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"WOMA Dresses for Younger Wearers BY MARY The increased length of women’s|are made to be worn with little lace- skirts has not thus far had any effect on little girls' dresses, and more than | the legs bare for five or six inches | ever smartness demands a precise ad- Justment of bloomers so that they do f) FOR THE LITTLE GIRL THIS TWO- PIECE FROCK OF STRIPED BLOUSE_AND PLEATED KILT OF SOLID COLOR HAS A SCARF TO MATCH. net show beneath the hemline. Bloom- ers, if worn, must be extremely short, but many of the new Summer frocks MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE MERRICK. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., June 7.—With an actors’ strike threatened, the motion picture industry faces today one of the most serious crises it has yet encoun- | tered. ‘Talking pictures, bringing Equity members into the celluloid fold, create for the talkie originators a complex problem. The Actors' Equity insists that all persons hired for more than two weeks' time in the case of a pic- ture starring an Equity member must be members of the Equity. This excludes only the cheapest ex- tras and brings players and character people, whose working time runs gen- erally the entire length of the picture, into the Equity fold. These persons have everything to gain by joining the Equity. Joseph Schenck has expressed him- self as against the Equity on the ground that unionizing motion pictures doesn't make for collective bargaining, because of the tremendous discrepancies in the salaries paid. Mr. Schenck indicates that one actor receives $10 a week, an- other $200, still another $5,000. 3 says Mr. Schenck, is the difference be- tween artistry and technique. Leonore Ulric_knows her Hollywood. She arrived in Movieland with enough trunks, maids, gowns and star panoply to give the colony the greatest jolt it has had since Pola Negri lived high hereabouts. Leonore Ulric isn't conspicuous. Few of the stage guild are. They have a way of enjoying life inconspicuously and doing their work thoroughly. It seems to come down to the fact that they are satisfied with their own reac- tions to their luxuries, and don't give a fig whether or not the rest of the colony knows just how elegant they Zzeally are. Leonore Ulric will begin a story of the frozen North—in Hollywood, of a June. And you know that can mean heat and then some. But while salt and marble dust can be had and air- plane motors will toss up the rolled oats coated in paraffin you can produce an Arctic region on any studio lot with the temperature 118 in the shade. The Ulric is a big departure from ther movie types—far more of & de- than Ina Claire or Helen Twelvetrees. She has less tautness in her silhouette—and the taut quality is the keynote to camera fitness. What Straight Talks to W BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. One-Track Spending. ‘We passed a house the other day, on a street near our home, that was being torn down. It was the home of & de- voted couple that put every cent they had in the world ino it. it was their treasure. It now is their loss. Their loss is the direct result of “one- track spending.” Things went along smoothly for years and all was serene. Year after year savings went into some improvement on or in the house. Then came a succession of misfortunes, First the elderly husband met with business reverses. Then his wife be- came ill. As he increased the mortgage to raise money he was discouraged to learn that back taxes would have to be paid or his beloved house would fall into the sheriff’s hands. Then he fell behind in interest pay- ments on his mortgages and finally he was foreclosed. The house is already down and a new apartment house will obliterate its memory. Of course, many of the “improve- ments” were destroyed with the house. Many thousands of dollars were lost in the foreclosure proceedings and the couple sacrificed that money for more | than 30 years in vain. ‘That sort of “one-track saving” is but one variety. There are instances where families impoverish themselves to edu- cate and finance some fav or members of a family, or possibly they have indulged a hobby, continued 2 losing business, made clothes extrava- gance a habit or chosen any one of a few hundred other “single tracks.” Each one of us is limited during the course of his or her lifetime to a cer- tain amount of money. It is up to us to | Manipulates the anatomy like a skilled masseur, gently or vigorous- ly, as you prefer. Brings Health— Reduces Superflous Weight. COME IN FOR A DEMONSTRATION Harry C. Grove Inc. 523 11th St. Main 2067 N’S PAGE. MARSHALL. trimmed French drawers that leave | | above the knees. | Sleeveless dresses of figured dimity are attractive and practical for little girls and often there are coats of pastel | colored pique. to go with them. For the all-white dress of dimity, voile, linen o batiste there are coats of pique or he cotton material showing small flower prints. For the girl over 5 or 6, suspender dresses are a good selection, the skirt and suspenders being of linen or pique | and the little blouse of dimity or fine | linen. For the very little girl the dress that | hangs from a shallow yoke or straight | from the shoulder is still the type most | | often seen, but often there is an ar- | rangement’ of gathers or tucks that | provides something of a flare below the | walst line. For the girl over 6 there | is much to be said in favor of the dress with a definite waist line which is sometimes placed high enough to be called “normal” A charming party | frock of organdy has a full gathered skirt and a closely molded sleeveless bodice. If you would like to make a little apron_ that is as easy to wear as it is | to look at I am sure you will want a | copy of this week's Home Dressmaker's Help which giv-s the diagram pattern | for meking a_new flaring apron. I| will gladly send this to you if you will send me & stamped, self-addressed en- | velope. | (Copyright, 1929 Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “I remembered my manners at the | | party all right an’ wiped my plate with | my napkin like papa does at the res- | taurant.” she brings to the new medium will be largely & matter of voice and tempera- | ment. In her arrival interviews she an- nounced that she had come to Southern California to stay. Add to that the per- sistent report current here that she is married to Sydney Blackmer, and make what you can of it. Hollywood tats up all stray threads of gossip into neat little patterns. Bill Hart comes back to the screen with the talkies. He has been a favor- | ite all these years of his absence. Hun- dreds of letters have poured in_ every day asking that he come back to the screen. Will Rogers had a hand in bringing him back, although when his ex-wife, | Winifred Westover Hart, signed a con- tract for one of the best talkie roles of the year Bill Hart objected strenuously. Perhaps he knew this triumph of his was coming and he didn't want her to | going to tea | theres LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was reeding the sporting page and ma was looking at the jokes with a serious ixpression, saying, Well, its sad but_true, I cant put it off any longer, Il haff to get down to serious house ' cleaning tomorrow. Yee gods, you dont meen to say your the whole house up by the roots agen and leave it lying that way for me to trip over, pop sed. It seem: s since the last volcano Well its been a whole year and thats just another proof of time in_its flite, ma sed. Let me see, I think Ill try to get that same woman in to help me that 1 had last year, she's strong and willing and hasent got many ideers of her own, and I think Il try to get hold of her, she sed. I hope she duzzent get hold of me, shell tern me upside down just from force of habit, pop sed. Cant_you put this thing off for a while? Spring is the season of the year to let things grow, not to pull them up, so why not let the dust grow gently on the ferni- ture and then reap it in the fall as na- ture intended? he sed. Thats a very poetic thawt, but it anything poetic about hous cleening it must be a new discovery ma sed. So tomorrow the dust flies, she sed, and pop sed, So do I, I meen, come to think of it, I don't think I'll be abl to come home for dinnir tomorrow, of course I know you dont like me to stay , away for dinnir but I haff to take care of a very important customer. Thats all rite, you neednt apologize Il be glad to know your not coming home so we can keep on werking with- out bothering to stop for a regular cooked dinnir, ma sed, and pop sed, | O is that so, well if I dont happen to be in your way just now IIl retire be- hind my newspaper. Wich he did. “Bozo thought he'd go after a few catfish, but he ain't had any luck vet at gettin’ a mouse for bait.” (Copyright, 1929.) PARIS.—Molyneux 1s one of the people who stick to straight lines and | curveless silhouettes for daytime. One of his newest sport ensembles has a lace wool cardigan over a sleeveless, two-piece dress. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. |one-half mm. of lead equivalent front X-Ray and Radium Workers. | oneret, min, of e1d Siia wave the | Recommendations adopted by _the | same minimum value. | Second International Congress of Radi- |~ Electrical —Floor of X-ray room . ology in Stockholm last Summer should | should have insulating covering—lino- | interest all who work With X-rays Of |Jeum, rubber or wood. Overhead con with radium. | ductors should be not less than 9 feet Working hours.—Not more than seven | from floor, and should consist of stout hours a day. Not more than five days| metal tubing or other coronaless type. a week. Workers should spend off days | Connecting leads of coronaless wire in the open air and sunlight. Not less | should be kept taut by suitable rheo- | than one month vacation annually.|phores. Unless there are reasons to the (Except the long vacation, these Tules|contrary, metal parts of apparatus should apply to everybody who works.) ‘should be well earthed. Overpowered Workroom—The X-ray room should | fuses must not be used. Quick-acting, not be below ground floor level, “"kmidouble-polc circuit breakers should be there is special provision for sunlight. | ysed, All rooms, including darkroom, should | Radium Salts—The radium should be have windows affording free_admission | manipulated with long-handled wooden of sunlight and fresh air. Workrooms | forceps, carried in long-handled boxes should be properly ventilated, with both | Jined on all sides with 1 cm. (over one- air inlet and air outlet to give Cross|third of an inch) lead. All manipula- | them | gather words as a_ collector | rich. take the edge off. ventilation. All rooms should be deco- red member | I once asked a man who had worked | with Hart in many pictures why Har didn't come back, and he told me that at several attempts to effect his return his technique was revealed as old-fash- foned and not sufficiently elastic for modern methods. Perhaps talkie tech- nique is more in line with the methods of Bill Hart's movie days. | At a recent Hollywood party the fol- | lowing people met: Florence Vidor and Jascha Heifetz| came to greet their hostess, Ouida Ber- gere. She was once married to George | Fitzmaurice, who, with his wife, Diana | Kane, was standing in a nearby group. | | Florence Vidor was engaged to Fitz- | maurice before he married Diana Kane. | And as_they all stood ehatting in | walked King Vidor and Eleanor Board- man. They bowed to every one pleas- | antly, and, one hears, a perfectly good time 'was had by all Some of our little Broadway boys are | lonely for Manhattan. A playwright | fresh from the big city came to his first Hollywood party and was buttonholed by one of the sunshine-and-flower en- | thusiasts who abound hereabouts. “Don’t you adore Southern Califor- nia?” she trilled. “Isn't Hollywood laid out wonderfully “Yeah, they laid it out all right,” he | drawled disgustedly, “but they forgot to bury it.” (Copyright, 1920, by North American Newspaper Alliance.) omen About Money spend it in several ways to assure us of | necessaries in the present and future, | protection against hard times and reliel for emergency needs. 1 Banking on any one thing is dan- gerous. It matters little whether we | bank on clothes to afford us all the | pleasure of life or on & house to serve las an investment, 8 home and capital | reserve. Our spending should proceed |over many tracks. Diversification in spending is as wise a principle as diver- sification in investing. Distribute the {risks of life. If one thing is lost be | able to turn to several others for com- | fort, pleasure and remuneration, | Life is too uncertain to follow a single track in spending, because we may fol- |low that track for a lifetime to find it | | leads to ruin, and then it is too late to switch. Universally accepted as the standard of excellence ONEPOUNDNETIWEIGHT IHAGEES B0 | some disheartened soul. | cheer to the weary. We can give com- | more people suff | companionship and kindness A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN, Better Than Giving Money. Text: “Silver and gold have I none; but what I have give I thee."—Acts, 116, Happy is the man who has money to give and gives it cheerfully and wisely. I never wish for a lot of money, except as I see o many opportunities for doing good with it. But that is the way most of us talk when we haven't much money. We talk about what we would do if we were rich. But perhaps if we were rich we might not be any more liberal than some others who are rich. The question is whether we are giving what we have to give. “Stlver and gold have T none; but what I have give I thee” If we are not generous with what we have the chances are we would not be ‘generous with wealth, even if we possessed it in abundance. What we need is to turn our thoughts to the principle of giving. Money is not the only thing we may give. We may give other things as well. We have ability to help people. We can give that ability. We can give kindness, hospitality’ and _friendship. We can give an encouraging word to We can give fort to those who sorrow. We can give companionship to the lonely. And, after all, these things are of greater value than money. And there is far more need for th things. ing for want of love, than for the want of material help. There are | rated in light colors. X-ray rooms should be not less than 250 square feet | in floor area, not less than 11 feet ceil- ing height. Darkrooms should be not less than 100 square feet floor area. Room temperature should be around 65 degrees Fahrenheit. Generating appara- | tus preferably placed in separate room. | Operator.—Never should expose him- | self unnecessarily to direct beam of | X-rays. Should place himself as re- mote as possible from tube. Normal eye | should not detect fluorescence of screen | placed in operator's permanent position | in the dark. Tube should be surrounded | as completely as possible with arequate | lead equivalent, the thickness of which should be not less than 1 mm. where peak voltage does not exceed 75 Kv. and not less than 5 mm. where peak volt-| age is as high as 225 Kv. ~Operator | should protect himself at all times by | a screen of not less than 1 mm. lead. | In giving X-ray treatments, operator | should remain outside X-ray room be- hind wall with not less than 2 mm. lead equivalent, or a thicker lead if the tube covering falls short nl;(he lead equiva- lent recommended. ' Lead glass of fluorescent, screens and inspection win- dows should have equivalent values recommended for covering of tube Where the tube inclosure or screen lead equivalent falls short of that recom- mended other walls, floor and ceiling should have supplementary protection for occupants of adjacent rooms. Pro- tective gloves should have not less than 1t is well to give silver and gold, if ' we have it to give and that is the thing needed; but to dispense spiritual values is better than giving money. Banana Sponge. Soften two teaspoonfuls of gelatin in one-third cupful of cold water, add one- third cupful of bofling water and one cupful of sugar. When the sugar is dissolved strain over one cupful of banana pulp, heat to the scalding point cool, add the juice of one lemon and beat over ice water until light and cold, then beat in gradually the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs. mixture into a of banana. Serve cold, ornamented with whipped cream sweetened flavored. and Seal Brard Tea iscf tle l { same bigh guality, | | Turn the | mold lined with slices | | color-smartness . . . to | maen are usiny PARIS COLORS =-S0 easy with Tinfex «+.. IPsreallyeasy toachieve ‘your ward- robe lovely in all the new Paris colors. That is, if you use Tintex! ««+ . Everywhere smart wo- Tintex . . .to restore the | faded color of frocks, sweaters, blouses, scarves, sports-clothes, etc. everything that's washable | smartest colors. For Tintex is so very simple to use. You just “tint as you rinse” . . . nomuss or fuss . . . and with perfect results always! . . Ask your dealer to show you the new Tintex Color Card. It shows | the smartest Paris colors on actual materials. | —THE TINTEX GROUP—, | nud notion counters, 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 wwnuulilh. S ————- at all drug, dept. mre115¢ PARK & TILFO wew vorw sois o8 ESTABLISHED 1840 GUARANTEES THAT TINTEX WILL PERFORM D | tions should be as rapid as possible. A screen of not less than' one inch of lead should be used to protect the body when handling radium. Attendants hould not remaln in the same room with patients undergoing radium treat- | ment. Nurses and workers employed in making up radium applicators should hold their jobs not longer than six months. Small_quantities of radium may be transmitted by post in containers lined with not less than 3 mm. of lead. Large quantities should be transported by hand in suitable cases. Similar protection should. be used in handling radium emanation, so-called radium “seeds,” “implants,” radon. | Horseradish Sauce. Beat half a cupful of thick cream for about two minutes, teaspoonful of salt and one teaspoonful of sugar, then beat in three or four tablespconfuls of freshly grated horse- radish. Pour over cold cooked beets or serve with meat or fish Add half a | three-fourths of the OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL . Memorizing. We ought to take care to see that the children memorize good poetry and | prose. We do not do as much as we| could in that direction, I fear. In thel lower grades the children learn a goodly | number of rhymes and proverbs, but usually as they advance in the grades the memory work slows down. There is so much other work to be done. And| vet, the poetry, the fine prose, means so | much to the children in later years. | Select the quotations with ‘due re- | gard to the child's state of mind, stage | of growth, tastes and abilities. Because Shakespeare wrote magnificently is no reason for making a nine-year-old boy | learn “To be or not to be.” That is| cruel to the boy and to the memory o the great | Nor is it fair to make him learn “The! Captain's Daughter.” My hand is, against the captain’s daughter. z don't believe & word of her, so it would | do me no good to learn her story. But there might be a little girl somewhere who adored her. Let that child learn the poem and let the boy learn “TI ] was a sound of revelry by night'—if he likes i, The child must like the words he| learns. That he fully understand them | is not_necessary. Indeed, it is impos- | sible. The words of the Twenty-third | Psalm have one meaning to us when | we are children and another when as| old folk we repeat them with full| knowledge of their value. The music and_the rhythm of the| words will outweigh the content in lh!“ beginning, but that does not matter.| ‘The memorizing is the thing. | It is easy for children to memorize | verse and prose when they are in the early grades of the elementary schools. They are curious then about rds, about language, and all that comes to is welcome. It is then they gatht-rs; jewels, They select them and pridefully | use them again and again until they| are commonplace, Then they take another group and incorporate them into their language, so that it is enriched! and glorified by the words of master writers. Any child can learn ten or a dozen pleces in a year. If those are reviewed and repeated and kept well in mind from term to term, the child has a mine of riches to draw upon for the rest of his life. If he has not acquired the habit of memorizing by the time he enters high school he is not likely to acquire it with any ease or pleasure later. There are many sources of material We begin with “Mother Goose” and work through to Shakespeare and the Bible. The field is wide and broad and 1t offers material for any kind of child, to any sort of teacher. Let us not neglect it. “Speaking pieces” was good practice. Some form of that festival should linger among us forever. (Copyright, 1920 Stuffed Tomatoes. Wash and dry six firm tomatoes. Cut off the tops, remove the pulp with a small spoon and rub through a fine sieve. Put two tablespoonfuls of butter in a pan, add ome cupful of grated rye bread crumbs, cook for a few minutes, then add one-fourth teaspoonful of grated onion juice to the tomato pulp and one tablespoonful of chopped parsley and salt and pepper to taste. Stir in two egg yolks and fill the toma- toes with the mixture. Sprinkle the tops with bread or cracker crumbs but- tered and place in the oven on a but- tered tin and bake for half an hour. Serve hot. Radishes. Small, red radishes are now plentiful and cheap in the market. They may served uncooked as a relish, the large varieties being peeled, sliced ana salted for the table. To serve, remove the tip end of the root, remove the longer leaves and have only a small plece of stem on the radish. To make them resemble a tulip, equal parts frqm the root end, down length of the radish, or, Hke a rose, cut around the radish in three rows, alternating the cuts. Place in‘cold water until ready to serve. Only Sugar ‘ In the Blue Box Jack Frost Sugar. Pure and clean. Made from 100% pure cane 3 Refined according to the most modern scientific methods. Always uni- form. Always packed for protection in the Blue Box. That’s Jack Frost Sugar in its five different forms: GRANULATED BROWN POWDERED TABLET CONFECTIONERS Every Jack Frost Sugar hasa Special Use. Buy each in its Sanitary Carton — It’s safer. For sale by all stores that feature quality preducts Refined by ‘THE NATIONAL ‘SUG,AR REFINING CO, N.J. JAC FROST CANE SUGRR NATURE'S ESSENTIAL SWEET | later generations as Montaigne, author | probably has been surpassed by no other e T e Walking on His Thumbs When He Was Sixty Was a Stunt of Father of Montaigney J. P. GLASS, THERE OUGHT TO BE APLACE IN EVERY CITY WHERE PEOPLE IN WANT OF ANY- THING CAN GO Each morning he had the child wakened by strains of music. His three tutors were commanded to speak only Latin to him, and not even his own mother was permitted to ad- dress him in French. The result was that even the servants picked up frag- ments of Latin and scattered them ovef the countryside, where they remained in use for centuries afte Plerre taught Michel”Greek declen- sions by means of a game he invented Pierre Eyquem of Montaigne at 60 till went upstairs three steps at a time, could leap from the ground to a horse's back, and, when he particularly over- flowed with spirits, would walk around a table on his thumbs. | The worthy proprietor of the Chateau | of Montaigne was famous throughout | the Valley of the Didoire, in Perigorde, | as a “character.” His mind was not | less active than his body. He was a progressive, always acquiring new ideas. | « In the sixteenth century he originated | In ail his childhood he whipped him a proposal which has since been realized | but twice, and that gently. ~ After he in modern advertising by the “want|reached 6 he went through a change ads’ of newspapers. {of heart, though. Custom was too “"There ought to be,” he suggested, “a | strong about him, so he sent Michel off place in every city where people in want | to school and then to, college, fearing of anything can go and list their need | perhaps he would produce a dunce. in a book kept by a public officer; as,| If modern contentions that we estab- ‘I want to sell pearls’ or ‘I want to|lish our habit of thinking by the time buy pearls’; ‘I want a master’ or ‘I| we are 7 are correct, we must give want a workman,’ and so on and on.” | Pierre Eyquem credit for a great deal Pierre Eyquem was 33 when he came | making due allowance that he gave his back to his ancestral estates from the | son an inheritance of genius. Italian wars and married Antoinette | The philosopher’s mother has alwavs de Louppes. The first two sons born | been a dim figure, obscured by her hus- him by this good woman were educated | band's glittering personality. She had according to the customary methods of | a great many other children, and died the day. but by the time the third ar- | in 1603, 10 years after her grgyf son's rived Pierre was ripe for trying out | demise. % certain experiments of which he had | 1020.) heard in Italy. This third son was named Michel, more simply known to (Copyright, | | Don’t let moths iU your furs and woolens. Get Expello today THINK of your valuable furs and woolens—unprotected from the ravages of moths. Won't you spend $§1—won't you take one minute to make them absolutely safe? Just hang Expello in your storage closet. Easier than set- ting an alarm clock. No spraying or sprinkling. The wonderful vapor penetrates all fabrics. Every moth dies. Remember that moths eat summer and winter. And that a can of Expello lasts for months—goes right on giving protection without any effort or attention on your part. principally of a volume of essays which has been read the world over and which book of modern times in the extent of #ts influence on men. To make the infant grow up humble and sympathetic he had him held over the font by persons of low degree, chose his godfather and godmother from among peasants, put him to nurse with a sturdy village woman, and for a time after he had been weaned kept him in the village so that he might become accustomed to a hardy way of living. Everyday Law Cases Constitutes an Act Bankruptcy? What of BY THE COUNSELLOR. The bankruptey law provides tha! a petition in bankruptcy may be filed against a debtor who has committed an act of bankruptcy. Mere insolvency of the debtor is insufficient to have him adjudicated a bankrupt. Acts of bankruptcy consist of the following: cut into six | 1. Conveying, cealing any property with the intent to hinder, delay or defraud creditors. 2. Transferring, while insolvent, any property to one or more creditors with intent to prefer such creditor over other creditors. 3. Permitting, while insolvent, any creditor to obtain a preference through legal proceedings, and not having va- transferring_or con- Also comes packed 10 handy bags to the tin for chests, trunks, etc. Both styles fully guarane teed. The Expello Corporation, Dover, N. H. Get Expello at your drag or department store today cated such preference five days prior | | to final sale of such property. | 4. Making an assignment for the benefit of creditors, or applying for & receiver. | 5. Admitting in writing inability to pay debts or a willingness to be ad- | judged a bankrupt. “In defense to a petition in bank- ruptcy a debtor may show that he is solvent, but he must appear in court | with his books, papers and accounts {and submit to an examination as to | | all_matters tending to establish sol- | vency or insolvency. K/LLS MOTHS Now a Cocoanur LAYER On Sale in Stores To try it once is to renounce home baking utterly. Note below how it saves you worry and me. Also its reasonable cost. ‘The actual rec- ipe is printed at the right. By ALICE ADAMS PROCTOR HAT'’S a teally amazing cake shown above. We are proud of it. Ic is different, utterly different, from any ordinary cake you can buy. Domestic science experts will testify to this. Also more than one million women. Today it is rapidly becomin, the vogue at important soci functions here. It is viewed as a “certain success,” and hence served with perfect confidence. We bake it for you to a recipe developed more than 100 years OUR COSTLY INGREDIENTS FLOUR. Made from the country’s very choicest wheats. Specially ‘milled for us. Every drop pasteurized BUTTER. A fine grade of fresh creamery butter, It tests “go score” by United States Govern- ment standards. EGGS. All carefully inspected, ot once, but foe fines, T FLAVORINGS. We make our own. No others measure up to the standard we set. ago in New England kitchens. Our ing edimual also are most unusual. They actually surpass in many ways tho’s{ you can buy yourself, What theyarelike we show in the box at left. Now for cost. You'll be amazed to discover that by buying this cake you save half the cost of gah'ng it at home. In view of the rich ingredients used, this may seem incredible, until you learn how we reduce the retail “Tlostess THE ACTUAL RECIPE of our Cocoanut Layer. 3§ cup granulated sugar. 2 eges, medium size. Ycup hot milk. 1 cup Cake Flour. 3§ of a cup cornstarch. Pinch of sale. price by purchasing our ingredi- ents in vast quantities. It is known as a “Hostess™ Cake. A brand name that has come to stand for the finest in bakery products. So start, if you will, with our Cocoanut Layer. Or if you pre. fer,our Chocolate Layer. Or our Devil’s Food. Or our now- famous Cup Cakes. All baked to time-proven recipes and en- dorsed by the Good House- keeping Magazine. In ordering, only remember this: Whether you ask for a Hostess Cocoanut Layer or a Hostess Choc- olate Layer, emphasize that word “Hostess.” This is highly important if you want the kind of cakes described here. Since they cost no more than ordinary kinds, to accept a substitute is folly. One trial will prove this. ©Cake_ BAKED BY THE BAKERS OF WONDER BREAD