Evening Star Newspaper, July 22, 1929, Page 24

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WOMAN’S PAGE. Jacket Costumes BY MARY MARSHALL. ‘The trim linen jacket suits worn ‘with tuck-in separate blouses have come to give us a welcome change in street apparel—after the weeks and weeks when every one seemed to be wearing flowered chiffon. And in the days that THIS SMART WHITE LINEN SUIT IS WORN WITH A PRINTED SILK | BLOUSE IN SHADES OF BLUE. THE WHITE HAT HAS A BAND OF BLUE. | remain of Summer we shall doubtless see more and more of these convenient | jacket costumes. If your Summer | wardrobe stands in need of replenish- | ing you could not do better at this late date than to buy, make or have made a jacket costume of this sort. There | MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE HOLLYWOOD, Calif., July 22.—This | is the village of Paradox. The Anti-| Cigarette League works overtime here. Not that it does a bit of good. so long as writers think the thoughts flow more freely, actresses and actors think the flesh gathers more slowly and di- rectors think the action speeds up con- siderably when there is a fag between the lips. Here is the hamlet where endurance | fiyers have their locks permanently | waved before facing the camera, and | for news reel, movie close-ups, press | cameras and thousands of fawning fe males who will embrace the fiye landing Jovian curls canuot be beat. | Out here the Main street boys bead | their lashes, blondine their = water- | waved hair, put their Summer tan on | from a bottle and wear the dizziest | colors in the known world. Out here our ladies have courage and character—the courage to wave to an | old friend across the theater aisle and say: “It's me, dearie, Mabel—let the hair g0 dark- again. He-hee, no wonder | you didn’t know me—" | | plece suit and separate blouse for street | nounce er-min, e as in “her,” i as in | ter.” phantom, spirit. | vocabulary by mastering one word each | Her natural beauty is enhanced by such | gowns as Hollywood has not seen these | on [ for Midsummer are very smart suits of black linen, which have been worn by smart women with crisp ruffed or jabot blouses of white linen. They are also seen in pastel colors and are especially attrac- tive in white, when instead of the all- white blouse one may get a more in- teresting effect from a blouse of figured silk. “This Midsummer vogue for the linen suit indicates, it seems to me, that after mueh hesitation American women are following the lead of smartly dressed French women in favoring the two- ! wear. There is every reason to believe that the two-plece suit will be much more generally accepted here this Au- tumn than it was last Spring. It is rather odd that Americans have been so slow to adopt the fashion of the tuck-in blouse—because several sea- sons ago there was a tendency on the part of certain flappers to adopt this mode of wearing the separate blouse— even before Paris dressmakers had be- gun to make use of the revival. Now— as every one knows—the tuck-in blouse is much more often seen in France than here, and leading designers have made use of the tuck-in blouse effect in many of thelr smartest new cresses. This week's diagram pattern shows how to cut and make one of the new camisoles that button in the back. If you would like a copy, please send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Mary Marshall, care of this paper, and it will be forwarded to you. | Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. often misused: Do not say ‘Words Say “Either “Either are’ likely to go.” is likely.” Often mispronounced: Ermine. Pro- “sin,” accent first syllable. Often misspelled: Calvary (the place where Christ was crucified); cavalry (horsemen). Synonyms: Ghost, apparition, spec- se a word three times | Word study Let us increase our and it is yours.’ day. ‘Today's word: Prodigality: ex- {ravagance; profuse liberality. “It wasteful prodigality.” MERRICK. Phil Plant—graces a midnight boule- vard cafe in a backless gown of blue moire and a coat of honey-colored vel- vet with fox pelts of the same tone at neck and sleeves, She is easily the most exquisite figure in the village eve at present. many day. Hats are in the discard for the moment. Village belles have taken coyly to the parasol. This revival of an ancient feminine custom is somewhat amusing. It is| hly practical, in reality. For the e-head is far more comfortable in closed car, and with the sun’s rays what they are—around 92—open Cars just aren’t. Mary Faton's contribution to the new feminism is & ruffly thing which might have been used as a flirting | weapon in a “Floradora” number. Pale yellow silk all covered with yellow net and with pastel ribbon streamers. Mary Eaton is very blonde, and goes in for pale and lovely colors as a set- ting for her natural gold. 'And the character to eat a half head | “"Sne’ afternoon I discovered Ethel | of lettuce with a bit of salt and lemon | gent Armstrong bronzed the color of on it with all the flair a_gourmst an Indian, and with a white moire brings to the highest art of a European | parasol further to intensify the effect. chef, Gretta Garbo was carrying an oiled Things change rapidly here, Thres silk affair which looked like a butter: months ago Harold Lloyd told me he wouldn't put any dialogue into his next release. one on which he was then work- ing, because small theaters were not equipped with apparatus to give such pictures to the public. Today Lloyd is making a 100 per | cent talkie of that same silent. And | that. in a nutshell, tells you America’s reaction to the talking picture. In the face of it a few fanatics still hold to the theory that the public is longing for the good old silent film. 1t is hard to bring up the dear pub- lic's standards of appreciation through the honesty system. A few unprincipled creatures spoil beauty for the mass of | people. | Mrs. William Fox combed Europe for lovely things to put into her husband’s new chain of theaters. The latest of | these, on the West coast, was his par- | ticular pride. So the dressing room | was equipped with a set of tollet articles which had once graced the toilet table of a famous sixteenth cen- tury beauty. The exquisite bottles and trays were worth a fortune. And some enterpris- ing thief stole them on the opening night. Such people bring the tin-comb- on-a-chain type of public utility into vogue, and not without reason. Bennef ormerly Mrs. Constance LET CLOROX DO TH (lKG{ fly wing, and was smart and origin Lucile Gleason's sunshade was natural crash with raffia roses woven on to it. For the benefit of those curious about how Jeanne Eagels is going to do “Jealousy” in a talkie, be it known that the verneuil play from which Eugene Waltes made the story as given in_America will be drafted. In the original the actually is in the story. In Waiter's play he is only & name. This latter makes him a menace instead of what he really is in the original—a very sympathetic character, Eagels is making pictures that are not along the conventional lines of box-office success. The courage which inspires such choice is commendable. The public will not know whether or | not it wants strong subjects with an | unpleasant flavor brilliantly presented unless it has an opportunity to see some of them. \ ‘The Eagels vehicles have strength and bitterness. More than that, they are well done. Perhaps a public cloyed by the saccharinities of the usual movie will like quality for a change. Time, will tell;, but the public will have td be the arbiter of its own destiny. She: I adore tennis—do you adore tennis? wife's lover He: Y-E-A-H—come over some after: noon and bring your court with you. E JOBS YOU DREAD ) your White. Clothes GRAY/orYELLOW q.l'lousands of women ing this question say: * answer- *Since I began using Clorox my white clothes are white.” And might! well add —"‘and sterile too.” Clorox in the soaking suds or first rinse bleaches, deodorizes and disinfects—all at once. No need to boil! Use Clorox in wash- ing machine or tubs. Just follow directions on bottle. Bleaches « removes stains destroys odors « kills germs SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY ¥. CORY. Me an’ Baby has a sure-'nough in- vertation to a party at Tommy True- man’s! ‘Iss is where he say he goin’| ter be d'lighted. (Copyright, 1929.) NANCY PAGE Frozen Fruit Salad Is Frozen Delight BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. It was a_sultry hot day and Nancy knew that Peter would enjoy something cooling and refreshing, She planned & frozen fruit salad. This was both salad | and dessert. Black coffee was served | with it and Peter relaxed and looked 0 | rested after the dinner that Nancy | knew she had chosen wisely in plan- | ning the meal. At that, frozen fruit salad is not hard | to make if you have an iceless refrig- erator. The mixture is packed in the | freezing trays and left for four or five | hours. If one wants to use ice and salt | it is wise to pack the salad into round | baking powder tins which have been | tested against leakage. These are filled. | the covers are put on and a strip of ofled cloth wound round the junction | of cover and can. This precludes any | salt water getting in. The tins are| packed in equal quantities of ice and salt and left undisturbed for three to | four hours. At serving time the cylinder | is unmolded and sliced. Here is her recipe: One-half table- spoonful gelatin softened in one-quar- | ter cupful cold water and dissolved over | hot water. Cool and add one cupful lime carbonated beverage, one cream cheese mashed and seasoned with two | tablespoonfuls cream, two tablespoon- fuls lemon juice, one-eighth teaspoonful | salt. Cut one cupful canned pineapple | in pleces, one-half cupful marshmal- | lows, one banana sliced and one cupful | canned Queen Anne cherries. Combine these and then fold in three-quarters | cupful mayonnaise and two cupfuls heavy cream whipped. If you do not care for flavor of lime omit it and sub- stitute one cupful boiling water. In this case the gelatin is dissolved in the boiling water and not over hot water, and the lemon is increased to four ta- blespoonfuls. Would you like some other salads? Write to Nancy Page. care of this paper. inclosing 8 stamped. seif-addressed envelope, asking for her Balad Leafiet No. 2, (Copyright, 1029.) Charles Pickens, a youth of Bedworth, England, was recently arrested for dam- aging a tree, and was dismissed by the judge with the warning not to again besmirch a great name. D. |\ DorothyDix Are Born That Way, and That Is the Trait That Has Done More Than Anything Else+to Prevent Their Progress. 7 C., MONDAY, Finds Shoul The;n So 1d Girls Be " Snobs? Nature PRDP‘. ROGERS of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in his parting advice to the students, urged them to be snobs, and told them that it was just as easy to marry the boss’ daughter as the stenographer. Now his wife tells girls that it is just as important for them to be high-hat and snobbish as it is for their brothers, 4 Which is, of course, the truth. Also, it is equally disastrous in both cases, for there is no other one thing on earth that so thoroughly handicaps a youngster of either sex as snobbery in a democratic country, where everybody thinks he is not only as good as anybody else, but a little better, and where the crowning insult that you can offer any one is to patronize him. However, to advise girls to cultivate snobbery is a work of supererogation. 1t is gilding the lily and painting the rose, for most women are born snobs at heart and they take just as naturally to high-hatting as a duck does to water. Look around you in any city and you will see that the most exclusive matron and the one who is most determined to keep all climbers out of the sacred inner circle of soclety is a lady who has just jimmied her way in with a golden crowbar. No princess of the. blood royal lays such stress on blood 2s the woman who couldn’t have told you the name of her grandfather until she hired a genealogist to manufacture a family tree. When a couple prospers and rises in the world it is the wife, not the husband, who insists on leaving the old neighborhood and going to live where | they will know people who don't want to know them and who scnds the children off to fashionable schools and forgets the very names of the old neighbors and friends who helped them rurse their sick and laid out their dead and split their last $5 with them when the rent was ovtr‘du! and there was no money to pay it. YOU often hear a self-made man brag of his humble beginning and tell of being ragged and half-starved and of the miserable jobs by which he worked his way up, but you never hear a woman admit that she is a self-made woman and boast of how she used to wash and scrub and pinch pennies, will ever concede is taat she was an impoverished aristocrat who had been robbed of her fortune. Hence, it seems gratuitous advice to urge girls to be snobs, and, as a matter of fact, snobbery has been women's bane and is the one thing that has done more than anything else to prevent their rmgru&, because it has filled the entire sex with the idea that they are too g to do plain, honest work and that if they work at all it must be at some highfalutin’ employment that has a romantic or iiterary or artistic halo about it. It is what makes a million girls aspire to be movie actresses or dancers or poets to one who is wiling to be a good cook. Tt is only in the last few years that women have divested themselves of their | snobbery enough to be willing to admit that they work for money and to take a pride in their jobs. the salesgirl's only reason for standing behind a counter was because it gave her such an opportunity to study human nature. And the boarding-housekeeper failed because she felt herself too grand to 0 to market and buy good food and see it properly cooked. And the stenographer failed because her employer wanted some one who knew how to spell to write his | letters instead of some one who affected to believe that she was attending a pink tea and that her mission was to ornament the office instead of turning out efficient work. And the saleswoman failed because customers wouldn’t stand for | a languld grand lady who condescended to wait upon them and who smiled | superciliously at them when they wanted stockings at $1.50 a pair instead of $10. ‘Women have only begun to succeed in business since they learned to scrap their snobbery and to be honest about why they work and proud that they have enough intelligence and grit to hold down a fob instead of being ashamed of it. It is not the girls who high-hat their customers whose commissions fatten their pay envelopes. It is the friendly, human, interested Miss Smith or Miss Jones, that customers ask for. So to the girl who has to make her own living no advice could be more fatal than to tell her to be . &nob. OR will any girl ever reach the altar by high-hatting men. Dear Lady Disdain was a hit, according to old-fashioned novels in our great-grandparents’ time, but she wouid be a flop with the modern youth. He isn't going to spend his time and his money taking out a girl who acts as if she were a millionairess and considered him a cheap skate. The girl who tries this and who, when a boy takes her to the movies, discourses about how fine a $7-a-seat play was or w when a boy takes her out in his flivver, turns up her ncse about it and talks about t high-priced ca that some other boy has never has but that one date. It is good-night for her when they part. And many a girl does herself out of & good husband by the snobbery that | makes her pretend that she is only used to riches and luxury and scorns the simple ways of life. Girls who make their own clothes at night wiil smile and say, “Oh, this is a cheap little French importation that I got for $140,” or I picked this hat up at & bargain. It only cost $50.” Or they boast of their | inability to cook and say that nothing on earth would ever induce them to go into a kitchen, and the poor young man who is just beginning to climb the ladder of success figures out that his entire salary wouldn’t provide this snobbish lady with chiffon lingerie, to say nothing of caviar, and so he decides that she isn't | the kind of wife he wants, and moves on. instead of a for in this ch man of As for advising a girl to pick out a rich man for a husband. poor one, that is equally bad counsel. even from a financial standpot land of opportunity the wheel of fortune turns so rapidly that the today is very likely to be the poor man of tomorrow and the poor man of today | the millionaire of tomorrow, and so the girl who marries for money very often The most she | Up to then the boarding-housekeeper took a few paying | guests for company: the stenographer went into an office because she was s0 | bored with society and tired of dragging around to Newport and Palm Beach, and | JULY 22, 1929. “Before long there's going to be an- other hunt for the missing link.” - (Copyright, 1929.) Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. M. J. writes: “A mother I know of has two children—a girl, 5, and a {boy, 7. The boy is very nervous, bites his nails to the quick, twists his front hair and cannot get to sleep until 11 cr 12 at night, though put to bed around 8. His meals are as follows: Two to four cups of coffee at breakfast, one to three cups of leftover or freshly made coffee for lunch and a cup of coffee and glass of milk for night. cats meat and potatoes, ‘'but refuses all vegetables. He eats eggs fried on both {sides. The mother insists that the | coffee has nothing to do with his ner- | vousness, but that he inherits it. How should this little boy be fed? I feel | with the father that the mother fs re- | sponsible for his nervousness, but I have no right to interfere.” Answer—Neither have I, Mrs. M. J., because the mother is not interested in | knowing how to feed the child. The only advice that is ever used is the advice that is really wanted. mother is satisfied with her method of feeding, and until she has some per- sonal doubts as to its effectiveness she will probably go right on making all the mistakes in’ the diet that it is possible for one mother to make and still insist that she is right. | Coffee has no place at all in the diet list of any child. I am sure you know that. Milk, or cocoa made with milk, or cereal coffee made with milk, are {the permissible drinks. The last two are simply changes from straight milk, |the cocon or cereal coffee being used |as flavors in this instance. There is practically no nourishment in _coffee, | except for the small amount of sugar and_cream used in it, 50 that this boy | might as well have so many cups of hot water for his breakfast. ~Coffee is a | well known stimulant to the nerves. It | keeps people awake and is often taken {at night just for that purpose. How blind his mother is! It would seem that any mother who had her child’s welfare at heart would at least listen to the dictates of her own good sense, {even if to no one else. She is evi- {dently fonder of the boy than the girl, vet she is feeding him as poorly as if she were deliberately trying to ruin his health. ‘This seems very inconsistent. doesn't it? to send her a feeding leaflet if she asks or it. | Mrs. 3. O. 8. writes: “I had some difficulty inducing my baby to take orange juice, and solved it this | T would eat an orange in front of baby and when she became interested enough | to reach for it I would break off a sec- | tion and let her suck it. She made ter- ribly wry faces, but came back for more. It took several attempts before FPrRATUREY." NOTED M BY J.P. Bizarre and terrible were the inci- dents _manifesting themselves after Percy Bysshe Shelley took up his resi- dence on the shore of the Bay of Spez- 2zl a. It was Spring and the atmosphere was redolent of life and hope. But in the abode of the poet apprehension and worry reigned, and sometimes stark terror invaded it. Still, it was not ‘magined that death was on its way. Sbelley's, mind was thoughts of the possible phenomencn of a dual body. Indeed, Lord Byron relates that, to ward the end of June, some close ac- quaintances saw Shelley walk into a little wood near Lerici when it was known for a fact that he had gone in the opposite direction. This was on the 29th of the month. But six days before, on the night of June 23, there had been an adventure wh'ch had curdled the blood of all the poet’s household. It was midnight. Mrs. Shelley had | gone to her room. Shelley already was |in bed. ~So, too, were their friends, | the Willilamses. | " Suddenly, loud, heart-rending screams | were heard issuing from the saloon. ‘The Willlamses rushed down from their room in alarm. Mrs. Shelley en- deavored to follow, but fainted at the |door. Entering the saloon, the Wil- IS | arousing the household. 1 shall be only too happy | | llamses found Shelley staring into the He | €VeS. | | They waked him and quieted him. Still trembling, he explained. | "'A vision had come to him of a | cloaked figure, which appeared at his | bedside and beckoned to him to follow. | " Seemingly he had risen in his sleep | and walked at the heels of this ghostly | figure to the sitting room. There the | figure turned and lifted the hood of its | cloak. The face revealed was Shelley’s own' “Are you satisfied?” With thece words, the apparition van- ished. Shelley’s screams rang out. It is true that there existed 2n ex- planation for this occurrence which | would discount Shelley’s idea of a dual | " He had been reading the drama, “El Embozado o ElI Encapotado.” In this story the hero is thwarted all his life by a mysterious personage. Finally, | when the hero forces a duel upon his persecutor, the latter unmasks, reveal- | ing himseif as the hero's own wraith {He also asks, “Art thou satisfied>” | Whereupon the hero dies, horror- stricken. Knowing this eircumstance, Sheller's vision, which many would consider no more than a nightmare, loses some of filled _with | | air in a trance, but with terror-stricken | she would accept it in any other way, | ‘;th drmw she takes it in any way of-| ! fered.” | e | An airplane without body recently | doesn't even have that by the time &! So, taking it all in all, T think that is misieading. Far better to tell them to selves, and to cultivate humtlity of spirit instead of arrogance. (Copsright. 1929.) 1s middle-aged. built at Dessau, Germany, consists of | one huge flying wing, inside of which | the advice to boys and girls to be snobs | are carried the passengers, engines and ‘ be simple and honest and true to them- | DOROTHY DIX. | { | fuel. and only the landging gear and | several fins with rudders project ex- terna! Beef Croguettes. Simmer one ?o\md of upper round or other lean beef in & small quantity of water until tender. Then grind the meat, using the fine knife of the grinder. Add one cupful of mashed potato sea- soned, or one cupful of thick cream | sauce, one teaspoonful of salt, half a| medium-sized onion, grated, and one tablespoonful of parsley, chopped. Mix well and form the meat into balls or| mold into oblong or cone shapes. Dip into & beaten egg which has been well mixed with one tablespoonful of water. Roll in finely sifted bread crumbs and place on a pan or board. Let stand for an hour or longer for the egg coating to dry. If the cream sauce is used as the binder, make it from three tablespoon- | fuls of flour and one cupful of milk. | Heat in an iron kettle any desired fat until hot enough to brown a bread | crumb in 40 seconds. Then carefully place the croquettes a wire basket, lower them slowly into the fat and cook are removed put them on a paper to absorb the excess fat, and keep warm in the oven until all are prepared. Serve with a garnish of parsley and tomato sauce. To make an oven-browned in- stead of a fried croquette, use one and one-half cupfuls of cream sauce in the mixture instead of one cupful. This is a little more difficult to mold. Shape the croquettes as described, dip them in egg crumbs and place them on a greased pan to brown in a hot oven. Carrot and Apple Pie. Cook one and one-half cupfuls of diced, cooked carrots with one cupful of diced, tart apples, one cupful of sugar, one-third cupful of raisins, one table- spoonful of vinegar and half a cupful of water until the mixture is thick and clear. Add a seasoning of nutmeg and vanilla and one tablespoonful of butter. ‘Turn into a crust that has been baked and cover with a meringue. Bake in a until & golden brown. As the croquettes | slow oven for twenty-five minutes. foronly I2minutes’ IYGEII' Bath Protecls Make this test for Body Odors Perhaps you offend not at all. This test, N ot, if it existed. What Science has Discovered The Jacts are these. Body odors have a simple cause. It has nothing to do with cleanliness. Bathe a: often as you choose and you gain protection for only a few minute- at most. So soaps, and baths and sweet-smelling lotions may be forgotten. ‘The cause of body odor is acid per- iration. Every chemist knows it. very doctor knows ific. We BCIe It is concldsive. It will put the [Free Coupon LEE SCOTT HELEN /0 SPIC LABORATORIES, INC. STOPS o I < I i i BODY ! ODOR OW learn the truth about this rplexing question. Until now you have been told you may give offense to those who come close and never know it. Also to use various remedies and still never know whether the condition had been corrected or Perspiration contains certain acids which unfortu- nately are offensive. Whether you are troubled can be shown by a simple test which wili be sent you free. It is 1 known to all chemists. Jnm. 986 416 W. Ontario Ct.; Send me a liberal supply of and the est, mlm AC) perspiral Name. Address........ unknowingly. Perhaps sent FREE, will show evidence before your own eyes. ‘Then if the test is positive in your case, simply use SpiC. It is the dis- cover;’ of a famous chemist. GPIC un- failingly and instantly changes the offensive acids, if they are present to a harmless salt. It gives rerfect pro- tection for an average of 14 hours with each application. No guess work about this, Tt 1s patented. So there is nothing else like it. . T use Spic, simply dust and rub it on the ody, under the arms, on the fret, It cannot irritate. It cannot harm. It does n .t stop perspiration. But it does absorb moisture and neutralize the acids. This soothing, splendid toi- lette powder makes the skin better. ‘This Test FREE That _i- the whole story of body odors. Now substitutescientific knowl- edge for guess work. Your druggist has Spic for 50c. Or | E clip the special pcn now. cou-, nicago, «ll. D tion FREE, post paid. THERE are manyreasonswhy all the mechanism of the General Electric Refrigerator is placed on top of the cabinet. Here are three vital reasons: 1. Refrigerating-mechanisms develop heat in the process of cooling the interior of the re- frigerator. This heat escapes and rises. Therefore, General Electric has placed the refrig- erating mechanism on top so that the escaping heat travels away from the cabinet. 2. Placing all the mechanism of the General Electric on top of the cabinet achieves maxi- mum food storage spacewithin the cabinet. It also saves floor PSYCHIC ADVENTURES OF EN AND WOMEN Shelley's Wraith Which Appeared Shortly Before His Death GLASS. its super-normal aspects. But in view of what later happened, there is abun- dant food for further speculation. He mght well have believed that he was ‘being warned of his approaching end. On another evening Shelley stood {upon a terrace above the sea, looking down upon the foaming surf. Suddenly he _cried out in agony. Rising out of the sea, he had seen | Allegra, the little daughter of Lord iByrun. who had died but a short time before. Her naked little body wet by the salty spray, she had clasped her | hands joyously and smiled at him A few weeks later, while in swim- ming, Shellev was drowned. | (Copyright, 1929.) — —o R 1 Stlcl(mg to Earth. | = Mgkl hslibesio e ] | Td like to be.a fiyer, and with the | fiyers soar, 2nd go up nine miles high- er than man had gone before. I see | the airships sailing up yonder in the | blue, and sometimzs feel like wailing, since I'm not soaring too. But I'm at heart a Tabbit, by foolish fears I'm | bound, and I've acquired the habit of sticking to the ground. I'm always be- | ing pestered by aviation fans, who seek | my shack sequestered to talk of fiying plans. They're so enthusiastic, their spirits are so high! And they make comments drastic on men who do not fiy. And when I hear them talking. s0 full of pep and mirth, I think it's | rather shocking that I still stick to earth. And I remark. “Tomorrow sail up to the sky: I'll beg or borrow a plane in which to fy. set me down as being a_has-been. I'm afraid. but now they will be seeing— Tl strive to make the grade. bit heart gives warning, but T'll sup- press my fears, and fly tomorrow morning, close to the shining spheres.” I go to bed still feeling determined on the flight, but visions most congeal- ing afflict me in the ni fat form cropping three, down-rush ng, B until ‘it hits a tree. I see the stern physicians collecting parts of mine, be- hold the sad morticians and coroners in line. And in the morning. sighing. I leave mv downv berth, and sav. ‘I won't 80 flying—I'll stick to this old earth.” | WALT MASON. 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Let us explain these 14 superiorities. n all-steel, warp-proof cabinet. an accessible temperature control. . mechanism that requires no oiling. 5...troublesome machinery eli 6...a new standard of quiet operation. 7...uponlegswithbroom-roomunderneath. 14. no installation a porcelain chilling chamber. . entire mechanism mounted on top. . maximum food sto: bsolutely no radio interference. . an unqualified two-year guarantee. minate 12. 13. . convenie! roblem whatever. e space. nt easy payments. Listen in on the,General Flectric Hour, broadcast every Saturday evening 8 to 9 Eastern Standard Time, over the N.B.C. network of 42 stations, GENERAL @ ELECTRIC ALL*STEEL REFRIGERATOR -~ NATIONAL 1328-1330 PpLY (0 [ NEW YORK AVE. - MAIN 6800

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