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WOMAN'S PAGE.} Wearable, Light-Weight Hats BY MARY ‘The fashion for untiffened, stitched fabric hats was set at the Riviera last “inter—and simultaneously at Palm Tsach and other Southern resorts in < *is country. They are limp and collapsible, easily racked and easily worn, yet they are n NATURAL COLOR TWEED STRAW FASHIONS THIS SPORTS HAT THAT IS SOFT AND PLIABLE. *7 made that they do not lose their 1ape. All sorts of materials have been used for these little hats. Thin velvet in ~ft coloring was often chosen for Zts worn at the Riviera, while for the The Sidewalks BY THORNTON FISHER. It is funny how militant a man will »» when there is a long telephone wire ween himself and the object of his rath, Gallant and chivalrous gentle- 1#n, whose courtliness toward women a crowning quality, frequently topple 7om their plaster pedestals in their bal censure of those who plug in eir numbers. He was in_the next telephone booth ~nd shook the hook vigorously as he | rxclaimed: “Operator! Operator hat's | he matter with you, dumb-bell | Of course, she wasn't a dumb-bell. The | <ay was warm, the booth warmer and 2 was working up a sweat in his | mpatience. “Try it again,” he demanded. *“I know there’s somebody at home—you haven't even rung them.” Then there was a brief silence. More -attling. “What do you mean, they don't snswer?” he yelled. “Try 'em again.” A pause. ‘What? It ain't the right number? the number in the book. It's 10666. hen the book’s wrong.” Another pause, “Gimmie the chief operator! Hello, irhief operator, Hey, why the if-and- #he-but can't I get my number? It's y7afferson 10666. What? Oh, pardon | e, you say it's 106562 Oh. Certainly, | 4l hold the wire.” | All the preliminary fireworks shot off in celebration of nothing. i % In a business office the other day 2 | man was talking over the phone. He | happened to be an acquaintance. “Mr. Jimps is not ‘here, you _say? Are you his secre- Akr me that I don't ike roposition “t%ll, Tell him 1 ~ave him credit for Saving better “rains than that. At this point, the door opened nd in walked Mr. ips. The man »t the phone sud- =nly hung up the >ceiver, rose to his feet, -and affably greeted " Ji “Jimps,” he sald most agreeably, “I was just calling {V:u to say that while rour proposition is all right, I think it better not to do anything about the matter. At least for the present. I understand your wisdom, but if you don’t mind, we'll let it ride for a time. Have a cigar. I think your idea is excellent, and I'm for it, but it will be more expedient if we go slowly.” There was more of the same line. Here was an example of militancy re- duced to docility. * ok ok x Another person who doesn't care what other people think is the man that rides around the city on a motoz- cycle wearing a high silk hat. He isn't advertising anything either. * * ok % An actor friend rushed to us with a newspaper clipping. “Well, at last,” he exclaimed delightedly, “the crities have given me a mention. Read it.” | ‘The review declared that the part My Neighbor Says: Always sprinkle the lower crust of a rhubarb. blueberry or straw- berry pie with flour before put- ting in the fruit. The juice will not then run into the oven. Wash your refrigerator out fre- quently during the Summer months with a solution of sal soda and lukewarm water. Brass candlesticks, _bowls, trays, etc, may be cleaned by rubbing them with a freshly cut lemon. Wash the articles first with soap and water and after applying lemon juice polish with a soft cloth. Sift flour, meal, powdered sugar and confectioner's sugar before measuring them. SINGING food Pour milk or cream in a brimming bowl of these toasted rice buhbles — then listen while they sing a song of crispness! Snap! Crackle! Pop! This great new cereal is telling you how filled with wonder flavor every mouthful is! Children love it — for breakfast, lunch or supper. At your grocer’s. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. | 14 MARSHALL. | | | present season linen and shantung silk | have been used extensively. | There is, of course, a temptation and | a_tendency every Summer to go hatless whenever possible. So general was the bare-headed vogue among many young women in this country last Summer— and indeed throughout the vear among many college girls—that one began to wonder whether the wearing of hats for any occasion would eventually be- come optional. But this season’s col- | lection of wearable, light-weight hats has come to check any such tendency, and the woman who wants to look her best on all occasions realizes the im- | | portance of wearing a hat when ex- | | posed o the bright and uncharitable | | glare of the bright Summer sun. | " “The very fashion for sun-tanned | skin has had something to do with | this Arms. back, neck must be of an even coat quite as deep as that of the face. The combination of pale shoulders with a face of lobster hue is no longer tolerated. The hat with a brim that shade: forehead and nose not only prevents ex- cessive sunburn but graciously protects the eves and cast a generally becoming halftone over the face. It you are planning to make any | | lingerie for Summer and would like to know how to make a most attractive little step-in that is extremely easy to | make, please send me a stamped, self- | | addressed envelope and I will gladly | | send you diagram pattern with sketch | of the original model from which the | | pattern was taken. (Copyright, 1029.) of Washington | played by our acquaintance was poorly | done. “Huh,” we ventured, “that’s a | knock. T don't see anything to enjoy | about that.” “You don't?” he shouted. “Well, T get | a mention, don't I? That's better than being left out entirely, Did you | ever stop to consider that it isn't the average workman who gets into print? Only the exceptionals break in. You Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. May 31, 1865.—When the conspiracy trial of those charged with complicity in the assassination of President Lin- coln was resumed this morning Edwin Booth, brother of John Wilkes Booth, the ascassin, was among those present. He will be called later as one of the witnesses. The likeness of Edwin Booth to his brother is quite noticeable to those who knew the assassin. He has the same classical features and finely cut chin. His face, however, is regarded as much more intelligent and thoughtful in appearance than his| brother's. Gov. Andrew of Massachusetts, who is now in Washington, has decided that all troops returning to that State shflll; rendezvous at Readville, about 8 miles from Boston, until they are mustered out. Maj. Gen. Hancock has issued an order that all white volunteer troops of the organizations in the middle mili- tary division whose terms expire be- tween now and September 30 will im- mediately be mustered out of the serv- ice. All soldiers in these organizations whose terms expire at a later date will be transferred to other organizations | from the same State. Maj. Gen. Sherman left Washington this evening for Cincinnati, where he will establish the headquarters of the | Southwestern Military Division. The military districts of the country | have been arranged into four grand divisions, as follows: The Atlantic Di-| ion, commanded by Gen. Meade, with | headquarters at Philadelphia; the | Southwesterri Division, commanded by | Gen. Sherman, with headquarters at | Cincinnati, the Transmississippi Divi- sion, commanded by Gen. Sheridan, with headquarters at New Orleans, and the Pacific Division, commanded by Gen. Halleck, with headquarters at San Francisco. Maj. Gen. George W. Thomas, who is now in Washington, will go to Rich- mond at once and relieve Gen. Halleck | there in command of the Department of Virginia. The new and beautiful steamers E. C. | Knight and John Gibson, now running between Georgetown and New York, are celebrated for their speed and exceilent accommodations. They are 525 tons cach and of exactly the same build. either have to be very good or distinct- | They leave New York Tuesdays and Iv bad to win recognition. Some pro- Fridays at 4 p.m. anl leave Georgetown ducer is going to say that the part| Thursdays and Saturdays at 9 am. The didn't it me and give me a chance. | trip consumes 42 hours. They carry It shows, too, that somebody is paying passengers and cargo. attention to your efforts.” We had to admit that. to a certain | extent, he was right. Wasn't it O.| Henry who portrayed a woman who | grieved over the loss of the affections | of her spouse because he failed to | beat her? LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. This morning pop was drinking his cawffee and looking at the paper at the same time, and I sed, Dont forget to- morrow is Sattiday, pop. ‘Why should I, I mean why shouldent | 1, sufficient unto the day is the evil| thereof, pop sed, and I sed, I know, pop, | but you sed you would proberly take “me to the circus Sattiday and tomorrow is Sattiday. Are you sure I sed proberly? pop sed, and I sed, Well you sed maybe and maybe means proberly to me, And what elts did I say? pop sed, and I sed, Sir? You sed not to remind you too often or maybe you mite change | your mind, and he sed, Well dont forget a maybe and a mite together is a prob- erly and a half. And he went down to the office and | the telefone rang while I was home for | luntch and it was pop, saying Call your | mother to the fone, Im in a hurry. | 'Yes sir, did you buy the circus tickets yet, pop? I sed, and he sed, A werd to the unwise is insufficient, call your mother to the fone. Yes sir, O, G, pop, I sed, and he sed, | W:ub now? and I sed, I forgot, she's | out. | Pop just banging his receiver down, | proving he reely was in a hurry, and | tonite after suppir he sat down in his | private chair and I sed, Did you buy anything today, pop. Not wunting to axually remind him, and he sed, Why yes, I bawt 20 shares and if it goes down Im a terrible chump and if it goes up Im even brighter than I thawt I was, not that it casual mention in your prayers tonite. | Proving he was changing the subjeck, | and just then I saw a edge of some- | thing sispicious sticking out of his top | vest pockit, and I sed, Would you mind | closing your eyes a second, pop? ‘ Not at all, it mite be rather restful, in fact, pop sed. And he closed zhemi and I quick looked and they was circus | tickits all rite, and I hugged him like anything, not saying what for and him not saying he knew without being told. Stuffed Bacon Slices. ‘These are easily and quickly prepared and are always satisfying. Every house- ld contains the ingredients for a tempting bread dressing. A good one is | made- as follows: One cupful of bread | crumbs, half a teaspoonful of salt, a | | dash of pepper, one egg or four table- | spoonfuls of evaporated milk, one tea- | spoonful of onion juice or one grated | onion, one teaspoonful of chopped | green pepper, and one teaspoonful of | minced parsiey. Beat the egg until | light, add the bread crumbs and the | other ingredients, and mix thoroughly. If necessary, add a few teaspoonfuls of | water to make a moist dressing. Place | a rounding teaspoonful of dressing n:‘ one end of each slice of bacon, and | roll the slice around the dressing. Skewer a toothpick and broil yntil the bacon is crisp and golden brow Serve with a tomato or creole sauce. | | referring to hysterical | come so bored with his home condi- T would go 8o far as to ask you to give | CAme so heavily involved in debt that Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Psychological Flights. Medical men use the word fugue in “flights from home.” For example, a man may be- tions and his immediate social sur- roundings, that he leaves the commun- ity, takes up a different occupation, changes his name and every habit that might possibly identify him as the fel- Jow who has just made the “flight.” The man may become so abnormally preoccupied with the assumed person- ality that for months at a time he has totally forgotten his real name, his previous occupation, his friends, etc. This is, of course, a case of abnor- mality. But “flights from home” are by no means necessary signs of abnormality. If the meaning of the term fugue is stretched a little, it may be used to describe behavior which any one could call normal and sensible. Many people, rather than be dis- turbed by callers or by various sorts of collectors who all too frequently knock at their doors, instruct the maid to say | that they are “not at home.” Some have their telephones disconnected at opportune times, or, if it becomes nec- essary to prolong the “flight,” resort to the very useful fugue of installing a “silent phone.” Suppose the Jones, for whom you dont care much, pay a formal after- noon call. Now instead of actually re- | turning this formal call, you wait until you know they are out, and then call and leave your car ‘hich amounts to a return of the 1. The medical man may not call your behavior in this case a fugue. But isn't it a “flight” | from a boresome situation? Isn't it a | case of avoiding those who “make you | tired”’? | T once knew a business man who be- he actually became “sick of his notes™” and could not bear to drive past the banking district of the city. | Psychological flights are common, everyday, normal tendencies. It mat- ters ‘little what you call them.” Some- times they are provoked by a very slight stimulus and become exaggerated, in which cases they are called abnor- malities. But more often they represent normal, sensibile; logical attempts to make the best of the many ways of get- ting on in the world. (Copyright, 1¥29.) Pkl Date Coffee Cake. Cream two tablespoonfuls of shorten- ing, work in half a cupful of sugar lnd‘ add one well beaten egg. Sift together one and one-half cupfuls of pastry flour, | half a teaspoonful of salt and two tea- spoonfuls of baking powder. With a third of the sifted dry ingredients blend | half a cupful of chopped dates. Stir into the sugar and butter mixture the raminder of the flour mixture, alternat- ing with half a cupful of milk, then add the dates, dredged in flour. Pour into a shallow, oiled pan and dot with cin- namon butter, made by rubbing half a cupful of sugar and half a teaspoonful of cinnamon into two tablespoonfuls of butter. Bake in a moderate oven for 30 minutes and serve bottom side up. This is delicious as a dessert or accom- paniment for te: e IS Man's Last on your grocer’s master coffees taste. to the is the first name to look for among the coffees “Wilkins” is your guaran- tee of fresh coffee always —and a flavor obtained by the personal skill of this in blend'ng fine popular WILKINS COFFEE Name shelf. | world. e={p) PARIS.—Polka dots appear less often, but when they do they are apt to be sizable like the white spots on a dark blue crepe de chine model Martial and Armand for afternoon. MGVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE MERRICK. HOLLYWOOD, Calif, May Hollywood beauties have adopted the Verte make-up for evening. clally popular with fair-skinned types. An exquisite luminosity of the skin is the keynote of the new effect, and the effect itself is achieved by using a face powder of a subtle, pale green shade. ‘With this green powder is used an eyelid paste of a slightly deeper green tone, blended subtly into the skin until it is hardly distinguishable. The result is a strange and arresting clarity which enhances the charm of all save the ex- ceedingly brunette. Hollywood's Verte face is really noth- ing astonishingly new but rather a re- vival of the oldest beauty secret in the Phryne, the courtesan whose loveliness, revealed in court, swayed a jury, affected the green face. The name Phryne meant frog, and was given her because of the luminous green of her skin, While beautiful ladies are greening their eyelids, song writers in the colony are turning out hits at a rate that makes you dizzy to even hear about. In one studio the big note-and-rest men are wondering if rest is ever to be found outside of a bar of music. They have been driven at such a pace that 35 songs have been launched since Feb- ruary 8, and .at least eight of them are hits, say the genties who paid for them. When you're bored in Beverly Hills or th eparty is going dead on your hands you “make-up” the gentlemen present just by way of a lark. One wife who recently based her divorce complaint on this quaint custom found her husband's line-up of witnesses in court rather disconcerting. They testi- filed that the girls rouged the men’s cheeks and put lip salve on the men’s mouths to pick up & dull evening. 1t is espe- “They look so funny,” said one of the | blondined young things, going into gales Abe Martin Says: LIFE 15 WHAT WE MAKE ‘.,".fij | SOETIMES K / /P MY oW | / o SEH TRY flt’é;[rl Difference of opinion is what makes home brew. (Copyrisht, 1929.) Wonderful new vapor guaranteed to kill moths for you Now you can be sure that moths won't ruin your expensive furs and fabrics. Here is guaranteed protection—different, surer than anything you've ever used. Ex- g,ella is a vapor in crystal form. enetrates all fabrics but can’t stain or harm them in any way. Reaches into folds and paddin, —where the moth worms hide. Kills them—every one! Its clean, refreshing odor disappears by the time you are dressed. Can protects for months. Use it sum- mer and winter—for moths eat all year round. Hang Expello in all your clos- ets. Put some of the bags in every trunk or chest. Two styles, Each only $1. The Expello Cor- poration, Dover, N. H. Get Expello at your drag or department store today 31.—|of elfin laughter at the very remem- | | 48 _precious hours. | doeskin gloves on the slim tanned arms | OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL Chumming With Children. I am always sorry when I hear a mother or father say, “I am his pal, I am his sweetheart.” “We have never | been separated for a day.” “He tells | me everything.” “We are the best of chums.” 1 I am sorry because I fear that a | child is being sacrificed to a grown- | up’s selfish vanity. No child can be the real friend and companion of an adult. There may be and often is a very rare and close relationship be- tween parents and their children. but it is not that of youthful companionship. Only a child can be a companion and chum to another child. No grown-up can ever take that place in the life of his children. I have even heard parents say, “I'm just a child with him.” It is not so. When the Great Teacher commanded us to be as little children, he did not mean it in the terms of play. He meant in terms of the spirit. We are to be | simple and undefiled as children in spirit, not in brain and body and action. | Else why grow up at all?> No. no. We |are to be towers of strength to our | children, but not children ourselves. Train the child to seek and find | companionship among other children. | His companionship with other children is a very important phase of his edu- cation. From another child he learns to live in harmony with his fellows. { We cannot teach him fair play, gen- | erous treatment of his friends, imper- | sonal rivalry, because there can be no | question about these matters between | us and our children. He must live with his peers, not his elders, if he is to be a | well rounded personality. We have to depend upon the chil- | dren’s playmates to make clear a good | bit of our teaching. We may preach unselfishness, fair play. good manners and the rest. but until they function among the children no child ever truly senses them. One child can teach another better | than an adult can teach him something he found difficult. “Let Michael show me,” begged a kindergarten child when the teacher had tried and tried again to teach her how to tie a knot in the horse reins he was making. In a few minutes the mystery was solved. Michael had succeeded where the teacher had failed. Mind must speak to mind before any teaching functions. and | often it is necessary for one child mind to speak to another child mind in order shown by RITA. brance. Well, play lotto long enough and you'll descend to anything. On the road to Malibu, where the fly- ing speed cops play of & Saturday after- | noon, the entire movie colony hies away | to forget the routine of the studios for | | right. ‘Then rather encourage your children to make friends with the other children. Teach them to give and take, to share generouzsly and to receive graclously. Don't make the mistake of keeping your children to yourself and themselves, but let them grow with their mates. (Copyrisht, 1029.) AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. | I saw Buddy Rogers in a black and scarlet sports car. He looks like one of those cherubic young things drawn by commercial artists to display the latest of everything from asbestos shingles to Italian hats. There'’s nothing wrong | with his picture, Every pleat is in its proper place, and he'd sooner cut his | throat than have an inch too much | cloth in a coat revere. I saw Lilyan Tashman in white raw silk with lacings of blacw ribbon. The hat was the piece de resistance of this costume. ‘Turned off the face in front, it was of natural-colored straw faced with black moire. Her make-up was of a deep Arabian tan; her lipstick a vicious vermeil that n.ade her mouth and eyes the most arresting things in her entire scheme. Add a roadster of green in the most | extravagant cut and put short white| of the Tashman—said arms bared to| the shoulder—and you have the picture. | Producer (in an off moment)—You have the most divine mouth. It's just made for- | “Talkies yelps the lady, who has| ambitions of her own. . Baked Halibut. Lay a good thick slice, or about two | pounds, of halibut on a buttered oven glass platter, sprinkle with salt, then pour one cupful of cream over it .Cover with thick stewed and seasoned tom: toes, or seasoned slices of fresh toma- toes in season, and top with white onion sliced thin. Dot all liberally with but- ter and set in a moderate oven until “Jim pretends he runs things at his house, but no man is boss in a home where a little woolly dog sleeps in | chairs.’ (Copyright, 1 Willie Willis | that. an important matter may be set | the fish is cooked, covering for the first part of the baking. Serve on the platter in which it is cooked. Accom- pany with tiny potato balls sprinkled with melted butter and minced parsley BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “Mama thought I was settin’ on the steps poutin’, but I was just practicin’ and chopped beets in the middle of | my flerce look.” a spinach ring. (Copyright, 1929.) THAT FAMOUS BRAND...The most luscious delicacy the sea pro- vides...delicious, tender and tasty. Rich in iodine and phosphorous, those goiter-resisting elements. FEATURES.3 Unusual Parents of Celebrated Men Edgar Allan Poe’s Parents Left Heritage of Romance His Foster Father Couldnt Understand BY J. P. IF YO REG DAY GLASS. U LIVE TO RET THIS You WILL HAVE NO- =3 John Allan rebelled at the proposed adoption of tiny Edgar Poe. What would their Richmond friends think? | It séemed to the canny Scotchman and | cautious man of business that the in- troduction into his home of the child | of “questionable stage people” was a great risk. | ‘When he finally surrendered he could not forbear warning childless Frances Allan. “If you live to regret this day,” he told his wife, “you will have no one but yourself to blame.” | In the years that followed, when Ed- gar Allan Poe's wild adventures stirred John Allan's wrath, Mrs. Allan may sometimes have wished that she had bowed to her husband's wishes. But his warning—"You will have no one but yourself to blame"—was misplaced. Frances petted Edgar and spoiled him, but it was John who, failing to under- stand the boy, thwarted the venture upon which his wife had so hopefully embarked. Once, in a rage, Allan charged the child with “being dependent upon strangers.” This seemed to Edgar to reproach his poor parents, whom he could scarcely remember, but whose sad romance he had poetically enshrined. He could not forgive John Allan, as he had heard enough of their story to think them blameless. Old David Poe—they called him ‘“general” in his home city of Balti- more, where he had served valorously during the Revolutionary War—had never forgiven young David Poe for marrying Elizabeth Arnold Hopkins. ‘The doughty old man, who had been the friend of George Washington and over whose grave Lafayette was later to kneel, kiss the sod, and murmur, WHY WE DO BY MEHREN “From shirt sleeve to shirt sleeve is four generations.” From a genius to average mentality is only one generation. Nature seems to believe in mass pro- duction and a general level of average mentality as well as an average in all other physical and mental traits. The immediate offspring of any unusual in- dividual, whether of plant or animal, have a tendency to revert to the gen- | eral average. Thus very tall men are likely to have tall children, but not taller than themselves. Similarly, very short men are likely to nave short chil- dren but not as short as themselves. In this way nature gradually wins back the unusual type of the original. Other- wise, the tall would breed taller and taller children and the short would breed shorter and shorter children unt the difference would be so great thi you could scarcely recognize the two groups as belonging to the same species. ‘The same is true of mental traits. An unusually brainy man is quite likely to have children of superior mentality, but not equal to himself and more near- ly ap] ching the normal average level of intelligence. By the same token one of average or even less than average mentality, if not decidedly abnormal or diseased, is likely to have a child of more than average ability. In this way nature keeps the race true to form. It is remarkable that ONE TO LAME BUT " YOUR SELF ) “Here rests a noble heart,” had destinea his handsome, light-hearted son for the law. It was a terrible blow when David not only married an actress but adopted the stage himseif. . Perhaps the time came when the new Mrs. Poe wished that the son had been more of his father's mind. Her bad luck dated from her marriage to him, three months after the death of her first husband, C. D. Hopkins, the come- dian. But she never complained. He was a gentleman, and he came of a distinguished family. Her own stock | was good, but these were things which |a woman in her position could value | highly. He was not only a mediocre actor but, | by giving her three children, interfered with her art, which had brought her | recognition as one of the leading | actresses of the day. To cap it all, he | had died, leaving to her the whole bur- | den of support. | Her own health was wrecked by ex- haustion and worry. By October, 1811, the was too weak to appear at the benefit night which had been arranged for her in Richmond, Va. On Decem- ber 8, in a cheerless room behind Mrs. | Pipp's millinery shop, in lower Main street, she died. | . Charitable Richmond ladies had long |been interested in her family. The oldest boy had been sent to his father's relatives in Baltimore. A Mrs. Mac- kenzie now came forward to adopt the little girl, Rosalle, a mere baby. And so it was that Frances Allan, who could never have a child of her own, put Edgar Poe in the way of being re- proached by John Allan for “being de- pendent upon strangers.” Thereafter the boy hated him and | Alian Iost all chance of influencing him. . (Copyright, 1929.) WHAT WE DO K. THOMSON. there should be any variation at all from the form. There are three im- portant laws of mental and physical in- heritance which must be regarded at the same time in order to understand the general process. 1. The law of heredity tends to trans- mit without change the traits of one generation to the next. This i8 the conservative element in evolution. And if there were no other laws to offset it there could be no true progress. 2. The law of variation is responsible {for introducing new traits. This law | accounts for the freaks of nature, which are technically called “sports.” Without the law of variation Luther Burbank could never have produced new. fruits and new flowers. Nor could cattle and poultry breeders produce different and better breeds. 3. The law of regression is a buffer between the law of heredity and the law of variation. Its function is to see to it that variation does not go too far. The three laws co-operate to form a system of checks and balances which provide for change and progress with- out the danger of breaking up the species. And these laws hold for both mental and physical traits. It is chiefly the - law of regression which explains why brainy men do not always have brainy | children. Would You Buy Milk This Way 2 Would you go into a store today and buy milk right out of an open can? Certainly not. Well, then, why go into a store and buy sugar in bulk? You can’t even be sure it is cane sugar. You can’t be sure it was properly refined. You can’t be dust and dirt. sure it hasn’t collected But if you buy Jack Frost Sugar, packed for protection in the Blue Box, then you know you are getting 100% pure cane sugar, sugae which no human hand has touched in the refining process. Sugar which reaches you clean and fine and pi until you open ure, sealed, untouched it. Insist upon Jack Frost Granulated Sugar in the Blue Box. Remember, there’s a JACK FROST SUGAR for every purpose: CONFECTIONERS GRANULATED Delightful in salads, cocktails, sandwiches and hot dishes. NATURE’S ESS! TABLET POWDERED BROWN Don’t ask your grocer for “‘sugar”. Insist up- + on Jack Frost Sugar. Sold by all stores Refined by THE NATIONAL SUGAR REFINING CO. of N.J. JACK FROST CANE SUGAR ENTIAL SWEET «