Evening Star Newspaper, June 19, 1929, Page 33

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N*'S PAGE. VACATION BOOK PRIVILEGES BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Tt is & custom of some free public Mbraries to lend books in Summer for a fime double that usually prescribed, so that persons going on vacation can have the privilege of good reading while away without spending any money for A BOOK IS A GOOD COMPANION FOR SUMMER LEISURE HOURS. it. All sorts of subjects are included besides fiction in the volumes so loaned It is for the borrower to decide and make selections from the books so ap- portioned by the libraries. It is possible to pursue studies and research, to be- come acquainted with the history of places being visited, to read biographies ©of persons who lived there at some time A WASHINGTON remote or near at hand, or of any fa- vorite character, etc. These are offered as well as books that are diverting or novels of absorbing interest that “while away the time” as one rests on the sea- shore or relaxes in a hammock in some cool and leafy spot. Frequently the time privileges are ex- tended for two months, so that a long vacation period is covered. Also the | number of books allowed on one'c card is apt to be increased. This permits of |a range of subjects for Summer read- ing. No one is expected to take fiction slone when using the full scope of the library's offer. This would soon deplele the stacks of fiction so that fewer per- sons could enjoy this special class of | reading. Fiction is a favorite topic, re- | quiring the minimum of brain energy | in_order to enjoy it and giving the most LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Sattidy morning I got up without being called, being more than I do on skool mornings, and I went around to see it Puds Simkins was up yet. Wich he was, standing inside his parlor win- dow looking out kind of sad, me say- mlt, Come on out Puds, why aint you ou Aint aloud, Puds sed. Why not? I sed, and he sed, My mother wont leeve me, and I sed Well | maybe she will if I ask her, sometimes it makes a diffrents if somebody out- side of the family asks them. Well I dont know, you can try, he sed. You cant be arrested for trying. he sed, and I sed, Whats she keeping you in for, anyways? Well I tell you, Puds sed. You see my unkle took me for a ride in his automobeel and we went away out in relaxation for mental strain that one’s work calls for during the remainder of the year. | Summer Reading. | Books of a light character, those that have “happy endings,” mirth-provoking books that are writtem with the sole object of entertaining the readers—ali these come under the heading of “Sum- | mer reading.” They are enjoyed Ly brain workers as well as frivolous minds For the first group they serve purely for mental reaction and diversions; for the second group they are customary caliber of reading. The first group co sult the librariansgor study the cata- logues of readings for vacation reading, | and select with care. The second group | make a hurried trip to the iibrary and | take whatever happens to be ¢n the shelves. A snappy jacket and a taking | title are their criterions of choice. Thousands of persons each year er- | joy these vacation books obtained with library extension privileges. Do not ex- | pect valuable volumes, rare books or | those of a semi-reference character to e loaned. Sometimes if a person is known to be doing some special bit of work and would find one oI even more of the specialized books to be invaluable during an absence, libraries have been known to give “extra special permits to one known to be thoroughly reliable’ Those who are going on quiet vaca- tions in which leisure will be theirs to spend in reading should take advan- tage of the library privileges descriped, thereby increasing the pleasure of the trip without adding to the expense accoun (Copyright, 1929.) My Neighbor Says: When preserving fruit by the cold pack process, pack it loose- ly into jars, shake it down and leave one-half inch of space at the top of each jar to get best results. The most important part of the preparation of desserts is the serving. To be appetizing, hot desserts should be served redlly hot and cold desserts cold. It is inexcusable to place a chilled dessert on a hot plate or a warm pudding on a cold dish. Two quarts of milk added to one quart of heavy cream makes cream of sufficient strength when serving coffee to 100 people. Put a drop of sweet oil on the cogs of your food-chopper and egg-beater occasionally to keep them in good condition. DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. Much has been said and written about the “tragedy” of the presidential yacht Mayflower. Yet there is one more story still to be told. 1t concerns a handful of Navy offi- cers who suddenly found that they must go to sea. There's a regulation in both the Army and Navy that ro officer may on duty in Washington more than four years. In the Army an officer must 80 to a post or into foreign fields. In the Navy he must go to sea. And officers, especially the wives of officers, like duty in Washington. ‘The Army has the advantage over the Navy. Around the capital are sev- eral Army posts. Fort Myer, Fort Wash- ington and Fort Hunt, as well as sev- eral nearby posts in Maryland, all are desirable assignments and make possible a continuation of social life in Wash- ington. Not so with the Navy. Orders to go to sea in the Navy now simply mean go to sea. The Mayflower is no longer at the Washington Navy Yard. In this fact lies a sad story. New officers were assigned to the presidential yacht this Spring. They were men who had been on duty in the Navy Department for four years and therefore were under the necessity of “going to sea.” New uniforms had been ordered. The officers were prepared for the rigors of a trip down the Potomac once a month for the next four years. ‘Then Mr. Hoover decided to econo- mize. New orders were issued to the officers. Now the new uniforms are laid away *h.moth balls. And once happy wives are mourning the fate that has decreed that for the next four years they must chase the Atlantic and Pacific fleets from port 1o port for a glimpse of their husbands. “Going to sea” for them has taken on & new and mournful meaning. But there are naval officers who haid with genuine delight the passing of the Mayflower. As ove old sea dog described it to the writer an officer detatled to duty on the yacht was nothing more than a glorified footman or butler. At least, he regard- ed it so. He will never forget an incident that occurred during his service on the craft, Even now he boils with rage at the thought of it. All hands had been piped on deck to greet the presidential party. Officers and crew were at attention. Members of the party boarded the yacht. One guest had several coats on his arm. Looking around him he singled out an officer resplendent in his blue uniform with gold trappings. To him the guest handed the coats. The indignant officer glared and let the coats drop to the deck. Only dis- cipline saved the guest from a probable punch in the face. For more than 11 years Representa- tive John Charles Linthicum of Mary- land has been trying to persuade Con- AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. gress that “The Star spm.fled Banner’” should be declared the national anthem of this country. He has had a bill to this effect before the House almost continuously since 1918. Little success, however, has been his. Invariably the bill has died in committee or else has been crowded out in the rush of legislation. But Mr. Linthicum refuses to be discouraged. Each session he drops his pet measure in the House hopper. He is ukmndnm that he will yet get a ‘The Maryland Chapter of the Na tional = Soclety of United Daugh- ters of 1812 first interested him in the proposal. At the request of that or- ganization he introduced the measure for the first time in March, 1918, War conditions and the accompanying rush of legislation, however, prevented his bill getting very far. He reintroduced the bill in April, 1921, but it met the same fate. 923, for the third time he tried t Congress to declare officially that “The Star Spangled Banner” be America’s national anthem. Interest had increased. The House judiciary committee called representa- tives of various patriotic organizations to Washington and obtained their views. Representatives McFadden and Swope of Pennsylvania and Repre- | sentatives Fairchild and Celler of New | York in the meantime had introduced similar bills. But in the closing hours of the bill was | Sixty-eighth Congress the caught In the jam and died. Not to be daunted, Linthicum came back to the next Congress and for the fourth time introduced his bill. This time it didn't even get out of the com- mittee. In January, 1 to Linthicum by this time had come to regard his bill as something akin to an | affair of honor. | Therefore, when President Hoover convened the special session in April, despite the fact thas it was to be lim- ited to consideration only of tariff and farm relief, at the first opportunity he dropped his bill in for the fifth time. And if it dies again, then as soon as the regular session opens in December he will try again, Linthicum’s contention is that “The Star Spangled Banner” now is consid- ered by all as the national anthem. Since 1889, under orders from the Navy | Department, the song is played at both morning and evening colors. It also is| played at retreat in the Army. ‘The anthem for the service, he savs, | certainly should be the anthemn of the | people. ' watch and see what a old fashion black- subjects of treatments of subjects, and | {0t ShYthing around but horses, and he .!hs blacksmith yelled at the horse, he the country and we went pass a black- smith place and the blacksmith was in there hammering a horse shoe on a horse, and my unkle stopped so I could smith use to look like when there was d the horses foot between his knees h his back to the rest of the horse, and the horse moved and he yelled some pritty fears: werds at it to make it stand still, and last nite T had a old | crokay mallet and my mother was sit- ting there reeding the paper and I backed around in frunt of her and got one of her feet and started to pertend to shoe it like a blacksmith, and I must of axsidently hit her corn or something and she quick tried to pull her foot away and I yelled at her what sed. What did he yell? T sed, and Puds| leened down out of the window and G wizz I bet that one wasent, I Well, maybe you better not ask Puds sed, and I sed, Well, maybe not. Wich 1 dident, NANCY PAGE Young Girls Think They Want Long Hair. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Mrs, Lacey no sooner had one prob- | lem of dressing solved than along came | a whole crop of new ones. Her oldest | child, Claire, had worn bobbed hair all | her life. Now that she was getting into | her teens, she wanted to let it grow. | She never had known what long_hair was and it looked like a thrilling adven- | ture. She pointed out all the other girls | who were wearing their hair longer and curling about their necks or hanging in wisps. “Of course you can do it, Claire, if you want to. But I should not think you would like that hot muff at the back "o! your neck on these hot Summer Privately, Mrs. Lacey objected on an- other ground, that all the rest of the youngsters were doing it and that each and every child looked just like her neighbor. But she remembered that young folks in their teens count it a tragedy to look different. They feel out of things and queer unless they are all patterned alike. She told Claire that she could do it it she would be sure to keep her hair | clean and brushed and shining. She I had seen so many dirty, greasy-looking, | matted wads of hair. She suggested that Claire might like a hat which had the down-in-the-back effect. And she also called attention to | the more individual looking berets. | But muff of hair it had to be, hat or | no_hat. Mrs. Lacey hoped the time would | come when Claire would have inde-| ndence enough to dress in a becom- | g and an individual fashion, but she might just as well have sighed for the moon. That independence does not come in the teens, nor even in the twenties. How about a new sandwich? Write to Nancy Page, care of this paper, in- closing a stamped, self-addressed’ en- velope, asking for her leaflet on sand- ‘wiches. Good Farm Lands Buried. The recent eruption of Mount Etna placed a lid of lava over agricultural lands valued at $2,500,000. A great deal of this land was very rich, which is the explanation of why the natives insist in locating on the slopes of the mountain with a record for outbreaks. | Tra other day he called up to tell us C., WEDNESDAY, PARIS.—Elaborate teagowns or dresses to wear at informal dinners in one’s wn home are necessities for the chic society woman these days. Worth has a ‘hite tulle and lace model with touches of emerald green. R The Sidewalk BY THORNTON FISHER. He was raised in the old home town. | that he was honeymooning in Wash- ington with his bride. When he was a small kid he was | probably the ugliest | duckling in _the | that drugstore. was red and his flat “phiz’ was studded with freckles. It was easy to imagine the sort of woman he would marry if he ever attained man’s estate, She would be a com- fortable kind. a good cook and back vard conversation- alist. We were therefore prepared o meet the misses when we arrived at | the hotel. We could hear him saying, “Boy, meet the misses and don’t laugh. when the elevator door opened we rec- ognized the red hair and freckles. He was the same lad, only grown up. He | grinned foolishly ‘as he stepped aside to let an astonishingly pretty girl emerge. He was apparently alone. The bride probably preferred not ‘o meet his old friends. Sometimes brides are like that. We were mistaken. When he said, “Boys, meet the wife,” there was confusion not to mention conster- natfon in the ranks. The astonishingly pretty creature was his bride. She has | never been in his home town, and we | are wondering what the home folks | will say when they see the young wom- an. It is a never-ending source of wonder how the homely boys grab off the beauties. | * ook % A huge car came bowling along in the night. Its headlights were blind- ing. The driver was doing at least 50 miles an hour. Instead of keeping to the right of the road the car shot di- rectly to the left and would have crashed into a machine going in the opposite direction, only quick-wittedness saving the situation. Pitching blindly ahead, the crazy car continued on its uncertain way and another driver mov- ing in the opposite direction was com- pelled to swing suddenly to avoid a col- lision. Something was wrong with the car or the driver of the machine. Those who witnessed the incident were in- clined to blame the latter. This may explain why even the most careful drivers are the victims of accidents and the casualty lists so long following a week end. | o | A local motorist has had several ex- periences recently which have taught | him a lesson. He had the habit of | parking his car at the curb in front | of his dwelling without lights. This has | resulted in his recelving police calling | cards the next morning. In this case | he was to blame. The other night his | lighting system failed to function and | he was not at fault. Anticipating a card | from the alert officer on the beat he | wrote the following note and placed it where he usually found his tickets. “To the officer—You will note that I have | no lights tonight. This is due to th fact that something s wrong with th electric system and I will have it re- | paired tomorrow. Kindly overlook the | matter tonight. Yours truly.” Whether | a passing cop observed the note and | governed himself accordingly the owner | doesn’t know. This, however, should not be made a general practice. * X %k Six or seven men stood hatless the other day in front of one of Washing- Healthful vegetablesl need not be unappetizing | Little water and smrall amounts of sugar work wonder flavors in th A FAMOUS cooking specialist, on the staff of two large m: covery of imp in healthful, d This woman interested in better tasting food: she says, “that sugar in correct amounts added to the vegetables while cook- discovered, ing, intensifies tabl freshness to enhances the fi all instances she emphasizes that of the vegetables. She gives the PEAS COUNTRY STYLE—To young tender carrots, and a small onion. Scrape and slice the carrots, and cook them and the cover, adding 1 level tablespool nearly butt “Amy always said she wouldn't get nothin’ on_ the installment plan, but havin' triplets is goin' to far.” CTopyright, 1929 The wonderful thing about “k‘" by good ccoks and scientists e, tizing flavors of fruits and meats as well makes nearly every good food more palal s, restores in large measure the flavor of ese beneficial foods azines, has announced ortance to everyone inter: elicious foods. announces her discovery to all “We have the natural flavor in fresh vege- ghtly wilted vege and or of canned vegetable sugar incre: the food value following delicious recipe: 2 cups of shelled peas, allow 4 peas in just enough water to n of granulated su, ‘When blespoon of 1 level teaspoon of flavorer, recommended that it develops the app s vegetables—in fact le. A big.of sweet makes the meal complete. The Sugar Institute. ITA. of Washington ton's largest apartment houses and listened to an auctioneer call for bids. There wes an im- pressive seriousness about the group as they raised the ante. One shquted $150,000. Another raised it to $175.- 000. Higher and higher the bidding mounted until it was fn excess of a quarter of a mil- lion dollars. The ease with which these large sums were colled was rather discouraging to the janitor who heard them. There is something about an auction that is impressive. We have witnessed small country auctions and the picture was not a pleasant one. To see a homestead and household goods go under the| hammer is to witness one of the saddest lexperienm of human kind. It is the aw. L b In a certain large city there is an Alimony Club. Most of the members Join voluntarily even though they are carefully locked in every night. They are there because they have refused to pay alimony. The members are a happy lot of fello’ some of them from ex- cellent families. A friend of ours spent a little time in this barred window clubhouse. He sald h: needed a vaca- tion and never spent such a quiet and enjoyable one. * E k¥ | “Take this story in the booth,” said | the city editior. The reporter picked | up a pigce of copy T, entered the booth l‘nvd closedvlhep‘&r. e “8ix killed and four injured,” repea ed the reporter quietly. Then he re typewriter to tell the readers about one of the most recent frightful tragedies. The reporter had ten minutes in which to make the edi- tion. He did it. Then he yawned an expansive yawn, lighted a cigarette and | looked at his mute machine. A thou- | sand words of tragedy and more tomor- | row. Thus does the news mill grind on and on. | S s Time to Make a Will, Will-making should be done when you are well. To wait until you are ill and then have it suggested that you | should do so would be so depressing | that the mental effect, reacting on the | body, might make the illness termi- nate fatally. " - NoSharpness | teries havi | he had seen there. The Mount Vernon JUNE 19, 1929. o Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. June 19, 1861.—The steamer Mount Vernon, commanded by Capt. Woods, returned to the Navy Yard tonight about 9 o'clock after a trip down the Potomac River to the White House, Va., to search for Confedefrate batteries on the Virginia shore. Leaving the Navy Yard during the afternoon, she pro- ceeded to the White House, where she | sent men ashore in boats. They scoured the country for miles around in quest of secessionist batteries. Along the beach they found marks | which indicated that large bodies of | men had been there, but none were visible, nor were there any signs of bat- ng been there. All the farmhouses in the vicinity were visited, but no evidence of the re- cent presence of troops was found. A colored man informed Capt. Woods that, a Confederate officer had been there and offered to engage colored men to cut the woods away on the heights in | but that he left and had not been seen | for several days. i Capt. Woods discovered a_suspicious | sloop in Pomunkey Creek, opposite the | White House, but did not go after her | at the time. 'Finding nothing of a hos- | tile character, the Mount Vernon re- turned up the river. Soon after making his report at head- quarters here, Capt. Woods received orders to_proceed back to Pomunkey Creek to look for the mysterious sloop was immediately got under way and proceeded back down the river. It is believed that this sloop is engaged in ferrying men across the Potomac River from Maryland to Virginia. Information reached military head- quarters here today -that day before yesterday there were 10,000 disurion iroops encamped at Manassas Junction, 1.000 at Centerville, 1,500 at Bull Run, | about half way between Manassas Junc- | tion and Centerville, and 1,600 at Fair- fax Court House, with a few smaller | camps scattered nearby. | It would thus appear that the entire force now menacing Washington and standing in front of the Union Army to prevent Gen. McDowell's column from marching upon Richmond numbers about 15,000 men, rank and file. A _scout who penetrated the village of Faixfav Court House today reports that the Confederate troops that were there have withdrawn toward Center- ville. Some persons think Gen. Beaure- guard is preparing an ambuscade for Gen. McDowell. | BRAIN TESTS ‘Two lists are given here. The one at the left consists of general names—of geographic description. The list at the right includes &roper names only. ‘The object to identify or classify each of the proper names by using one of the names at the left. But con- siderable care must be exercised in do- | ing this; otherwise you will have some definitions left over at the finish. A certain proper name may be the name of a State or a river: if you use it as a State. you may cut out another State that appears in the list. ‘Time limit is three minutes. General names Proper names (1) State Caribbean island Erie sea Florida city Delaware Cuba mountain river Washington lake Maine (8) peninsula Ontario Do not refer to the answer until you have checked off the proper pairs by putting numbers after the words in the second list. Answers to Above Test. Carribbean, sea; Erfe, city: Florida, peninsula; Deleware, river; Cuba, and: Washington, mountain; Main State; Ontario, lake. Willie Willis | e, BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “I could go out an’ play, but the fellers seen me showin’ that new girl my muscle.” Here's 2 smooth, sure to like! No pucker, no sharpness to Heinz Vinegars . . . oaly the full-bodied, fruity FEATURES. Historic Qui ck-Thinkers 9.—Disraeli. Audacious and Often Brutal, Used Twaddle From Policy in House of Commons. BY J. P. GLASS. WELL., YOUNG ¢ MAN AND WHAT INTEND Sptaking of Benjamin Disraeli, the | Jew whe became prime minister of Great Britain and died as Lord Be consfield, Carlyle once asked: { “How long will John Bull permit this | | preparation for the erection of batteries, | apsurd monkey to dance upon his stomach?” Disraeli's reply to this uncalled-for | query was characteristic. He offered | the philosopher the Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, and, in a delicately | worded note, tendered him a pension. Disraeli's audacious mind was en tirely too fast-moving for his enemies | and critics. From the day when he| first appeared in the House of Com- mons until he had done with power all his actions were dictated by policy. He garbed himself grotesquely to attract atlention, even wearing rings outside his gloves. Hating the commonplace, he recognized that twaddle suited the House better than anything else and so employed much that was common- place. He was coldly calculating even | when he was indulging in excited OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRI. Children, boys and girls alike, think | they can do things when grown-ups| know they can't. That is, the grown- ups are quite sure they can't. Well, they are almost certain they can't. Sometimes the children put them to Ico;!uslon in atter days. But that comes ater. Betty dresses in all the finery she can 1 hand upon and poses before the rror. She is acting. She is the hero- ine of the last book she read, the last movie she saw, the last story she heard told. She strides up and down her room making funny gestures and utter- ing strange sounds. She is a great actress. Or she is an opera singer. She trills | and tralla-la’s, making dreadful sounds. She thinks she is doing very well in- deed. She hears the applause of the great audience. She bows to the Presi- dent in his box, to the foreign prince on her right, to the family on the left. She tastes the sweets of success. Brother Ben sharpens his sword and | is a pirate bold. He changes according | to the latest book. Now he is Tom Mix riding on the air; now he is a great surgeon saving the king’s life, perform- ing the most delicate and intricate op- erations with an airy gesture and en- dearing himself to the nation. A, if he had been there when Lincoln was stricken he would have saved him. “Let me, let me,” youth cries and stru[llef against its weakness, its igno- rance, its helplessness, and we shrug and say, “You can't, you silly. Who do | you think you are? Duse? Melba? | Columbus? Shakespeare?” i Better not do that. When you see a child dreaming great deeds, when you see him striving to be somebody, crealc something, let him be. Go your way in silence and pray that he succeed, for the dream of greatness is the beginning of great things sometimes—not alwavs, but sometimes—and one ought never t spoil a chance like that. ‘When a child expresses himself in any such way there is a reason. Some- thing within him is driving him or her to sing, to act, to experiment in this | fleld or that. There is a reason for this | seeming silliness, this presumption. | Why should it be called presumpticn | for a child to try to be great? He is answering some deep-laid urge, that expression is to be freedom because it is L, All fine work starts in this way. The child feels he must sing—and he cannot | sing, just makes noises, never mind. Let | him sing himself, act himself, dream himself through this stage to his satis- | faction, and from it will spring another | form of the idea and when that has | grown to maturity it may take an hour, | a day or a lifetime, another form and higher one opens up. Remember that when a child ex-| presses himself this way he believes in what he is doing. He thinks he is do- ing as well as the model. Let him alone. In this way his growth develops. | And it may be his talent is budding | just below. Give the child that chance | and don't call him silly. That is just what he isn't. | mellow Vinegar you're tang of vinegar that has aged in wood for months. Every drop a drop of flavor . . . delicate, appetizing, so delightful for the salad dressing . . . Four kinds—Cider, Malt, ‘White, Tarragon. It really costs you very little to enjoy Heinz quality—the quality you find in Heinz Oven-Baked Beans, Heinz Tomato Ketchup, Heinz Cooked Spaghetti, Heinz Rice Flakes —or 'HE Vi PURE negars any of the Heinz 57 INZ PRIME 00 You) MINISTER TO BE / \ W™ oratory. He became a Tory because that party needed brains He knew that audacity had its value. He entered the Commons as Lord Mel- bourne, prime minister, was relinquish- ing office. They were introduced and Melbourne, laying a hand on Disraeli’s shoulder, said: “Well, young man and what do you intend to be?"” Disraeli, with lightning appreciation of the other’s position, replied: *Prime minister.” He could be brutal in debate. Reply- ing to Joseph Hume, a solemnly dull and virtuous member of the House, he destroyed him by remarking: ly honorable friend has spoken ihis eve- ning with that accuracy of detail which he always shows—particularly on sub- jects of which he is profoundly ig- norant.” To another man who attacked him, | and whom he despised, he said “I extend to you the mercy of my silence.” Two anecdotes paign methods He once said: “When I meet 2 man whose name I cannot remember, I al- ways say, ‘And how is the old com- illustrate his cam- | plaint?’ He was asked to write a persuasive note to a man whose vote would decide an election. After writing the note, he suddenly asked the messenger, “How much land does this man hold?” “Thirty acres.” was the reply. Upon which Disraeli remarked, “I think I had better add ‘ * * * consdeiring, sir, your stake in the county.’ After he had become prime minister Disraeli understood he must adopt some new methods. He seldom saw t members of his party and kept awa: from places, like the Carlton Club, ‘where they would be. He had concluded that & man seldom seen will become an abstract idea. His marriage was one of policy. He picked as a wife the widow of Mr. Wyndham Lewis, a woman much older than himself with an income of $25,000 & year. Definitions. Tory: Formerly the name of what is now “called the Conservative party in England. Carlton Club: ~ A famous English political club in London. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY ¥. CORY. ‘We's mischiefin’ Drandpa. He's tryin® ter keep his eye on us. F_rocks New Light Colors <. Now...you can change a last seasan’s dark mto a lovely light one for summer —with the help of Tintex Color Remover. And it’s so a‘Tgk. safe rst, take out all the origi- intex Color Remover (it and quick!” nal dye with | can’t possibly injure anything in your wardrobe that boiling water alone will not harm!). Then, with Tintex Tints and Dyes tint it to one of the light Paris colors . . . and thus make it new, smart and lovel «++. Gothrough your ward- robe today and see how many things will respond to this color-magic. And sure, 100, to see the new Tintex Color Card at your dealer’s. Tt shows smartest colors on actual materials. o—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 8o it can be dyed a new color. Whitex — The new bluing for restoring whiteness to all :h‘z materials. at all drug, dept. stores ntex TINTS anD DYES PARK & TILFORD NEW VoRK soLE DIsTRIBUTORS STABLISHED GUARANTEES THAT TINTEX WILL PERFORM

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