their boys into trouble. Your place, your name, carry duties with them. Our family has certain traditions, and much is ex- pected of us. Your place is to lead, not follow. Make up your own party and lead the other way around.” Try it. It works. Drag out that old blackened ofl painting of Grandfather Hoosit and make much fo it. And you will be doing right by the children and the family. (Copyright, 1929 Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN, ‘This problem is simple when one's family is no longer dependent. In such an event there is only the question of a m_;h:mmwuon of one’s effects, woman whose acute is she with a to provide an income for them, rather than parcel out her estate. In order to do so it will be necessary to organize one’s estate. Such an estate must be so planned and managed that it will also make a satisfactory yleld during one’s own lifetime. There are these essentials to consider planning one’s estate: First, one! will require cash for qmerge! as well; 28 daily use. Secondly, one will require | that a fair portion of one’s estate be| invested in easily and quickly market- able_securities “or_stocks. Thi one NATIONAL SEWING WEEK USED MACHINE BARGAINS Buy a guaranteed used sewing ma- chine during this national sale and save—every machine at a reduced price. PRICES RANGE— may have a portion invested in property, such as a home, whose yield may be in things other than dollars and cents. It there are mo: vm’ed Ppro it be advis- the event it. but it is possible to determine beforehand the nature and composition of one’s estate. The planning of one’s estate and for- mulation of a set-up is not difficult. It is the only way one may assure herself will not shrink, that her will be carried out, and that those she holds dear will be provided for according to her intentions. I :lzh in ForYou Tune in Tonight 8 to 8.30 on WMAL and learn— et a smart, col- 1st- how you can flfl-%fi Rubber Apron her life. He was a total |1’ ‘th t for their one defect of |1V are Mrd. D, J. M. writes: -“T wonder why 6 a.m. is picked by all authorities as the beginning of baby's day. gEE § e & 13 RE 8 FEH only important thing schedule is that it be kept regular. actual hours should be chosen to fit into the baby's own household. Mothers of small babies do not all have children in school, Families do nes all eat dinner at 6 any more in this country than any other country. Such an assump- tion is rather a limited one, don't you think? and probably encompasses your immediate neighborhood or family. It certainly does not hold true in any fam- ily in which the husband works until 6, or in & large city where it takes some- times an hour or more to reach home after office or store is closed. It re- mains, then, for the mother to adjust baby to her own household, since regu Iation is begun the first weeks of baby’s life, and can be as easily regulated to one schedule as another, providing his rations are suitable and satisfying. | In making any rules for the care of babies it is taken into consideration that they can be changed if the change makes it more convenient for the mother. We have to suggest some schedule, and those suggested have been found to fit more babjes and more households perhaps than any others. do think you are quite right in saying that new mothers are terrificd when they deviate from rules. I honestly believe that the mother of a first baby will do better, though, and make fewer mistakes if she continues to cling closely to rules. After this first experi- may trust her own judgment, but until exhp:‘rience bl:“ flve;‘ hen; some idea of | what can be expected of a baby good rules are not to be scoffed at. MOTHERS AND THESR CHILDREN. When to Pull Ears. One mother says: When my little daughter was about 4 years of age she quite suddenly devel- oped the habit of pulling her ears when angry or crying. I tried every known cure—spanking, petting, persuasion, of- fering of presents. Everything failed. I was about to admit myself whipped whep one time when she was having an unusually bad tantrum I was seized with & sudden idea. Catching hold of her two ears, I be- gan pulling with short, vigorous jerks. “Mother, will help you, dear. Come pull hard now.” And suiting action words, I did pull hard, though no harder | than she was accustomed to do. This' unusual performance caused her to stop crying and stere at me ‘n wonderment. ‘Then, when I began to hurt, she startec crying , Ing me to stop. After the third repetition of this cure I never had to resort to it again. Perhaps sim- ilar cases might work in other cases of nervousness and unusual habits. (Copyright, 1929.) i on, to Brown Sugar Carsmels, Mix two cupfuls of brown sugar with one cupful of white granulated sugar, half a cupful of light corn sirup, one | cupful of cream, two cupfuls milk and half a cupful of butter. Cook slowly, stirring constantly, until the mixture reaches the firm-ball stage.| This means that a small amount of the | hot mixture dropped in cold water will form firm, rather hard balls. Remove; from the fire, add four teaspoonfuls of vanilla and one cupful of nut meats, and turn at once into a slightly greased pan. When cold turn the block of | out of the pan so that it can be cut evenly. Cut in squares with a sharp knife and wrap each piece in waxed paper. Just §1 for Expello } wi N hundreds of dollars’ worth of clothes ONE dollar for a can of Expello. One minute to hang it at the top of the closet, And your en- sive furs, clothing, and woolens will not need attention for months. Expello is the surest and most convenient moth-killer 'ou ever A vapor in cry 'orm. Heavier than air, it pene- trates down into farthest corners —into_tiniest crevices. Perme- ates all fabrics. Kills the moth in folds and pad- and not the fly- e damage. And remember, they’re as destructive in winter as in summer. Expello is harmless to furs and fine fab- rics. No spraying—can’t stain. disappears at once. Also can with ten handy i ete. Snly 81 The Expells , Only $1. The Ex| Corporation, Dover, N. H. Get Expello at your drug or hm”:u‘nt store todsy I| combated the idea of there Psychic Adventures of Great Men and Women How Saint-Saens’ Requiem Was Born Through a Friend' Death in Battle. 2 3 BY J. P. GLAS?. . Q TACowdad |3y “A' PROFOUND ANXIETY UNNERVED ME.” Camille Flammarion, the French as- tronomer and writer on psychic sub- Jects, has cited Camille Saint-Saens, the great Prench composer, as an example of the “independence of the soul rela- tively to the body.” “He died on December 16, 1921, aged 86 years,” says Flammarion. *“ the previous 16th of October he had Junched at my table at the Juvisay Observatory. . * * His spirit was as young as it had been at 20, yet he complained of the failure of his organism. o He suffered from his legs. * * * At the same time Le Menastral published an article full of the spirit of youth from his pen on Berlioz. While his body perished his soul remained in full poe In view of the celebrated scientist's statement, it is interesting to note that Saint-Saens himself rather vigorously being & soul or a God. Perhaps, having per- petuated his inner being in his immortal symphonies, he felt it unnecessary that it should survive in other form, and so was not interested in the subject of the hereafter. Nevertheless, he was not unaware of psychic phenomena, al-| though his impressons do not clothe | such phenomena in a supernatural at- | ‘mosphere. | Perhaps the most striking of Saint- Saens’ psychic experiences concerned the writing of his “Requiem.” The “Requim” was begun in 1871, more than half a eentury before the | composer’s death. He was then 36 years | of age, and & soldier in the French| army, which had just been ingloriously | vanquished bx the conguering Germans. | Very likely he little thought that he| would live to see the day when the| tables would be turned. Here is his account of the highly dramatic inci- dent, which loses none of its impres- | siveness by the casual manner in which | it is related to his friend, Flammarion: | “It was in Jjanuary, 1371, on the last | day of the war. I was at an outpost of | Arcueil-Cachan. We had just dined off | {an excellent horse, of which we had| made a stew with dandelions we had gathered ourselves, “Our dinner had entirely satisfied us end we were as gay as one could be in similar circumstances, when I suddenly heard in my head a plaintive musical theme of doelorous thords—which I heve since used for the commencement ol ‘Requiem'—and I felt in my inmost ing a presentiment of some misfortune. | “A profound anxiety unnerved me. i “That was the verv mament when Henri Regnault, my friend, to whom I ‘was very much attached, was killed. “The news of his death caused me such grief that I fell {ll and had to re- | main three days in bed. “I thus proved the reality of ‘tele- pathy’ before the word was invented.' You are indeed right in saying that, classic science does not know the humen being and that we have everything ml jearn. Saint-Saens’ narrative does indeed seem to be concerned with telepathy. | But the principal facts he presents give | cause for all sorts of speculation. In the midst of physical and mental contentment he was seized suddenly by profound anxiety and a presentiment of misfortune. Eimulteneouslv he “heard” musicsl lines of a funeral mature which ran through his head. g One event—the death of his friend, Re-nault—appears to have been respon- sible for both these happenings. How did this come to be? (Copyright, 1929.) Baked Mushrooms. Clean one pound of mushrooms and cut them in small, uniforpn pieces. Ar- range alternate layers of bread crumbs and mushrooms in a casserole, sprin- kling each layer with salt, pepper and a few bits of butter. Beat three eggs well, add two cupfuls of milk and pour over the mixture. Place bits of butter on top, which should be of crumbs, and bake for about 50 minutes in a medium oven. This serves about six persons. new features of O-Cedar Polish Mops MiLLiONs of women use no other kind. Triangular shape fits corners, gets into difficult places. O-Cedar Polish Mops are detachable, washable — and easily renewed with the famous O-Cedar Polish. At de- partment, grocery, hardware, drugand otherstores. O-Czdar Corp’n, Chicago, Il OEdar Mops GOOD for your GOOD for your breakfast health Say goodbye forever to dull breakfasts. Start tomorrow with Heinz Rice Flakes and know bow good a good breakfast can be. Crunchy, golden-brown flakes of rice. Cracker-crisp and tissue-thin. Toasted to a tempting flavor like that of freshe roasted nut-meats. Say goodbye, too, to dull days of logi- ness. For Heinz Rice Flakes have a special health quality in the form of a gentle, natural laxative effect. This comes from a new, patented Heinz process which trans- forms the natural roughage element of the rice into a pure, edible cellulose. Add to your enjoyment of breakfast— and to your “Joy of Living”!

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