Evening Star Newspaper, June 3, 1929, Page 27

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Dress With Detachable Capelet BY MARY ‘The cocktall or casino jacket that was devised to make a sleeveless evening dress suitable for late afternoon wear or for informal dining, now has a rival THE DETACHABLE CAPE OF THIS SLEEVELESS FLOWERED CHIF- FON FROCK FOLLOWS THE DOWN-IN-BACK LINE OF THE SKIRT. in the form of the detachable capelet. The sketch shows a flowered chiffon | dress which with the capelet may be worn for Summer afternoons and which without the cape is appropriate for eve- ning. The Sidewalks MARSHALL. Usually the capelet follows the lines of the skirt, flaring when it flares and dipping down at back when the skirt dips that way. To the woman who feels that her shoulders and upper arms are not perfectly proportioned these capelets are a decided comfort. Some- times the capelet extends only a little below the shoulders, sometimes it reaches the elbow, and in some of the new chiffon frocks the capelet falls in graceful folds well down toward the wrists. If you are nhnnl.rx'_"l your Summer vacation wardrobe so that you can get | as many changes as possible in the least compass then by all means consider the possibilities of a dress with a detach- able capelet. Charming as are the light evening fons that are used for evening, many fashionable women are turning with in- terest to the new, darker evening | shades. Jenny and Patou of Paris have revived brown in transparent materials for evening and Lelong sponsors navy blue. This weeks' diagram pattern is for a smart little work apron with the new | flaring skirt section. If you would like | a copy with directions for making and | sketch of the finished apron, please send me a stamped, self-addressed envelope and I will gladly send it to you at once. (Copyright, 1929.) — DAILY DIET RECIPE TOMATOES STUFFED WITH CABBAGE Medium _size tomatoes, 4. shredded cabbage, 12 cup; French dressing, 13 cup. SERVES 4 PORTIONS Wash tomatoes. If the skin is not spotted and tough do not peel them. Cut off tops. Scoop out centers. Chop these and mix with the finely shredded young cabbage and French dressing. Reflll tomato cups and chill. Could be served on lettuce or a bed of shredded cabbage. DIET NOTE Recipe furnishes fiber and much lime. iron and vitamins A, B and C. Could be given to children over 6. Can be eaten by normal adults of average, over or under weight. Those wishing to reduce should use a non-fattening dressing. of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. June! The month of brides, graduates, early apples, lightning bugs, roses and the advent of the vacation season. Strangely enough, of the 31 men who have occupied the White House, none was born in June. In fact, May and the present month are the only months not recorded among the birth statistics ©of our Presidents. * x ko Recently an ambitious young fellow, a college man, told us that he aspired to the writing of sports. “It is a com- paratively new game,” sald he. He ‘was wrong. Homer began to write sports three thou- sand years ago. He related the story of a fight between Epeus, champion of Greece, and Euryalus, _cham- pion of Troy, at the sports held at funeral of | HOMER WAS THE. FIRST SPORTS WRITER ‘Troy, The gaunt- lets were made of rawhide and Homer thus describes the battle: i “At_len; Epeus & weighty blow. Full on the face of his unwary foe. Beneath the ponderous arm’s resistless | 4 sway, Down dropped he nerveless, and ex- . tended lay, As a large fish, when winds and waters Toar, By some huge billow dashed against the shore.” * k% Within a few miles of the city there are not a few folks whose sole means of illumination is an ofl lamp. In front of one dimly lighted abode a small, A Sermon for Today BY REV. JONN R. GUNN. Not Fits and Starts. “In every work that he began he did it."—2 Chron., xxxi.21. One day in Winter a boy was en- gaged in shoveling snow from the pave- ment. The drift was a deep one, he was a small boy, he had but a bit of a shovel, the task was a big under- taking. ~But minute after minute he labored for two whole hours, and the drift was rqmoved. When asked how he had accomplished so mu with such a small shovel, he replied had noth- ing but a little stove shovel to work with, I know, but by keeping at it I got the job done.” It is by “keeping at it” that all great Jjobs are done. The trouble with some people is that they work only by fits and starts. They go at things with a fit of enthusiasm for a few days and work with a vim. They make grand starts which seem promising enough. But their starts soon fizzle out. Their zeal does not last long. They have never schooled themselves to continued and persistent effort. Consequently, they never accomplish much of anything and never get anywhere, These people who work by fits and starts are apt to be forever changing from one occupation to another. Fail- ing in one occupation, they are ready to change to another which appears more promising. And so they never thor- oughly try out any occupation by con- tinuous effort. Such people never amount to a great deal. Spasmodic efforts accomplish lit- tle or nothing. “In every work that he began, he did it.” That tells the secret of success. Tt is steady, continuous driv- ing that gets the job done and makes s record of worth-while achievement— not fits and starts, Text tha “I know fust how he ‘Wwonder who it was that weather-beaten car stood, while from within could be heard a radio. Some- how we can get along without the ne- cessities of modern life if we can but have the luxuries. * ok ok x Not long ago a crowd gathered at an intersection in this cll‘l(y muvlnhs:h a human negotiate the perilous’ per- pend.lcule{ side of a high tullding. We have never known sonally or with him. His i one of those busi- nesses (or is it a business, trade or what?) that does not contribute par- ticularly to the weal of the genus homo. He enter- tains like the acro- bat, by providing thrills for the less stout-hearted. The thrill dealer makes comparatively little money, assumes & risk X"J! slice of usually passes away with his boots on. His name, if ever known, is soon forgotten, and others rise to devise fresh means of scaring the wits out of folks. An automobile race is thrilling be- cause the gray phantom cf potential extinction rushes in the wake of the motors’ exhaust, reaching an itching talon for those who defy safety. Dare- levils are inadequately compensated for the risks they take. Prizefighters, who take practically no risks at all, receive almost fabulous purses. ‘The thrill producer regards himself as an artist. He applies himself to the ecting of a stunt which others are either unwilling or unable o practice. There are fewer of these artists today than formerly. Occasionally, though, a new “phenom” emerges with a fresh | brand. Col. Lindbergh furnished the world with its last great thrill. ‘Thrills stir the imagination of the onlooker, to be sure. Anything that will accomplish that seems to us to worth while. Shortly after the war, a friend of ours flew into the effete East. He had been | a lleutenant of aviation. His name was ; Ormer Locklear. He was quiet, unas- | suming, and might have been taken for a bond salesman. We are not sure that he would not have run just as hard as the next one in a traffic con- gested thoroughfare. The air was his domain. Thousands watched Locklear leap from one plane to another in mid- alr or hang by his toes from a rope ladder, swinging violently in the high winds. He strutted the wings of his plane and sat on the rear of his fuselage with all the ease in the world. He was sure of eye and foot. The papers were | soon filled with storles of the bravery of the young Texan who shook his ?\lnflflld first at fate. He rhllleng:d lestiny once too often and fell with his ship to his death. Such is usually the end of the men who provide momentary heart quivers. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Shredded Pineapple Dry Cereal with Cream Scrambled Eggs Graham Gems, Coffee LUNCHEON Tomato Soup Vegetable Plate Hot Biscuits Coconut Cream Ple Tea DINNER Pea Soup Boiled Ham, Raisin Sauce French Fried Potatoes String Beans ‘Watercress Salad Banana Pudding Coffee GRAHAM GEMS One cup graham flour, 1 cup flour, 1Y, cups sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cup milk, 1 egg, 1 teaspoon melted butter, 4 teaspoons baking powder. Mix and sift dry in- gredients, add milk gradually, eggs well beaten and melted butter, Bake in hot oven in buttered gem pans 25 minutes. COCONUT CREAM PIE Combine 4 eggs, '» cup of sugar, 1)z cups milk, 3% cup cream, 1 teaspoon vanilla, and beat 2 minutes. Strain and add 1Yz cups freshly grated coconut. Pour into ple plate lined with pastry and bake at 450 degrees for 10 minutes. Then reduce heat to 325 degrees for 30 min- utes, BANANA PUDDING ‘To 1 pint milk, put on and let come to & boil, add 1 spoonful cornstarch, 1 spoonful sugar, 1 spoonful cocos, little salt; wet these in very little cold milk be- hot milk. Put into dish 3 cut-up blnlnlllu'lnd 1 cup walnut meats, pour in pudding ice. Eat with cream tones this season and the figured chif- | THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. C Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. June 3, 1861.—The 1st Maine Regi- afternoon, numbering 850 rank and file. This regiment was raised within three proclamation calling for troops, but in out among the men they were detained by order of Gen. Scott at Portland until they could come to Washington with a clean bill of heaith. The delay was by no means agreeable to the men. This regiment has been eager to get into the fray ever since it was organized and there has been con- siderable rivalry between the 1st and 2d Maine Regiments to see which would get into the war first. The 1st Regiment improved the time at Port- land by perfecting itself in the Hardee drill. The 1st Maine left Portland three days ago and came through on the “double quick.” The men felt naturally here today, but otherwise they are in fine condition. The 1st Maine Regiment comes from Androscoggin County. which is famous throughout New England for its pretty girls and fine young men. The men are splendid specimens of physical man- haod and a few of them approach the gigantic in proportions. They are armed with the Minie musket and their uni- pantaloons, with fatigue cap of the same color. they say the Boston dealers perpetrate on them when they supplied their uni- forms. The say the cloth and work- manship are so poor that the clothing is already falling to pieces. The regiment is accompanied by a brass band, consisting of 19 performers, led by Prof. Chandler. There also is & fife and drum corps of 16 men. The reception of the 1st Regiment was enthusiastic en route. In Boston a beautiful flag was presented to the men by Messrs, Dresser, Stephens & Co., and in New York they received a handsome regimental silk flag and also a superb camp flag. My Neighbor Says: If you wish to give cake a pis- tachio flavor use half vanilla and half almond flavoring All furs should be well beaten and freed from dust and loose hairs, well wrapped in newspaper, with bits of camphor laid about them and in them, and put away in a cool, dark place for the Sum- mer. If a cedar chest is to be had, they should be placed in that. Instead of that, new cedar chips may be scattered about. It is never well to delay packing furs away until late in the sea- son, for the moth will very early commence his ravages. In pack- ing them they should not be rolled so tightly as to be crushed and damaged. To clean painted kitchen walls, dip & damp cloth in dry baking soda, wipe the walls, then go over them again with another damp cloth. Unbleached cotton dyed in varfous colors makes attractive covers for pillows. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. The Homecoming. One mother says: S0 often after the children fault which I must call to their atten- a rule never to meet them with a cross word or to speak of their faults the moment they return. I want them to feel that home is a pleasant place to return to, and_after they have been there a while I call them apart and discuss whatever the trouble may be. ‘They are never afraid to come home. (Copyright, 1920.) AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “I didn't know Cousin Ben had his | him at choir practice last night.” | (Copyright, 1929.) ment reached this city at 4 o'clock this days after President Lincoln issued his consequence of the measles breaking a little travel worn when they arrived | The Maine men complain of & swindle | for school I find some misdemeanor or | tion when they return, but I make it | tonsils took out until I set in front of | form consists of a gray frock coat and | MONDAY PARIS.—Champcommunal has &n afternoon ensemble of black broadcloth coat made with cleverly placed bias folds, and a black crepe de chine dr(;;s, which | follows the lines of the wrap. MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE MERRICK. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. | Me and pop was coming out of the | circus Sattiday, and all of a sudden | pop stuck his hand in his outside coat pockit. saying, Blast it to smithereens, my pockit has been picked. Me thin ing.” G, I wonder if mine has? quick felt in my pants pockit and my nickel was still there, pop saying, Con- | found it to blazes I knew I was doing | a boobish thing sticking the change from a 20 doller bill in my outside pockit when I bawt those checks for special reserve seets, but the crowd was 50 thick I couldent get into any other pockit. It serves me good and rite. Hang it all up and down, I take my | to if T live as long as Methoozla's older | brother. he sed. Me_thinking, Heck, how about me? hafl to take your sollem oath, why dont You just say you wont go any more by st “saying it and then if you ever mind you can change it without it | being agenst the law or anything. Because I prefer to take my sollem | oath and thats what I hereby take, pop | sed. If anybody asks you if your father | is jackass and dunkey enough to clamly | pour a small fortune into his outside pockit under the watchful eyes of & thousand pickpockits, tell thats so, he sed. going to ask me and Id tell them to go and mind their own bizzness if they did, I sed. What was that you took out of your outside pockit and put in your in- side pockit while the circus was going on? I sed. Heh? pop sed, and he felt to see, and here it was the money, saying, Well Ill be transcontinentally switched, and I sed, Well aw heck, pop, you went and took your sollem oath never to go to | another circus, you cant change a sollem oath, can you? _ No, but T can add an amendment to it, pop said. Il add an amendment wich will make the whole thing reed, | T here by take my sollem oath never to ! g0 to another circus unless my son and | air is with me. Meening me went, Being why we both home feeling better insted of Lessons in English | BY W. L. GORDON. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., June 3.—The of the other things she philosophizes so Continental flavor will enter the sound | prettily about. | picture field with a vengeance when the | | forthcoming combination of Ernst Lu- | bitsch and Maurice Chevalier goes into | effect. | _ Lubitsch was responsible for the Jan- | gijver fabric, looked like a calla lily— nings' success of his early American gjim and straight and subtly provocative These pictures, made in Ger-|in'g virginal sort of way. | fame. many, swept this country. Jannings| became an idol, an actor who stood 0T | in that around Hollywood?® acked 1. He was brought to | thipking of first night. |art in pantomime. | this country; made pictures; came talk; | |the old UFA, which first fathered his | | celluloid appearances. | It's » neat circle. And some day we may find ourselves sneaking into some | |little art theater to see Emil Jannings | |in one of the pictures he made abroad. At last we have found ouj who gave | Calvin Coolidge those hats in which he was photographed so frequently. Maynard is the gullty one. And, what's more, he boasts of it. decorators will take place. The two aforementioned skull coverings were re- ceived on the news reels with wry smiles for quite a while. | has & sixth sense. It makes her know her good points and enables her to min-~ imize her bad ones. A dab of rouge well placed will mini- mize the length of a nose that is in- clined to earry the line too far down on the face, says the lovely Ina. She really doesn't have to worry about long noses, small eves, bad hair lines or any ' BEAUTY CHATS Homemade Marcel. ‘The problem of the girl with straight hair, who looks best with a slight wave, who does not like to ruin her hair with | a hot iron, is solved by the cheapness of the water wave combs which every shop has on sale. For the straightest| hair can be given a soft and natural| looking marcel wave these days by the most inexpert hands. This is best done just after the sham- poo. Dry the hair as much as you can | by & quick rubbing with a soft warm/ | bath towel. Part it, take your comb and pull it backward from the parting. Insert a water-wave comb. Take your own comb again, pull it forward. With- in two inches or so, insert another | water-wave comb. Continue this, pull- | ing or combing the hair forward and| back, as & marcel wave goes, holding | [1t at two-inch spaces with a curved | water-wave comb. Then push these combs together as much as you can, to raise the hair a| little from the head and to exaggerate | the marcel. Hold them with har pins Turn the ends of the hair under and| cover your head with a silk net cap.| Dry with an electric dryer, if you own | one, or sit out in the sun’if it is hot | enough to dry the hair, or near a radia- | tor or a fire. I do this in the Winter- time by bending a little over the top of | an ofl stove, which heats an occasion- | ally-used spare room in my house. One reader objected to this method as “dan- | gerous,” but I have never found it so; the flame is far away, and the stove has a long funnel and a protecting m:,-tknl plate that spreads and covers the ' wick. But warm weather permits the best way of drying and setting the hair—hot sunlight. ~There are setting lotiors, by | the way, to keep the wave in longer and make it firmer, but if the hair is nat- | urally greasy, they seem to make it ofly | |ina few days. Chickie—Peroxide will surely bleach the hairs on your arms if it has not lost | its strength, and if you apply it after | you have bathed the skin. 'Any skin secretion or any soil will lessen the bleaching tendency. The fats in dairy cream are considered especially good for the skin, but any other nourishing | oil will also be helpful and much pleas- | anter to handle. | P. I. W.—You should be advised by l'a good doctor, who will know whether | or not you should have your appendix Cooling and Refreshing When we run down the person Who | contr. gave Mr. Coolidge the Indian war bon- | Jiquid variety), and rang up some of nets a mneat little pogrom on head|her friends to say good-by. in the world! Ina Claire says every beautiful woman | 5 at 140. on fatty tissue. Just born beautiful—Ina Claire—and | with a lot of talent besides. Norma Shearer, standing in a robe “Now, whatever are you going to “Juliet,” says Norma Shcarer. A New York star got a Hollywood act. She was blind with joy (not “I feel so wealthy,” she caroled. didn't think there was so much money in five weeks I | make more than in an entire New York 3 Roland West spent his first night in talkies |lying in a gutter in mud to his neck. ;Add that to your salary check.” | Why, And the excitement; A50) “‘Yeal drawled the friend. Obituary: Conrad Nagel's hair line—the N'sl-! while ambrosial locks—R. I. P. (Copyright. 1929. by North American Newspaper Alliance.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES removed. You should do everything to| get well, as the risk in repeating these periodic attacks is grcater than to hm’e‘ an operation at the right time. |could also have the rupture through surgery and get rid of that, truss. The sallow skin, conistipation and | the suppuration evidently come from | this enemas give you temporary relief, they should be continued; but the only thing to do that will count is to get a good doctor and do exactly the right thing to get perfectly well. trouble with your appendix. Dot B.—At 18 years, height 5 feet 3 inches, you are 20 pounds overweight You may lose some of this| weight in the next two or three years through the natural processes of de- veloping, but it will be just as well if you select your diet so you do not pile Rich sweets, starches and ofls add to your weight. especially if you do not have enough exercise. An [tunt Tiomes ianfl is EARking JDISIFaNT0F | perers 2 e oy G B ior T been waiting for that to be sprung since the moment Mary | Shakespeare) she adds, - and I are doing a scene as a revue number—and then a modern adapta- tion.” Whereat my breath came more freely. I think the Bard of Avon is safer in 1.0® the hands of the Wednesday Afternoon Club than on the village talkie stages. ind Doug went ack Gilbert You cured Often mispronounced: Epistle. Pro- nounce e-pis-l, e as in “me,” 1 as in| ' t silent, accent second syllable. of | Ofter misspelled: Breach (a gap or Synonyms Accidental, unintended, ! unpremeditated. unforeseen, undesigned. Word study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: imposture; act of an mpostor; fraud or imposition, “He was the dupe of some imposture. do Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. “Color in the kitchen” has become an important feature these days, for. if there is one room in the house in which we can_ combine gay colors to our heart’s delight, it is the kitchen! The lover of a bit of Chinese red finds that in her black, yellow and cream or “ | If | scheme this very vivid shade may be used with very pleasing results, where- as she might spoil the effect of her entire living room by a touch of this pans, knife handles, refuse cans | v detail that one can possibly the way of color selection; but one of the most important items is the win- dow, for its treatment must be one which is simple and in keeping with the room. In the illustration is shown an ideal window for the kitchen. The shade is of glazed chintz with a yellow ground and tiny flowers in red, black and green. The curtalns and valance are | of yellow organdie to match the back- Nearly one-fourth of the concessions ground of the chintz, and they are of foreign interests for operation of | trimmed with tiny frills of bright red natural resources in Norway are held in the United States. icoted in black. | organdie pt ' (Copyright, 1929.) LET CLOROX DO THE JOBS YOU DREAD | [ So says a fastidious woman who uses Clarox daily. Dish towels, dish mops, dish rags can be kept white white, clean, odorless and sterile too, when Clorox isadded to their washing suds. And towelsmade of unbleached linen, flour os sugar sacks, can be easily and quickly bleached with Clorox. Just follow directions on bottle. AT ALL GROCERY sollem oath thats the last circus Ill go | And I sed. Weil G, pop, hay, you dont | | think diffrent and wunt to change your | them yes, ! Well G wizzickers. pop. nobody aint | break); breech (the rear or lower part). | black, green and cream= imagine claim individual attention in FEATURES Care of Fading Hair. When & woman of mature years has answered in the negative the momen- tous question, “To dye or not to dye” the hair and has decided to make the best of her fading tresses, her biggest beauty problem is the correct grooming of her hair so that it will not become scanty and unmanageable. When the hair has been dyed once it must always receive regular retouching at the roots to keep it uniform in color. All this trouble is avoided by the woman urally, but she has her problems. { An abundant, healthy head of white hair is lovely. It is more flattering to the complexion than dark or golden hair can be, because skin tints change jas the hair fades. There are several @me of which are controllable and some of which are not. Among the latter are hereditary influences and the care (or the lack of care) that the scalp and general health have received in the past. It is only natural that the woman who has had good health all her life, who has always massaged her scalp and brushed her hair daily, and who has a heritage of strong hair to begin with. should be proud of her crown of glory all her life. On the other hand, those who hav had il health and have neglected the care of their hair will find it more diffi- cult to keep it from becoming scanty in the later years. External care alone cannot make up for a poor inheritance. but_this is no reason why one should neglect proper grooming. Local treat- | ments can be depended upon to make {the hair better than it would be with- cut them, although they cannot work |a magic transformation in its quality. | The most important daily treatment {for the hair is daily massage of the | the flow of blood and loosen the scalp. | A deep, stroking massage from between | the shoulders up the spine to the back of the head should be added to the usual scalp manipulations. One should ure hair tonics with caution on white {or fading hair, since some of them tend to affect the color or cause scalp irrita- tions. They contain a large percentage of alcohol, which is drying. Usually as It.he hair fades it becomes drier and is BRAIN TESTS This is a test of omissions. "It re- quires a certain amount of acquired knowledge. Lists of words are given in their normal progression, but some-! where in the chain a name is omitted; The word omitted is “June.” State the omissions in the lists be- low, allowing three minutes: (1) Sunday, Monday, ‘Wednesday, Friday, Saturday. (2) Million, billion, trillion, quintil- lior n. (3) Colonel, lieutenant colonel, cap- tain, first lieutenant, second lieutenant. (4) Spring, Autumn, Winter. (5) Seven, eight, nine, ten, king. 6) I,V,X,L.D, M. | Roosevelt, Wilson, Harding, Cool- i ‘Tuesday, queen, 1) idge. Hoover. (8) Pitcher, catcher, first baseman, shortstop. third baseman. (9) Millimeter, decimeter, dekameter, hectometer, kilometer. | (10) Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Deu- teronomy. | There is only one omission in each instance. It is.a symbol or a word | which should normally appear in the chain. Mark the spot where each should appear when naming it. Answers. | (1) Thursday (fifth); (2) quadrillion (fourth); (3) major (third); (4) Sum-| mer (second); (5) jack, or knave (fifth); (6) C. (fifth); (7) Taft (sec-| ond): (8) second baseman (fourth); | (9) centimeter (second); (10) Numbers (fourth). | meter, | Delicions Rice Pudding. Cook half a cupful of rice with one | pint of milk, one teaspoonful of butter | and one-fourth cupful of sugar until | perfectly smooth, then put through a ricer. Dissolve two tablespoonfuls of granulated gelatin in one-fourth cupful of warm water and add the strained rice. Let cool and fold in one pint of whipped cream flavored with one table- spoonful of maraschino. Put into a mold to harden. Serve with fresh fruit or chocolate sauce. | sue-thin and roasted! for the health they help transforms the natural natural laxative. scalp. The massage aims to stimulate | are made by a patented, MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. benefited by olly scalp salves applied before the massage. Here is a good re- cipe: Two ounces castor oll, two ounces | petrolatum, half ounce spermaceti. Melt the ingredients together and beat in one dram ofl of bergamot and one dram oll of cassio. | ‘When the hair begins to turn gray it | ? who is resigned to growing gray nat- ! T | | | factors that make the hair beautiful. ! is more important than ever to avold strongly_alkaline, drying shampoo mix- tures. Use only pure castile soap in liquid form. After the shampoo, use a blue rinse to take out the yellowish tinge in the hair. Mix French bluing €| or blue ink with the water to make a sky-blue rinse ! (Gopyright. 1920.) 4 Tintex Gives Faded Wardrobes New Paris Colors h....Yw }\ndknol be dis- mayed when smart frocks, negligees, e discolored. For Tintex will quickly re- new their beauty . . . their usefulness. Safely, surely and easily, restore the original color to everything washable in your wardrobe «..o0rgive it emart new Paris colors. 1n the final rinse-water, just sprinkle a little Tintex. Then “tint as yow sinse.” That's all you have to do! | s s Ask your desler to show you the new Tintex Color Card. It shows the smartest Paris colors on actual materials. «+—THE TINTEX GROUP—, Products for every Home- tinting and Dyeing Need Tintex Gray Box — Tints and dyes all materials. Tintex Blue Box — For lace - trimmed silks — tints the silk, lace remains white. Tintex Color Remover —Removes old color from any material so it can be dyed a new color. © _ Whitex — The new bluing for restoring whiteness to all white materials. - at all drug, dept. stores and notion counters - LOF | ntex TINTS anD DYES PARK & TILFORD ; NEw voRw i ot . STABLISHED 1840 2 GUARANTEES THAT TINTEX Wll PERFORM Getup toa Breakfast Worth getting up for! Who's a sleepy-head? Certainly no one who has a breakfast of Heinz Rice Flakes to look forward tos While you're dressing there's that vision of a bowl of those crispy, curly flakes toasted to a golden brown. And the flavor! Remember? But of course you do. Like nut-meats that have been shaved tis- And even if Heinz Rice Flakes dida’t have that wondrous flavog you'd be glad to eat them. Glad to bring. Because they Heinz process which roughage of the rice into a pure cellulose that acts as a gentle, Worth getting up for? A thousand times yes—says the whole family! HEINZ « OTHERS OF THE 57 « HEINZ OVEN BAKED BEANS HEINZ PEANUT BUTTER HEINZ VINEGARS

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