Evening Star Newspaper, June 25, 1929, Page 26

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Food From Kitchen Gardens BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER, ‘Those who live in the country or who thave the pri of getting fresh fruits and vegetables a nearby farm and those who have kitchen gardens, how- ever small, realize that products have %o be enjoyed in their special seasons e SRt VEGETABLES FRESH FROM THE GARDEN MUST BE ENJOYED IN ‘THEIR SEASONS. as these come along. This is not true to the same extent where the products are bought from fine stores. These &tores have the call on the markets of the world and buy from one section and another as vegetables and fruits ripen in varying temperatures where grown. The season is thereby prolonged, be- ginning when the first products are ready to eat and continuing as long as available from the northernmost sec- tions. But even so the native fruits and vegetables as they appear are in the greatest demand. Some seasons for home grown or native products are very short. Some are quite long. These products should be enjoyed to their full by lavish use during the time. I have known green peas to have such a poor season thal only for about two weeks were they available. The weather was the cause. But how delicious was the succulent green vegetable while it lasted! One of the pleasures in having a kitchen garden even though it may be small is watching the vegetables and fruits develop in counting the time when each variety will be mature enough to have on the table, and in making epicurean events of such times. Certain vegetables and occasional fruits, such as the everbearing straw- berry. can be had during entire seasons, Most of these require consecutive plant- ings, the intervals between times vary- ing according to the product. Every farmer knows this and it is only the amateur gardener who has to learn it. But there are many “city folk” who know absolutely nothing of how vege- tables, etc., are grown and merely take it as a matter of course that they should be available all Summer long. ‘These persons miss all the joy of vege= tebles “fresh from the garden.” If they cannet have this pleasure the next best thing is to note when “native” the most of them. It is at such seasons only the farm products are most de- licious whether picked from one’s own garden or bought from the green grocer, (Copsright. 1929 DAILY DIET RECIPE. CUCUMBER LYONS. VEGETABLES. Cucumbers, medium size, two. Butter, one tablespoonful, Paprika, one and one-fourth teaspoonfuls. SERVES 3 OR 4 PORTIONS. Peel cucumbers and cut in slices about one-half-inch thick. Add_very little water and cook gently about 15 minutes so vege- table will be tender and water all absorbed. Dress with butter and dash of paprika. Good with broiled steak or broiled ham- burger, DIET NOTE. _Recipe furnishes some fiber, lime, iron and vitamins A and B. Can be eaten by normal adults of average, over or under weight. WORLD FAMOUS STORIES THE RIGHT WAY BY LEO TOLSTOY. Tolstoy, 1828-1910. was a Rus- suthor of "‘War ‘and_Peace." “The Kri {Gount Leo lar novelist, A oAnna Kar eutzer Sonmata.’’ ening,” first, according to the tradition, created so that they had no to work, nor to provide themselves shelter, clothing or food. Every lived to be a hundred exactly and immune from disease. passed, and when God looked _see it i3id. 5 ¥ : L S8 Himsel their living apart one another, each man for him- 3 fnblvut an end to that, He made it cold from and hunger, build themsel flocks an: *Labor Ml d herds. ‘will-unite them,” thought God to . “No man can hew and draw ‘wood, build dwellings, forge im- plements, sow, reap, spin, weave or make clothing alone. Therefore men will be forced to recognize that the more they associate in labor, the more will 'Hlmduu and the more com- 1 their life be. This cannct but unite them.” Time passed and once more God looked down to see how mankind was faring and whether it were now re- jolcing in its lot. Yet he found men even worse n before. True, they worked together (they could not do otherwise), but not all together, for they had divided themselves up into groups, each of which strove to depute its labor to another, as well as hindered its fel- lows, ‘and wasted both time and en- :;P in quarreling. This was bad for aof them. Seeing this, God decided to make men ignorant of the precise moment of their th, as well as liable to die at any e, instead of at a hundred exactly. e expedient He justified to Himself us: “When men know that they may die at any moment they will be too careful of their lives (hanf{ng, as those lives will be, by a single thread) to rage against one another, and so put in jeopardy those hours of life which may be allotted them.” Yet things turned out quite other- ‘wise, and when God looked down once more to see how mankind was faring, He found that the life of men had in no ‘way altered for the better. Some men were stronger than others, and so were able to avail themselves | of the fact that death might come at any moment to intimidate those weaker proportion of them and threatening the rest. ‘Thus an order of life had arisen in which a certain number of strong men and their followers did no work at all, but, consumed themselves in ‘idle- ness, while the weaker were forced to work beyond their strength, and de- teriorated for want of rest. Each of these two classes feared and detested the other, and the life of manl became more unhappy than ever. 3 Seeing how things stood, God de- termined to make use of the last remedy of all. This is to say, He sent every kind of disease among men; for He thought that when they had become gubject to-disease they would - realize { | | | that the healthy man must pity and assist the sick, so that d4f he himself fell ill, he, too, might receive assistance from the healthy. Then for a time God let mankind alone; but when He lJpok=d down once more to see how . s were getting on, He found that from the wery moment when men had been made sub- Ject to discase their life had been growing steadily worse. The diseases which God had thought would unite them had only served to sunder them more. Those who had been used to compelling others to work for them now compelled them also to wait upon them when sick, although they them- selves took no thought whatever for other sufferers. At the same time, those who were thus compelled not only to work for others, but also to wait upon them when sick, were so overburdened with labor that they had no opportunity to attend to their own sick folk, and 50 had to leave them helpless. More- over, some discases were recognized jo be infectious, so that, dreading the in- fection, many men would neither go near the sufferers nor consort with t)’l;ose who had come in contact with them. Then God said to Himself: “Since by these means I have failed to bring men to understand wherein lies their true happiness, I will leave them to arrive at that result through their tribulations.” ‘Thenceforth, therefore, God left mankind alone, Abandoned to their own devices, men lived for a long time without under- standing the means by which it was possible for them to live happily. But at last some of them began fo realize that labor need not of neces- sity mean for some a means of sub- jecting their fellows and for others a kind of penal servitude, but rather a ml;‘l;ie of joy, uniting all men in one. e face of that death which threatened every man hourly, the only prudent course for them was to make up their minds to spend in concord and. love such years, months, days, hours or minutes as might be ordained them. Lastly, they realized not only that disease should not be a source of di- vision among men, but that, on the contrary, it should be a source of loving good-fellowship, ‘When Frying Scallops. Expert cooks have a way of intro- ducing additional flavor to the usual fried scallops by pounding crisply cook- ed bacon to a powed and mixing this with the crumbs or flour in which the | scallops are rolled previous to being than - themselves, by killing a certain | friend or sauted. If large, the scallops are improved by brief parboiling before being crumbled and fried. MENU FOR A DAY, BREAKFAST ‘Melons ‘Wheat Cereal with Corned Beef Hi Hot Corn Bread Coffee LUNCHEON ‘Tomatoes Stuffed with Crab Meat Hot Baking Powder Biscults Strawberries with Cream Lady Fingers, Tea DINNER Cream of Onion Soup Cheese Souffle French Fried Potatoes Lima Beans Romaine, French Dressing Date Pudding, Custard Sauce Coffee CORN BREAD Cream one-half cup sugar, one tablespcon butter, two eggs, one and one-half cups flour, two tea- spoons baking powder, pinch salt, ons-half cup milk, two table- spoons Indian meal. Bake in quick oven. Cream ash LADY FINGERS Rub one-half pound butter into one pound flour; add one-half in rind fruits and vegetables are quoted as in: +| the market and at such times to make | 1 i wise, they realized that, in the | THE EVEN WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. S. Patent Office, When wasbing machines had not been heard ¢f end the genial “old mammy” used {S have a half day's ironing done at 8 a.m. with the old- time irons and a charcoal fire? Lessons in English BY W. L. CORDON. ‘Words often misuséd: While *“com- modious” and “convenient” are syn. onymous, & nice distinction is to w “commodious” to imply expanse, “con- venient” to express suitability. “The | hall is commodious and convenient.” Often mispronounced: infidel; second | 1 as in “it,” not as in “ice,” accent first | syllable. | Often misspelled: Benjamin; not ine. Synonyms: tear, rip, rend, lacerate, split, cleave. 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: Amenity; pleasant- | ; suavity; geniality. “Then followed | xchange of harmless amenities.” NANCY PAGE Want Good Coffee? Lois Makes It for You. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE, n an e Roger’s sister had come to call at | her brother's home. Lois served coffee | which Roger said was his idea of & good | cup of coffee. “Do you mean the cup is good or | the coffee is good?” asked his sister. “by jove, I mean both. I like the cup, always did. It holds enough to suit me, and I sure do like the coffee.” “How did you make it, Lois?” And | Lois started a long monologue. “Well, I learned mapy things about coffee at a coffee demonstration and | lecture the other day. “In the first place, it is not as im- portant as we used to think that the coffee be packed or ground in any cer- tain way. Nor is it necessary that it be freshly ground. Of course, that all helps, but other factors are now known to be equally, if not more, important. “In m coffee, choose a pot which has a spout opening down far enough in the pot so that the amount o water you put in will go over the {op of the spout opening where it joins the pot. If you don’t the aroma will escape through the uncovered opening. If you usually make coffee for six and a GOOD cup or || COFFEE || have a coffee pot that is large enough, do not use that same pot when making coffee for two unless the spout is placed | low enough so that even two cups of | coffee will close the opening. “Then coffee when made should be poured into some other container. The grounds should be emptied, the pot rinsed and the coffee put back in. It is | the slow dripping from grounds in top of percolator or 'continued immersion | of grounds which makes coffee bitter. | And coffee is best in flavor when made | in an enamel or porcelain pot.” Veal Steak. Roll a one-inch-thick veal steak. which has bcen cut into servings, in | flour, blending with salt and pepper. | Fry in hot bacon fat until a golden | brown on both sides. Turn down the flame, cover with sour cream, dash lib- | erally with paprika, then add one sliced | onion if desired. Cover tight and let | simmer slowly for one hour. When done, the veal will be very tender and will have a delicious flavor. . 0 were spoiling _ our home’. .. I couLpN’r seem to-rid my home of flies and mos- quitoes. They were a terriblz pest, and bothered my husband terribly. I tried everything, Finally I got Black Flag Liquid. I'sprayed it around, and it worked beautifully. It killed every fly and mosquito quickly, My husband was so pleased! BLACK FLAG 35-... LIQUI y NG STAR, WASHINGTON, passions. | women at peace with themselves and ‘the world. | look up to you and respect you, you are laying the foundation stone of good | soldiers to obey him when he issued a command and if he let them argue with | shame and she had a right to utter a word of warning when she saw you making Black Flag also cdmes in Powder form. Equally deadly. D. C, TUESDAY, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX A Modern Mc her Resents Her Mother-in-Law’s Expert Advice on Child-Training—Straight Talk to Woman Who Wrecked Friend’s Home for Fun. DEAR MISS DIX: I have a rather disobedient son of 5 years and my mother- in-law told me that I was too slack in disciplining hi:), which I resented as being none of her business. She is old-fashioned and believes in enforcing obedience, while I am a modern mother and believe that I will eventually persuade my son to obey me. I admit that my mother-in-law has successfully reared a fine family of eight sons and six daughters, besides three children of a near relative. Her sons are all outstanding men in their professions, one is a judge and another high in the foreign service of our Government and they all give their mother credit for their success. My husband is very fond of his mother, but she has ceased to visit us and I am troubled because I do not want to cause the first rift in the family. But do you not think I did right to resent her advice? TROUBLED MOTHER Answer: No, I think you did a very wrong and foolish thing, and that instead of being offended at your mother-in-law’s advice you should have been grateful for it and profited by it. Any woman who has brought up 17 children to be fine men and women has certainly qualified as an expert in child-training, and you should consider it a privilege to sit at her feet and gather up her words as pearls of wisdom. According to the old adage the proof of the pudding is in the eating and you may be very certain that the success of your mother-in-law's method proves it to be the right one. Analyze he technique and you will see that it consists in tenderness combined with firmness, in kindness backed up by authority. She laid down certain laws for the guldance of her children and she forced them to respect them and that is why they love and honor her and why they are strong characters instead of wild men and women who are the playthings of their own ‘The trouble with you, dear lady, and with so many other mothers who do not enforce any discipline on their children, is that you run to extremes. You do not draw any line between authority over a child and grinding tyranny. You do not differentiate between switching a naughty child “and beating it to death with a club. You make no distinction between making a child behave and crushing out its individuality. In that way you justify yourself in your weak-kneed attitude in letting your children do as thry please and being a law unto themselves, in spite of the fact that many a time you have seen a fretting, whining, miserable child turned into a beaming pacifico by being turned across some humane person’s lap snd given a spank that regenerated it morally and certainly didn't injure it physically. Also you are bound to admit that the hapoiest and most contented children you know are those that are the most firmly controlled by their parents. The truth is that children who are law-breakers are no more happy than adult criminals. You would never go to the jails to find serene-minded men and Nor will you find joyous, contented children who defy their parents’ authority and do the things they are forbidden to do | ‘When you teach your child to obey you, you are not only teaching him to citizenship in his soul because you are teaching him to obey the law. Probably every one of the young criminals who fill our courts had mothers who never enforced any discipline on them and never taught them to obey. And what's the big idea in persuading a child to obey you instead of making him do it? What sort of an army would a general have if he persuaded his him and march on the enemy if they finally decided they would like to do it? I have heard other mothers declare that they never said “must” to a child. Yet life is one long “must” for every one of us. Duty doesn't come wreathed with roses, Hardships are not guilded. Work isn’t a pastime. As long as we live we must do things we don’t want to do, we must make sacrifices that it galls us to make, we must bow our heads to the rod #nd the sooner we learn this the earlier we learn to control ourselves and to do our duty because it is our duty the better it is for us. You say you resented your mother-in-law’s advice about how you were rearing your child because it was none of her affair, but it was. The child is her | son’s son, bone of her bone and flesh of her flesh, heart of her heart, as dear to her as her own ¢thild and nothing else in the world is more important to her than how it turns out. It bears her name that it will carry on to honor or WI a fatal mistake in its rearing. ‘Therefore, if you will take my advice you will ask your mother-in-law's pardon and follow her suggestions about disciplining that self-willed little boy to the end that he may grow up into being the kind of man his father and his uncles are. Grandma’s recipe for bringing up gentlemen instead of hoodlums evidently works. e e DOROTHY DIX. MISS DIX: I had a woman friend, one of the finest and truest that ever lived. She loved e dearly and proved it by many acts of kindness, I am a widow with no home ties and her house was always open to me and I spent much time there. Now my friend had a husband about whom she was crazy and who was really very fond of her, but just for fun and the sport of the thing I took him away from her, although I didn't care a thing about him I broke up their home and broke the woman’s heart and now my friends are cutting me because of it. I think now I did wrong because I am in love with a man who is 12 years younger than I am and I wouldn't want anybody to take him away from me, but don't you think my friends are taking ‘this too seriously and do you think I forfeited this woman’s friendship forever? I want her back because she was always my shelter in time of storm. MRS. X. Answer: I have never heard of a more dastardly act than yours, Mrs. X. Murder is a lesser crime than breaking a woman's heart and wrecking her home and it is almost inconceivable that any woman could be so cruel as to find pleasure in torturing a sister woman, It would have been some palliation 'of your offense if you had fallen in love with the woman’s husband and were the victim of a passion you could not conu;::’.nl‘atnt ym.lllu:"el yourself :mmut é)lwuu hll;: your treachery when you say you care for the man and were only amusing yourself by pl; r arts and wiles upon him to win him away from his wife. e Here was a happy and peaceful home with & husband and wife in it who loved each other and they opened their doors and took you in and made you welcome at their fireside. "And you repay their kindness by jollying and flattering the husband and vamping him and then when you have disillusioned him about his wife, coolly chuck him over. You tear the very soul out of the woman, who has been goodness itself to you, with jealousy and leave her without husband or home. What a pity you live s0 late in the world’s history. You would have made such a dandy little torturer in the inquisition because you have no pity nor compassion in you. I think your friends are perfectly right in cutting you You ‘are too dangerous to have around. A venomous snake would be a safer guest. Wickedness is not always punished in this world, but inasmuch as you are going to marry a man 12 years youn; T than yourself you are pretty sure to get yours and suffer pang for pang for what you have made another woman endure in seeing a younger amd prettier woman take her husband from her. DO! AR MISS DIX: ML ROTHY DIX, DE Is it a sign that your husband doesn’t love you when he fails to kiss you when he' les it is, for my husband says that he loves me’and 1t is just because es for work in the morning? My friends say he has so worries on his mind that he forgets these little things. R D. D. BOOSTER. Answer: Certainly it s no sign your husband doesn’t love you because he doesn't glve you a peck on the cheek every time he starts out to work. There | is. nothing that has less significance to it than the “habit kiss” that a husband |and wife exchange when they are both thinking about something else and planning the day’s work. I would rather have one kiss that me because he felt like it and wanted to kiss m s, e e than a million duty kisses. DOROTHY DIX, Omelets. Rice with peas—Heat and season one cupful of peas with salt, pepner and a teaspoonful of sugar. Beat well the whites and yolks of two eggs separately. Mix one cupful of cooked rice with half a teaspoonful of salt through the egg yolks, then fold in the egg whites. Melt one tablespoonful of fat in a hot omelet pan. Cook the omelet in a moderate oven until the egg is done, then score through the center and fold and pour the hot peas around it. Foamy omelet—Beat two egg yolks until light, add one-fourth teaspoonful of sals, a little cayenne pepper, one teaspoonful of butter and one ‘table- spoonful of milk. Beat two egg whites very stiff and beat into the yolks. Put the mixture into a buttered pan and cook over a low fire. Do not remove the cover from the dish during the first five minutes of cookihg or the omelet will be heavy. When set, re- move the cover and place in a hot oven to brown the top. 'Serve at once. . Easiest way to- lean up your gas stove SoAk greasy burners and grids “in_solution of Red Seal Lye. Grease dissolves like snow on a hot stove. Anothler valuable sugges- tion. Wash garbage pail occasionally with Red Seal. It quickly, most econom- ically cleans and purifies many things in the home. All Iye—it dissolves in- stantly, and rinses entirely away. Get it at your store RED SEAL LYE Msgs. J.J. L. ©1929,8.F.Ca. 15¢, and up. 7 JUNE 25, - 1929. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Drandpa say we is “leadin’ him a dog’s life"—but he ain’t so jolly 'bout it as Nippy. i (Copyright, 1929.) BRAIN TESTS ‘This is a test of progressions. Allow three minutes. Each series of numbers shown below follows a definite order of progression which may be readily understood by careful inspection. ‘The obj to write the number that should mext in order in each sequence. 1- 2- 3- 4- 5—— Next in Example: order 6. (A) 1- 3. T- 90— (B) 1-1 - 11- (C) 1+ 2- 4« 8= 16—, (D) 3- 9~ 27- (E) 1- 4- 9- 16~ 25— (F) 1- 2- 3- 7- 8- 9- 13- 14- 15— (G) 1- 10- 2- 9- 3- 8- 4——— (H) 1- 10- 100- 1000—— 18- 54— O 2 3- 4- 44— 16— Y- 1- 2- 3- 4= 8~ 12- Answers to the Above Tests. The correct numbers that follow in the various progressions are: A, 11; B, 12; C,32; D, 81; E, 36; F, 19: G, 7; H, 10,000; I, 162; J, 4; K, 22; L, 32. Abe Martin ga)'s:' SRR PITALITY "%@(ms Well, I've seen the newspaper pictures of all the principals in the Cameola Soutar roller skatin' queen murder mystery at Valpariso, Ind., an’ I'm in favor o' lettin’ it remain ferever a mystery. ‘Those who have seen the new one- dollar bil insist that it's stil too big FEATURES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Coiffure for Growing Hair. Dear Miss Leeds—(1) I have been let- ting my hair grow for a year and it is only down to my shoulders. It is long enough to do up but I have trouble in arranging it. Please suggest a coiffure. (2) How can I make my hair grow faster? MARY. Answer. (1) You may arrange your front hair in the most becoming way, that is, with a center or side part or brushed straight back with waves around the forehead and temples. Divide the back hair into two equal sections and twist each, Cross the right section over the left one, twist it in a small loop and pin it flat against your head on the left side of the center back. Twist the left-hand section of hair intaa similar loop and pin it firmly on the right side. This gives a pretty butterfly-bow effect, (2) Build up your general health by right diet and hygienic living. Be sure that you are not underweight. Give your scalp a good massage for 10 minutes at bedtime and again in the morning. Brush and comb your ha#f well every day. LOIS LEED! A Drooping Mouth. Dear Miss Leeds.—How can drooping corners of the mouth be corrected? Art they due to worry and will they go away if I stop worrying? I sometimes have a drawn feeling about the mouth. My skin is fair, fine and dry. I have been cleansing my face with cleansing cream at night and using water in the morning but I think the cream grows hairs. A skin specialist once .gave me a recipe for a cleansing oil con- taining olive oil, distilled water, glycerin and a few drops of garbolic acid, but I thought it was too strong for my skin and not nourishing enough, so I stop- LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Me and pop was taking a wawk, me asking questions and pop ansering about every other one, and pop sed, Here he comes now, the unspeakable ;kunk. Im going to let on I dont see im. Meening some man coming up the street. Being a fat man with a thin cane and & wax mustash, and pop per- tended to look in a store window till he went pass, me saying, G, pop, whats a matter with him? | He played the meenest trick on me that one human bean could play on | another, pop sed, and I sed. Why, pop, | what did he do? and pop sed, Its rather an intricate story, but Il try to make it clear to you. 2 And we kepp on going, rm saying, T never liked that man, and yet I had nuthing definte agenst him, and neither did anybody elts as far as I could ever find out. He was just & man that I dident like, and yet he seemed to lead a blameless life and treet his emloyees well and give money to the needy, so for years I was unable to have the sat- isfaction of slandering him in public. And then came my grate moment, he asked me to lend him 5 dollers, pop sed. G, , I bet you told him to go to the dickens, didn’t you? I sed, and pop sed, I did not, I gladly lent him the money because I was sure the dubble died scoundrel would never pay it back, and after that whenever his name was me 5 dollers. And for several weeks, Yerhnpo the happiest weeks of my life, injoyed myself in that innocent manner, and every time I saw the un. Speakable rascal I avoided him in cass he®mite axsidently pay me back the 5 dollers, and one day he got me in a corner and forced it on me and led my harmless fun forever, and thats t‘l"l k'. I call & low down contemtible c] it back, so it you ever get me you can say whatever you wunt rabout the 20 cents, I sed. A drowning man catches at a straw, pop sed. "Meaning he would. ‘Wich he did. fer all it buy. (Copyright, 1929.) v&‘ —_— B Alexandria, Egypt, has a revival of the ballet, ! | diet. LEEDS. ped using it. Should I use it again nstead of water for cleansing my face? Will it take away the lines around my mouth and eyes? ELAIN] Answer. T could advise you better if- I knew your age, height, weight and general state of health. When the facial mus- cles begin fo droop prematurely the cause is some form of ill health which has depressed the muscular tone of the body. First, then, you aould build un vigorous health by right diet and hy- gienic living. Have a thorough physical examination by a doctor to see what is wrong. Have your teeth examined /to see if there is any infection in your mouth. Sleep at least eight hours each night. Avold nervousness ené woiry. Perhaps you are not eating enough fatty foods like cream, butter and cheese; follow your doctor's advice on Perhaps you are not getting enough vitamins from raw vegetables and fruit. As to local treatments, I should suggest a cleansing oil made of 215 ounces of sweet oil, 2 drams cologne water and 5 drops tincture of benzoin. It will not grow hair; neither do most commercial creams. The growth of fa- cial hair is controlled by the internal chemistry of the body and sometimes the hairs begin coming in thicker than usual without any external cause. Wipe off the cleansing oil thoroughly, then pat muscle oil on the wrinkles. In the morning you may wash your face with warm water softened with oatmeal, rinse, dry and apply your pow- der base, which should be of an oily type. The eye wrinkles may be due to eye strain, LOIS LEEDS, (Copyright For Salads POMPEIAN PURE VIRGIN IMPORTED OLIVE OIL At All Good Stores: Beauty, Unaffected W:ter, Sun or Winllby. Gives your skin & “weather proof” complexion that re- beautiful under all Far superior * 6 it does not streak, Spot or rub off. Made in White, Flesh, Rachel and Sun-Tan, Send 10c. for Trial Si Ferd. T. Mopkins & n, INSECTS ; WITHOUT ;’OISON ee Brand "INsecT POWDER or Liquid Spray Liguid—30c, 75¢ and $1.25. Gun—~30¢ Powder—10c, 25c, S0c and $1.00 e, JDEAD) Turns Insects Upside Down Gun—25¢ WOt Wry arensvos: Mgy

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