Evening Star Newspaper, July 25, 1929, Page 37

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WOMAN’S PAGE.’ Little Girls Fond of Accessories BY MARY MARSHALL, A fondness for the small things of | them than they do if they could do dress that we call accessories is deeply | precisely what they pleased. ingrained in us all. Little girls take Mothers realize or should realize that an interest in their handbags, parasols, | the entire effect of smartness in a litlle scarfs, gloves and jewelry before they |girl's ensemble may be ruined by too give much thought to dresses or coats, |many accessories or accessories of the ‘And among primitive folk I uppose ac- | wrong sort. Jewelry seldom adds to cessories of dress are worn before the |the smartness of a little girl's appear- dress itself. ance. Handbags, if carried at all, Scientists tell us that dress was used |should be simple and very youthful. for ornamental purposes before it was | Those shown in today's sketch are far | more attractive for the little girl than more elaborate bags made in imitation of the larger bags ®arried by their mothers, To wear under a light frock that does not need a slip, the new camisoles | that do up in the back are most con- | venient. If you would like a copy of this week's circular giving diagram | pattern and directions for making, please send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Mary Marshall, care of this paper, and it will be sent to you at once. (Copyright, 1929.) DAILY DIET RECIPE CABBAGE TUSCAN. Shredded raw cabbage, 2 cups. Canned tomato juice, 14 cup. Olive oil, 1 cup. Lemon juice, 2 tablespoons. Garlic clove, 1. Salt, 35 teaspoon. Serves four people. Wash and finely shred cab- bage. Put the olive oil, tomato juice, lemon juice, salt and gar- lic clove in a wide-mouth bottle LITTLE GIRLS, CRETONN and shake until well blended and BAG AND PARASOL TO| | let stand one hour to bring out | | garlic flavor. Then dress cab- bage with this mixture and let it soak in dressing In ice box two hours. Arrange on individ- ual salad plates. A strip of pi- mento or green pepper Or An olive or beet section could be used as a garnish, DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes much fiber, much lime, iron and vitamins A, B and C. Good in laxative diet. Can be eaten by normal adults of average or under weight and by those wishing to reduce if olive MATCH, PRINTED GREEN CHECK NAMENTED WITH APPLIED DEEP SCALLOPS. blouses, and bracelets before sleeves, | this is the case. | small things of dress. They would| | oil were omitted. FOR SILK SCARF AND BAG. RED | WHITE LEATHER DOG. WASH- worn for protection or through sense | ‘There is certainly nothing at all new | That may explain the amazing fond- | usually wear a great many more of | BEACH LEATHER BAG AND BELT, OR- ABLE WHITE KID GLOVES \‘V!Tfli of modesty. Belts were worn before | about an appreciation of accessories if | ness that little girls have for various | % The Sidewalks BY THORNTON FISHER. A vistor in the city writes: “I| have just witnessed hundreds of Gov- ernment employes emerging from the varfous buildin The sight has im- pressed me with the accuracy of my conviction—i. e. we are living in a highly standardized era. We not only work in droves but play in drovi We have lost that individuslism cher- ished by our forbears. Our super- efficiency has impaired our initiative and made machines of most of us. | I could not help meditating upon this | When I saw the 4:30 throngs departing. | —F. G” | The subject is too deep for this| column. Every now and then some in- dependent soul emits a complaint about the age of standardization. If we were not standardized, automobiles would still be the rich man's toy instead of selling for a dime a dozen. That our initiative, individual if not collective, is not impaired is proved by compara- tively recent devices provided by in- ventive minds for the convenience and entertainment of the masses. Those who serve the public must, to greater or less degree, submit to S tems of standards formulated by th charged with the administration of | order. Otherwise, listen to the rail-| road engine driver speaking to his d the conductor. ;i , Joe, old Number 9999 is due to go mow. It's 7:03. I was up late| Jast night with the boys in a little game, and I don't feel so hot this morning. What do vou say we knock | off a few hours'| and _start | \ | e you're right. My | kid was ailing last | Cuttin’ his bunch of pas- sengers as far as < the engineer, “T want to stop off | at Windham June- tion and get some | eges from a fellow. It's only 10 min- utes from the station and I'll be back in a hurry.” | * K K ok The policeman on the beat “pulls | the box.” “Yeah, it's me, sarg,” he says. “I'm | a little late, but I met a friend and we had a fanning bee. What. you say! A robbery on this beat? Weil, when I get around to it, Il investigate it. I think I'll go over to the one-arm and grab off a bite of lunch, If any- thing comes up, just give me a buzz there. Oh, say, a guy told me this| morning that somebody had lifted his | gas buggy. I told him wed try to help him out maybe tomorrow or so. Good-by!" e ‘The hospital nurse: “No, doctor, I didn't give Mr. Fidget his pills. The girls played bridge so late I overslept. I forgot to mark the chart, but a day or two won't make any difference. | By the way, I'm going to take a few hours off this afternoon to do some shopping and maybe take in a movie. Certainly, doctor, I'll be back—and when.” The actor: You say it's 8:30 and the house is crowded. Well, let 'em wait. Can't you see I'm entertaining some friends. I can’t throw my friends out of the dressing room unceremoniously just because there are customers out in | front. Start the overture at 9 o'clock, ‘{)eoplet :L ‘Woking Mosque, Surrey, Eng- of Washington and maybe I'll be able to go on by 9:30. If I can't, I'll let you know. * k% ok The telephone operator: Oh, pardon me. Were you ringing long? What number, please. Just a minute, hold the wire. The boy friend has just dropped in. Now, what was the number again, please. Isn't it a lovely day? You say you're in a hurry. Well, it's too hot to be bothered. Why don’t you send a tele- am? All right, 5 cents, please. Drop a dime or a quarter. I don't care. Pardon me—what did you say, Gertie? No, I was talking to a girl friend. Here's your party.’ * ok k% ‘The captain of a company of troops: Sergeant, my compliments to the col- cnel, and teil him the boys were up all night on the line and we simply cannot go over the top for a couple of hours, 1f Company B wants to go, let 'em go. Besides, I'm not going to fight today until the second lcoie comes through with that $2 he owes me. He's trying to welsh on his bet, and I won't take a chance on something happening to, him until he comes across. * K Xk K Radio announcer: It is now 9:04 Eastern standard time. The next num- ber was to have been Rudolpho Rigo- letti, the Italian singer. Mr. Rigoletti is just finishing a be abie to appear for five minutes. ask you to stand by until he decides to go on. At 10 or 11 o'clock, or somewhere around that time, we will present the Gimlet Boys.” SR Airplane mechan- ic to aviator: I ain’t had a chance to service your crate, loctenant. I didn't get to the hangar till late. I guess your ship's o. k. If anything happens while you're up, let me know when you get down and T'll have it fixed. I'm all in. Didn't hit the mattress till 4 bells. * Kk k% Without standardization what would be the result? String Beans. ‘With tomatoes: Cut on a board some tender string beans and cook them until nearly done, then drain and add to them two or three tomatoes cut fine, and half a dozen small new onions, sliced. Cook for half an hour or so longer, stirring occasionally, so that the tomato will form a sauce. Add salt and sugar to taste, and a good plece of butter, and serve. The tomato and onion may be cooked together before adding to the beans, if preferred. English style: Sliver some new string beans the long way. Divide if too l(lnf. Cook, uncovered, in plenty of rapidly . boiling water to which a little baking soda s been added to keep them a betier green, until tender. Add o a guart of the beans one teaspoonful each of salt and sugar. Drain, add more salt if liked, place on a hot dish, add a very liberal quantity of butter, and squeeze over the whole the juice of a lemon. Place in the oven for a minute until very hot. ‘The Moslem festival of Edid-ul-Azha, commemorating the sacrifice of Abra- ham, was observed by more than 300 i Her shoes and gloves were plain and in ' SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. ‘We's all ready to go to Tommy’s party when the clock strikes two. Now re- member, Baby, don’t put either one ob yer thumbs in yer mouf—an' come a runnin’ fer the hanky if you needs it. NANCY PAGE What Does One Pack for Visit to City? BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Lois could scarcely wait until Roger came home. A college classmate who had been traveling for two years since | graduation was to be in New York for a month and wanted Lois to be her guest at_her hotel with her for a week. Lois was of two minds. She had| never left Roger since they were mar-| ried. But she knew that it was a good | thing for all married couples to take | occasional vacations away from each other. If she went to New York Roger | could take that fishing trip. He would be doing what he enjoyed and she! would not have qualms because she had deserted him in the hot weather. But would he think she was tired, of him is she said she wanted to go by | herself? Fate played into her hands, for that evening as Roger read the paper, his eve | lighted on an advertisement of a fish- | ing trip. He read it aloud, rather| wistfully, and then Lois read her Jetter. | The result was that each one took a vacation most enjoyable. Lois packed her bags with care. She knew that she would need evening| clothes for dancing with wrap, stockings | and pumps to complete the costume. Next she packed clothes for the street. Nearly all her dresses were of small| prints. With a matching or contrasting silk coat she had the smartest possible ensemble for the street during the hot weather. She took no sports clothes since such things are out of place in a big city. | | the best of taste. She looked the kind of person she really was—a well-bred lady with clothes suited to her income and position. Howmuch should one spend for clothes? Write to Nancy Page, care of this paper. enciosing & _stamped, self-addressed en 1elope, “asking for her leaflet, Budgets Are | | Asparagus and Chicken. Out two cans of asparagus tips into one-inch pieces. Heat three table- spoonfuls of butter, add three table- spoonfuls of flour, half a teaspoonful of salt and a little pepper, and stir un- til well blended. Add one-third cup- ful of cream or milk, then another third, then the last third, stirring wel until smooth. Pour this sauce onto three to five eglgs, separated and well beaten, and lastly the asparagus pleces. Place in a well greased ring mold, set in a pan of boiling wate: d bake in a moderate oven for haif an hour or until set. Remove to a hot platter, place chicken a la king in the center and garnish with fresh mush- rooms. % To make the chicken a la king, melt two tablespoonfuls of butter, in 1t cook one cupful of fresh or canned mush- room caps peeled and broken in pieces, and half a green pepper, chopped fine. Add two tablespoonfuls of flour and half a teaspoonful of salt. Stir and cook until frothy. Add two cupfuls of cream and stir until boiling begins. Set over hot water in a double boiler. three cupfuls of cooked chicken, cut in cubes, cover and let stand to me hot. Cream one-fourth cupful of but- ter, beat in the yolks of two eggs, half a teaspoonful of onion juice, one table- | spoonful of lemon juice, one-fourth teaspoonful of paprika, and stir into the mixture. Stir until thickening be- gins, then serve. ARE YOU NERVOUS I | D* | miserated upon having another burden laid upon them. ’ Sulky Husband—Does Man Want Other Men in Wife’s Family?—How Much Money to Get Married? EAR MISS DIX: What would you do with a grouchy husband who “goes into the silence” and stays that way for days? Sometimes my husband won't speak for a month at a time and I haven't any idea what I have done to offend him. v MRS, X. Answer: ‘There !s no other fault that & husband can have gets so on a wife's nerves as sulking. Nor is there any other weapon with which a man can 8o terrorize his family as with grim silence. el . - 1t is the whip with which many a tyrant holds the trembling wretches of his household in order. He comes home to dinner, or down to breakfast, with a face as set and hard as a stone image. Something has gone wrong. He eats and drinks without speech, refusing even to ask for what he wants. He reads the paper with a portentous dumbness that strikes a cold chill to_every heart. The children hush their prattle. The dog beats it for the cellar. The atmosphere of the room goes down to zero. Pinally, the wife musters courage to ask what the matter is. Is he {ll? Has any one unintenticnally offended him? What is wrong? To all questions he responds “Nothing” in a tone of voice that indicts the universe and convicts every one about him for having criminally conspired against him. Such a man always takes credit to himself for not saying anything when he is angry, but he would be less cruel and far more agreeable to live with if he smashed the furniture and swore a blue streak. A wife can deal with a red-hot, cursing man who gives her a chance to talk back and explain, but with a dumb one she is helpless. She can only grit her teeth and endure it and suffer grinding torments. Which the grouches know, and it is why they indulge in their mean, cowardly, dumb spells. g But men .had better watch their steps. The other day a woman in. one of the Western State® was granted a divorce from her husband on the ground that he was addicted to silent sulking, and it is time that man’s chief offense against the happiness of the home was recognized, and, take is from me, if women are given a hand in the proceedings when they compile a universal divorce law they will put grouchiness first among causes that are held to entitle a woman to freedom and alimony. EAT DOROTHY DIX. AR MISS DIX: A friend and I are having an argument over a family with whom we are both intimate. The family consists of a mother and three | daughters. My friend says that the girls’ chances for marriage are poor because she thinks that no man will want to marry into a family that contains only women. Please give up your opinion on the matter. INTERESTED. Answer: It's the looks, intelligence and charm of the girls that will decide whether men want to marry them or not, not the fact that there are no men in the family. If the girls are pretty and bright and attractive, no man will give a hoot whether they have brothers or a father or not. In former times, when women were dependent and had to be supported by men, it was thought to be a great misfortune to have a family of girls. And whenever another girl baby was born the parents were openly or tacitly com- | ‘Then a suitor might have hesitated to go a-wooing to a household of females, fearing he might find, after he got married, that he had not only assumed the board bill and shopping ticket of his wife, but of her mother and sisters as well. But, nowadays, when every girl who isn't born with a golden spoon in her mouth hustles out and makes herself a nice silver one out of which to sup, a family of girls will get on their feet and become self-sustaining just about as soon |idea that no hope was possible. time, if mosquitoes interfere as a household of boys will. than the boys are. You win the argument. the only thing that keeps us from Answe seem riches to one couple would seem It is being used to plenty or little: pennies or throwing dollars away. For oung couple to be happy, t them to have riches. They can even do kisses alone. to stand between them and want, for no happier and will value your bride more if Your Baby and Mine BY MYFTLE MEYER ELDRED. Mrs. G. P. 8. writes: “Because of the enormous amount of people you influ- ence, you ought to be more careful. You hold out no hope for the correction of | ill-shaped ears after the first few months. I find that the best time to | begin this is the third year. I make a| band at least two inches deep to fit all around the head, with three inches of elastic set in, a top to fit the head and tles to fasten it under the chin. The cap is worn every night and a child soon gets used to it, and it interferes with nothing since it is light, com- fortable and well ventilated. At the age of 30 I have corrected my own ears at least 50 per cent with this applianc Outstanding ears are so disfiguring that no stone should be left unturned to try and correct them.” Answer.—I heartily applaud your last statement and I am sorry if I gave the | I still think that the sooner this is begun the more effective it will be, and I still think, also, that if baby has outstanding ears, ears that are placed by nature far out from the head, inherited from an- cestors with ears of the same shape, that it is a pretty hopeless proposition. T;’y it, of course, but don't expect mir- acles. Right in line with this argument I am copying for you a bit from Marie Montessori’s article in the current Chil: dren, the magazine for parents (cur- rent when this was written). It says: “‘Formerly mothers arduously wrapped their bables in swaddling clothes to make their legs straight; they cut through the flesh that ‘tled’ their tongues so that they should learn to speak; they put tight little caps on their heads to prevent ears from sticking out, they turned the child from side to side lest the skull bones be malformed and stroked and pulled babies’ button noses 80 that their profiles might be fine and regular! Hygiene nowadays has proved beyond a doubt that the little noses grow shapely, the ears nestle to the ead, the legs grow straight and strong through nature's own laws and that in- terference here is not only useless but harmful.” ‘This is exactly what I believe. I think it makes no difference if baby always sleeps on one-side or on his tummy, or wears a cap or whatnot, if healthy and f flies annoy you in the day- And the girls are far more likely to support mother So the man who marries a poor girl is not a bit more likely to have to sup- port his sisters-in-law than he is his brothers-in-law. D!AR MISS DIX: I am very much in love with a girl and she is with me, amount should a young couple have to marry on? I cannot give a definite answer to that question, for so much de- pends on what a young girl and man have been accustomed to. What would poverty to the next. | could manage beautifully on another couple would starve on. It is knowing how to scrimp and save and cook and sew and turn and make over things that counts. long as they have the bliss of being together. cheese and kisses, but they must have the bread and cheese. Which is only another way of saying that they must have enough money to | provide a decent shelter and good food margin for the rainy day of sickness that is sure to come and of being out of work which is liable to befall them. Above all, they must have enough money | the wolf at the door and continually harassed by debt. Don't rush matrimony until you have the price, O. B. You will be all the And, you have no idea how much punch a until you feel that every lick you hit is for her, (Copyright. 1920)) The New Sun-Tan . Complexion has captivated all. Give your skin this seductive, healthy ap- pealing beauty thru the new “Oriental Sun - Tan” shade, Natural in appearance, with- stands water and will not rub off or streak. Ideal for stock- ingless limbs. Also made in ‘White, Flesh and Rachel. GOURAUD'S (o) Send 10¢. for Trial Size T, Hopkins & Son, rw CREAM Ferd. with sleep—spray Black Flag Liquid. All the pests die. Not one escapes. For Black Flag is the deadliest insect-killer known. Also sure death to ants, roaches, bedbugs, etc.’(Money backif not absolutely satisfied.) BLACK FLAG LIQUID IRRITABLE SLEEPLESS B ehalpint DOROTHY DIX. d marrying is the lack of muney.o What . B. ‘What one couple it s being accustomed to sweating the hough married, it is not necessary for ‘without the luxuries if they have to, 50 They can be happy on bread and ‘They can’t live on and sufficlent clothing, with a little couple can be happy living in terror of | you have earned her. nd pep you can put into your job | DOROTHY DIX. | not malformed by disease or rickets he will be when grown & sum or selection of the physical characteristics of his ancestors. I wonder if wou have ever seen the small caps t'at can be bought ready- made? I think {5 rather useless to make them at home, as the readymade ones are so light and strong. If one must use them, I'd prefer the latter with soft, strong tape over the ears instead of elastic. And there is no logical reason for belleving that one must wait until the third year to begin this. I'm sure you must admit that. Potato Croquettes. ‘To each two cupfuls of hot mashed potato allow one tablespoonful of but- ter and half a teaspoonful each of salt and onion juice. Beat together and cool slightly before adding the yolk of an egg. Form the cold mixture into balls and roll in crumbs to which chopped parsley has been added, then into egg slightly beaten with one table- spoonful of cold water and into plain crumbs. Immediately before serving fry in hot fat, a few at a time, until nicely browned, drain on soft paper and serve .piled in a pyramid. Cro- quettes must be so small they will be- come thoroughly heated through in the short time it takes to brown them. The Vogue for White Means You'll Need Whitex «... Paris says white is smart end you know it’s cool . .. s0 you'll wear white and surely nced Whitex ! v+ For Whitex makes it so easy for you to keep all your fine white things looking like new...and to restore their original whiteness if they’ve be- come yellowed by sunshine and laun- dering. In fact, this new-day bluing is the only bluing that works on any white fabric — be it cotton, silk, wool, rayon or linen. Use it, too, on colored striped, E:imed or figured materials with a white ckground. « Just try it! Sprinkle a little Whitex in the rinsing water...and watch everything whiten as Jou rinse. That’s all you need do...and you'll see why smart women find it indispentable’ for' laundering white frocks, woolen sweaters and « children’s things .. men’s white shirts and soft collars ... household linens, etc. Ask your dealer for Whitex today! 'storesand notion counters: hitex The New Bluing For All ‘White Fabries: Made by the makers of Tintex Tints and Dyes “When Bozo promised to pay back that bone after the first of the month— 1 wish I'd known how long after.” (Copyright, 1929 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 proper names only. ‘The object is to identify or classify each of the proper names by using one of the names at the left. Bu* consid- erable care must be exercised in doing this; otherwise you will have some defi- nitions left over at the finish. A cer- tain proper name may be the name of a State or a river; if you use it #s 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 (2) island Erie (3) sea Florida (4) city Delaware (5) mountain Cuba (6) river Washington (7) lake Maine (8) peninsula Ontario Do not refer to the answer until you:| have checked off the proper pairs by | putting numbers after words in the | second list. Answers: Caribbean, sea: Erie, cit peninsula; Delaware, rive island; Washington, mountain; Maine, State; Ontario, lake, MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN, Shirts as Dresses. One mother zays: | My husband always buys his shirts in pairs for he knows that it will be real economy for me when I come to make | Betty's dresses. When they are worn | out at the neck and cuffs I cut them up | for dresses and bloomers for her. If I had just one shirt I could not get out both the bloomers and the dress, but having two, I can cut & whole outfit very advantageously and not have to use any of the spots that show weak- ness. Sometimes if Betty is not in need of dresses I will make an apron for my- self, and I find that these garments al- ways wear well, as shirting is so much stronger than the ordinary cloth we use for these things. (Copyright, 1929.) Nine-tenths of the petroleum produced in Rumania last year was supplied by nine companies, representing largely | American and European capital | ‘| Lady Isabella. FEATURES. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. SHOU'LD a high official of a foreign country be a guest at a local hotel the emblem of'geh native land is un- furled to BIENVENIDO breeze each day % % ) of a national holi- day of some for- eign country, if representative of thediplomatic that country is a resident of the hotel, as a cour- tesy to him his is flown for the day. At such times hotel authorities consult with the State Department to make sure that that the act is in strict conformity with Government policy, and that no day or event 1s rec- | o;nlud which does not bear the stamp | of approval of the United States Gov- ernment. The display of flage on appropriate occasions is only one method employed by Washington hostelries to court the favor of the Capital's cosmopolitan population and draw distinguished forelgn visitors as their guests. Others even more novel and Tequir- ing much greater effort and expense are employed daily. For instance, when a hotel is a ren- dezvous for Latin American officialdom, it requires employes who come into con- tact with the guests to have a conver- sational knowledge of Spanish. A powerful automobile sped out of | one of the principal avenues in Wash- | ington late in the afternoon. At the wheel was a 14-year-old boy. him sat a liveried chauffeur. | Just ahead a little girl was alight- ing from a street car. An instan later she was rushed to & hospital se riously injured. ‘The driver of the automobile was the son of Sir Esme Howard, British Am- bassador to the United States. The | automobile bore of his| majesty's empire. Despite the fact Sir Esme expresse? | the willingness and desire to waive his | right of diplomatic immunity, precedent | decreed that this could not be done. One United States Senator demanded on the floor of the Senate that the the crest | case be prosecuted. Others urged that | the parents of the child seek damages. Every day, while the controversy raged, & car bearing Sir Esme and La Isabella, his wife, came to the chil home. Lady Isabella brought flowers | A mother herself, she sympathized with | the child’s mother. And she kept this | up until the child recovered. ‘The parents of the injured child came | completely under her spell. Nothing | further was heard of the affair. | This little incident is typical of tLe,| hold Lady Isabella has on those who | know her in Washington. Everywhure she is known as the friend and coun- selor of all. Not since Lady Pauncefote of Preston | has a wife of the dean of the diplo- matic corps been so approachable and kindly to the women who compose Washington’s foreign contingent as Nor can the foreign circle boast of & more energetic mem- ber. Her activities are both social and philanthropic, and are numerous and | varied. Always they are of a purely personal nature.. | As wife of the dean of the diplomatic | corps she is forced to divide her day | and adhere to her schedule in the | sternest manner. Like Mrs. Hoove: she employs a full-time social secretary, | Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. =) >~ “I didn’t mean to hit the old window. I was just tryin’ to bust a rock on that | new boy’s head. m Ui i for the problems she is called uj to meet are many and complica She must set the example for others in her circle. In recent years the corps has grown so large that the con- fronting the “first lady” of the corps is lv.)r:mendo\u, ans of the diplomatic co in Washington have succeeded elc}:pgf.her rapidly since Lord Pauncefote's death. M. Jusserand and his lady were jusi getting the reins in hand when the war came. Upon vady Isabella—who has been in Washington since 1924—has fallen the task of welding the broken chain. ‘That she has beer. successful, every- one agrecs. Where her pred- ecessor, Lady Geddes, was Anglo- American to the finger tips, Lady Isabella is perhaps the most comple:e example of Anglo- Italian nobility. She comes frc the most exclusi TItalian aristocracy. In her own right she enjoys rank and precedence ir. the courts of both London and Rome. Every year she visits her native land. She married Sir Esme while he was on diplomatic service in Rome. Both are devout Catholics and the greater part of their charity work is along this line. They have been es- pecially generous to all boys’ clubs and societies and toward all benefits and bazaars intended to add to their li- braries or gymnasium equipment. Beside | When zour Children Cry for It Mothers, who take cne simple precaution, are seldcm worried. With a bottle of Fletcher's Case toria in the house they can do what their doctor would tell them to do, when baby is fretful, fever- ish, colicky. constipated or stuffed- up with cold—egive a few drops of this pure vegetable, pleasant- tasting preparation. It comforts Baby and soothes him to sleep in a jiffy. It's perfectly safe for the youngest infant. Use it freely— and as often as needed, specialists advise. A more liberal dose is all it takes to comfort and relieve older children, when feverishness, bad breath, no appetite, colds, etc., show they need a good purg- ing. The mark of genuine Cas- toria is the Fletcher signature on the wrapper. Look for it to avoid imitations. CASTORIA The Biggest Factor in successful baking 1is It just naturally fits right into your facilities —and bakes to perfection. There isn’t any luck about it—for WASH- INGTON FLOUR is specially made for kitchen use—of wheat that is specially adapted to your methods—standard and stabilized flour on which you can depend—and which will never- fail you. The “‘Pantry Pals> With SELF-RISING WASHINGTON FLOUR you can b wonderful b and wafiles in a jiffy. It's ready mixed with the purest of leaven- ing phospha! real Flour — that has no equal. ‘Both PLAIN WASHINGTON FLOUR and SELF-RISING WASH- INGTON FLOUR are for sale by grocers and delicatessens—in all sizes from 2-1b. sacks up. You'll find the 12 and 24 Ib. sizes more economical —because ALL WASHINGTON FLOUR IS GOOD UNTIL USED. Wflkins-fiogers Millins Co. ‘Washington

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