Evening Star Newspaper, February 11, 1930, Page 26

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THE EVENING 'AR. WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11. 1930, FEATURES. Hair Should Be Made Becoming BY MARY MARSHALL. ‘The question of hair length is no)range one’s hair is the way that is most nearer a settlement than it was a year becoming. And since fashion permits ago. and really there i no reason why | short hair and long hair, as well as hair it should be settled. Many women— | that is rly trimmed to conform to younger women especially—have an un- | lines of the growing bob, it is possible Teasonable desire to see other women | for every woman to find some colffure conform to the fashions which they | that is stutable and flattering. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEVER ELDRED. Usually we look everywhere except st our own actions for the causes of & child’s behavior, but we are being will- fully blind. The ressons for a child’s | 800d or bad behavior are, in most cases, attributable to his treatment at ! LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. | Me and Puds Simkins still havent | met the bewty looking new gerl thu‘ moved into the corner house last week, and this afternoon we was standing | Ang ,OUtside around the lam post tawking about it does not seem to help. It has MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS, Dry and Brittle Cuticle, by e of my nails i= very y dry | have tried cutting it, but | ing e been | sleep and rest, bave not been receiving enough nour- Doubtless Dear Miss Leeds: The skin around | weight and should build up are under- ur whole )y & wise, nourishing diet, includ- plenty of rich milk and sufficient Exercise your neck, | | wing in ve: agged and unevenly ™ B . the ‘slender: gin) - of | diffrent ways we mite meet her, and 1| growing TY jagge! | chest ana whole body, as this will stim. school or college age the “growi boarding ing” bob | has decided advantages. {curls in the evenin ]ynumlul angularity o while for occasions when a trim coif. | fure is desirable the ends are | enor {bun at the back. From a 27-inch inch squere silk or cotton scarf you may make a charming Worn in soft it softens any long to be pinned into a smooth flat home and the effect of his home sur- roundings upon him. In this case the mother mentions the causes and the effect, but doesn’t connect their bear- ing upon each other. Mrs. E. T. says: “I read your column daily and I am interested, for I have | 8 boy of 4 years. He Is very mischievous. (2nd his father has given him 2 lot of | | hard spankings. Of late whenever 1| collar end cuff decordtion for a silk or|SPeak to him he starts to cry, as if he | | cotton frock | to proceed, send your stamped, self | dressed envelope to Mary Marshall, care of this paper, and it will be forwarded | to you. DAILY DIET RECIPE. SAUCE EPICURE. Butter, ' pound. Catsup, 1 tablespoon. ‘Worcestershire, 1 tablespoon. Paprika, 1 teaspoon. Dry mustard, '3 teaspoon. 1t you would like this | week's illustrated circular showing how | THE LONGER BOB IS ARRANGED IN SOFT CURLS FOR EVENING WEAR. | adopt. This species of intol pronounced when bobbed came the fashion. As soon as & woman had her own hair cut she was impatient | with her friends who did not go and do | lkewise. The same thing was true, to | some extent, when women began to let their hair grow again. They were out | of sympathy with thelr sisters and tnelr] cousins and their aunts who did not at once renounce the services of the barber. The really sensible attitude toward the whole guestion now—an attitude which one hears expressed on college | campuses as well as among older wom- | en—is that the best possible way to ar- Traveling Light. So far this Winter Tony and I are | hitting the trail hard in short pants. | As we come up for air between drifts | three Winters ago, running around the | PIngs and the reasons why they are the Perpetusl Pup looks like a Christ- | mas tree all decorated with dewdags and T am reminded of that sage remark of Confucius: “He who pays no taxes shovels no sidewalks.” Short pants come natural to the Be- whiskered Bully, but I had (0 be hard- ened for them. Not that T was afraid of catching anything, but just as a| matter of custom or fashion all through my earlier life, 1 laid away the nain- s00k and snuggled in long legged half wool conceifls from Thanksgiving on. Everybody did, more or less. And 1 do not hesitate to recommend it to every- | body now who travels much in the open | Winter north of 35. For birds who | brave the weather exclusively in closed | cars something more athletic is prefer- | Lemon juice, 2 teaspoons. SERVES ¢ OR 6 PORTIONS. Put butter in one side of & small saucepan. In the other side blend the catsup, Worcestershire, paprika and mustard. Then add the lemon juice. Place pan over a Jdow heat and stir the butter around in the seasonings until it is melted and sauce is smooth and rich. Don’t overheat or it will curdle, When done pour over a rich juley steak. Meat juices and ssuce will blend. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes fat. Some lime, a lttle iron present as well as vitamins A, B and C. Can be eaten occasionally by sdults of normal digestion who are of aver- age or underweight. bad habit of crossing that knee over: | the right—It is cms‘ed Mke that as I|vequest. This world be heloful for you type this article, and finally, it was the left knee 1 wrenched one night two or meadow drive in my nainsook and try- ‘ng_to dodge on the slippery pavement a flivver driver who probably thought it was & rabbit, from the length of the ears. Whatever it is, I dislike w0 im- pair the local metsbolism. So I sav sometimes when Tony of Dangerfield and I pause out there in the lee of a free between pants, as it were, awaiting for & lull so we can grab a breath and plunge Into the next adventure, I do think how fine it would be to have a were very much hurt. Do you suppose | this is nervousness? "“He will not go out to play like other | | children and seems to be afraid of the | | cold. As a consequence, he has no ap- petite. What do you suppose would be the cause of all this?" ... There seéms to be two answers to it. The child is obviously being made cow- ardly and uphappy through fear. The outdoor world seems full of new and | | strange dangers, and so he refuses to | 80 out_and meet them. He is probably quite unaware of the reasons for his | | being. beaten, and so he fears almost | everything. | There is the physical side, too. He |may be anemic «whether. the lack of | appetite causes that or the anemis causes the lack of appetife is a ques- |tion), and he would really suffer from jthe cold. If you give him toys with {which he can play actively outdoors, bundle him up in leggings, overshoes, & warm sweater and cap and coat. He should be comfortable outdoors. If you %0 out with him for a while, or falk | 1 to him frequently from the doorway. he will be happier out there alone and will be more inclined to repeat the experi- ence ‘the next day. To call a child mischievous is to put an interpretagion on his acts which is | | probably purelv in your own mind. A chfld acts in all kinds of ways, and as his surroundings are a natural part of | his life he uses them in every way con- ceivable, not from meanness or a de- sire to be annoying, but because it is | possible they are the only materiais he has with which to “do” things. Just | to have tovs mav not mean that the | child has the right kind of toys or the | {raw materials for doing things. so he | { uses the household furnishings and his | parents call him mischievous, { We have a leaflet. “An Analysis Ml Obedience and Punishment.” which sny reader may obtain by sending a self- | ddressed. stamped envelope with each | Dmitri. Things You Can't Eat. and vour husband to read together. es- If you are too stout, or if you want | pecially the portion dealing with 'h:’l:- to get thinner, here is a list of some | effective, or else effective in the way|forbidden foods. And the reasons, | they are with your boy by turning him | Kiven in calories, as to why they are {into a timid ‘unhappy. nervous child. | forbidden. | Children can't exist under tho i ; e ! ditions, and 3t is you who must change | BOlled ham. an average helping be ! bafore ‘you will ses any improvement in | IN§ 250 calories, is one of the most im- the boy. |portant items. Fried ham, an average i | heiping being 400 calories, is even i R more important. Sausages, small ones, {| A Sermon for Today | | (0 rriea crisp, are 60 calories. You { - — | probably eat four or five of these—with waffles or griddle cake at 100 calories BEAUTY CHATS nice red flannel knee cap or something | Y REV-JOMNCR, "GN, a fellow could slip on for such emer- | gencies. Something a fellow could slip | right off again as soon a5 the extraordi- | Dary exposure is over with. Of cour: it would tend (o slow down the met: Reproof of Sparrow. ; “Fear not, therefore; ye are of more | value then many - sparrows.’—Matt. | bolism if one were to wear such cod- | x.31. Consider the sparrows. | each, and butter and sirup running the score up: butter being 100 calories a level tablespoontul, and sirup & gen- erous 160 more for an average amount used. Total up—and don't eat them! Here are more forbidden foods. Sal- mon and sardines. To a four ounce K PARIS.—This Lanvin cost of broadcloth and astrakhan is all black. It was made for Princess Tlynsky, formerly Audrey Emery now the wife of Grand Duke RITA. BY EDNA KENT FORBES i @ name most people use: but since the daries put it up now in little crocks or pots it is being known also by this new name. It is always milk that has had all the cream removed and then left to turn slightly sour. Mazelle—Exercise makes the muscles firm: and if you have too much fat in parts of the body, exercise will nelp | to use this up while the muscular tis- sues are gaining in firmness. If you naturally have rounded limbs, you will always tend toward that fullness unless you exercise enough to keep them down to whalever is in proportion to the rest of your body. Miss may be induced by extreme nervous- ness, and it will be much worse when the person 1is under some nervous strain, The only cure would be to be throughly built up in heaith. . There was no_stamped, self-addressed envel- ope inclosed, but I shall be glad to send the formulas when you forward D. B.—Excessive perspiration | | saw the letter carrier coming down the | street, making me think of a ideer, and T sed, Well hay, T tell you, lets ask | the mailman if he's got any letters for her house, and if he has welll tell | | him we'll take them for him, and then | | we'll ring the bell and if she comes | to the door we'll interduce each other, and if somebody elts comes to the door | | why we'll still have a good excuse for ringing the bell. How will we? Puds sed, and I sed, Why, the letters of corse. G.'thats rite, I forgol we had letters, | Puds sed. Wich just then the letter carrier | started to go pass looking at the out- sides of envelopes to see where they | went, and 1 sed, Hay, have you got | nything for the corner house? | | Why yes, one letter, in fact thats my | next_stop, the letter carrier sed, and 1 sed, We'll take it. Yes, we'll take it, Puds sed. Why will you, for instants? the let- ter carrier sed. = You kids dont . live | there, 1 know where you kids live, you ! cant fool me, he sed, and I sed. G wizz whose trying to? We just happen to | be_going there, thats all, 1 sed. | “sure, we're just trying to do you a favor, Puds sed. and the letter carrier sed, Much obliged Im sure, but we'll take the letter there together, and then | we'll have each other for company, | wont_that be nice? And we started to wawk down with | him to make it look more as if we was telling the truth, and he started to wawk up the front steps and I sed, | G. T forgot, whats his name is waiting | for us around at the fire house. | G, thats rite, whats his name, Puds | sed. | ""And me and him quick wawked awa j without looking to see if the letter car- | rier was serprised or not. | Being the narrow letter carrier with | the wide feet. Names of Fabrics BY MARIE SHALMAR, | Most materigls, llke most sorts of |cheese, have derived the names by which they are known today from the town or province in which they were first produced. And for much the same son. Everywhere in Europe there wasgome sort of local weaving, and weavers working together in more or less iso- lated communities naturally worked out | specialized sorts of cloth making—the nature of which frequently depended to a great extent on the nature of avail- able raw materials at hand. i Calico is derived from Calicut, the place in India where this cotton mate- tial was first used. Damask was. first made in Damascus, madras in Madras, muslin In Mosul and lawn in Loan. | Batiste was named after an early French linen weaver named Jean Bap- and, of course, spoils the appearance of ulate the flow of blood. It is the the hand. Then, too, it forms into hang- | healthy blood circulating briskly that nails. Could you suggest some treat- | brings food for growth and repair fo ment? SEANNES. | each part of the body, When the cir- Answer—At bedtime soak the fingers culation is sluy h and the blood itself in warm olive ofl for 10 minutes. Bind |is in quality, all the tissues suffer. the tips of the fingers -with pleces of | ides taking beauty exercises in gauze moistened with the ol and pull | your own bed room every day, play out on_old glove fingers to keep the bandages | of doors as much as you can. Take a and ofl on the finger tips. In the morn- | walk in the fresh air and practice deep- ing take off the bandage and massage | - the fingers thoroughly, pressing back | the cuticle around the ndil. not cut | the skin. It needs to be kept well Jubri- cated until it grows better and is more pliable. It is a mistake to keep on cut- ting the cuticle or the skin around the | nails in & case like yours. The warm | oil manicure once or twice a week is beneficial also. Avoid using h soaps | or wabhing powders and always soften the water in which you wash your| hands with oatmeal, using a soothing | hand lotion afterward. LOIS LEEDS. . " Hollows in Her Neek. | Dear Miss Leeds: 1 wonder if you | will_please advise me through your | beauty column: as fo what could be | I have tried rubbing with cocoa butter, but it did not seem to do much good | and I thought that you could prescribe something more efTective. FLORENCE M. Answer—@ocoa butter, oil or an oily cream will lubricate the massage and help to keep the skin from becoming too dry, but the ti le is that you, like a great many other girls and women, bave been thinking that there is some- | thing magical about cocoa butter, oils and creams and that all you had to do |was to pat it in the necessary places and, presto! you would fill out the hol- lows and have a lovely rounded neck, throat and bust. Fortunately - or unfortunately, our | bodies cannot be made over, developed |or reduced in that way. One must tackle the problem from the inside for practical results. No external applica- tion possibly make you plumper unless you also stimulate the growth from within. Your neck, throat and bust are too thin, because the tissues | done to fill out the hollows in my neck? | | breathing. Swimming is one of the best exercises for dkvelopins this part of one’s body, and 1 would advise you to swim about twice a week, practicing the :trokles at a slow, even pace. Breathe eeply. Be sure that you masticate your food thoroughly, so that every mouthful m: | be g::wly prepared for thorough di- | gestion. Remember that it is use to eat a great amount of food unless it Is properly digested and assimilated. Keep {up with your local treatment and take cod liver ofl two or three times a day. Send a stamped, self-addressed envelope |for my leaflets on care of the neck, how to gain weight and beauty exer- cises. They will help you. LOIS LEEDS. The trumpeter crane of Venezuela is trained by the natives to guard sheep. All day it keeps an eye on its charges, ‘l'l’lfl !“I night brings them back safe to | the' fold. LUXURY-PERFECTION LES POUDRES — te, cambric was first made in Cam- brai, France: denim was first made in Nimes, chambray in Chambray, lisle thread material in Lisle and the first swiss, dotted or otherwise, came from | Switzerland. Among siiks canton crepe and canton flannel were first made in Canton. China, COTY “NECESSITY-PRICED” | | 4un{{ clothing continuously. At least I | ‘They neither | think it would. T'd rather freeve that |sow nor reap. They neither have store- knee than go back to the coddling habit. | bouse nor barn. God feeds them. Are | beans, a heaping tablespoontul, 100 After sll, as 1 sit here in my play | YOu not more precious in His sight-than | calories. Corn, the same amount, 50 n;om.dwheu t|he temperature is \lllntll%“"g’;“ow! .z el i icalor'::‘.' P:;lwu. each, 100. Sweet There or a |35 and sometimes up (o 60 or even 62 : re ra ue. , each, 200. This is for small Tentinle” peren: t Jollow i deciding | degrees . T am almost convinced that | Once (W0 of them sold for & farthing, | ones, 105, not ‘the big fellows. A smail | sbout underwear, and that is: Make | the morbid train of thought I have out | Nobody buys them now. Yet not one of | banana, 100 calories. A small bunch | yourself.comforfabls | there in the snowdrifts is just the final | them ever falls to the ground without of grapes, 100. Bread, one slice, not a I mever Can Dbe sure just what the QUITEr of the cold delusion. What would | the notice of our Heavenly Father. Are thick one either, 100 calorles. ~Sxéx); Ubiquitous Rowdy is thinking about, | OU ay? Anyhow I felt bound In con- | ou not more important than they? Are | inches s the size given in die* charts. R rior s AP2U" | sclence to make my confession. | 200 ot ot ‘greatee vaine -ty many | A Toll is about the same as s slice Hammer will be when n: finds that| | ki Fanki i VaEd e | E ; dandy bone isn't there, but candor com- | o {he following- Hithe m':y e | uwrm:unmaslwfhfi“‘ e anes | pels me to confess my own secret FOOD PROBLEMS . : .. A dots el o e P g | “Said the yobin to the spatrow, | DOG include sauce or cheese. Mayon- breeses drive bitterly across our course. : £ g ok ety ke SR LIS v 1 v the anxi i n bei ) , more 1 wonder whether the local metabolic L A e g if it 18 a large one. A doughnut, 180 | able. as a rule, though this is wholly & matter of individual taste or whim. So far as hygiene or health is concerned it dossn’t matter one little bit 1htlher| one wears heavy undies. light undies helping. allow 260 calories. Cream, | one tablespoonful, 50 calories. Baked the mailing envelope as requested, re- while china silk and crepe de chine were peating your request. products of China. This is HEINZ BY SALLIE MONROE, rate in that left knee will be retarded, | i‘ #nd if it is, what eflect it will have on | the kink or occasional grumble we have had in that quarter this last year or so. T L :rncfl';:;m’ ,;;’m“:d."’:fl ;“'f:‘m‘::g {ravages of Spring fever. There isn't so Iv_believe there is no such thing as much Spring fever nowadays. Ana the “rheumatism.” But just the same that Téason for this change is not that doc- left knee does intrude itself on mv con- (0l have learned how to control the sciousness. For one thing 1 have a habit ' disease with medicine, but that the dis- of sitting on it a good deal, or on the ase has been conquered by food. left foot I should say; I have another SpPring fever was really no more nor le:s than a languid, tired. sometimes JOLLY POLLY Beware of Spring Fever, Actually exhausted state thai prevailed in the Spring. People had been shut raw food. They didn't know their diet | was deficient. With plenty of meat and eggs. rooi vegetables, canned fruit | hams and preserves, wiih all sorts of de- A Lesson in FEnglish. A g00d deal used to be said sbout the | “Said tha sparrow (o the robin, ‘Priend. [ think that it must be That they have no Heavenly Father Such ss cares for you snd me.' " Let those who sre freted with anx- ious ‘care give heed to this reproof of ! the sparrow. Listen how the sparrows {chirp and ~ chatter without anxious foreboding. - They I not, yet they ate fed. They cannot trust. vet they | are cared for.” They are of little: value. | vet they are not neglected. You are ‘ebove them in all these respects. You indoors all Winter without sufficlent |aré esteemed of God to be of gyeater | Honey, one tablespoonful 100. A’ slice ofhp;e, ® sixth of & ple. that is, 350 cal- ories, average help! of pudding, 200 to 350. Ice cream, 20{! to gsn. A‘II this depends on the richness of the in- gredients. Cakes the same as pud- dings. So beware of these things. M. G. M.—“Pot cheese,” mentioned in diets for reduction, means the soft curds that are left when sour milk is slightly heated to break the whole milk | into the curds and whey. Another | name for it is “cottage cheese,” which | value than sun, moon or ster. You have | the capacity to work and trust and by | the exercise of that capacity you can influence tomorrow.. Put your trust in | Tomato Ketchup week At your grocer’s this week you'll see extra displays of Heinz Tomato Ketchup—to remind you that this is the week for you to get hctier_:cquaimcd with this unmatched Tomato Ketchup. Buy one of these big bottles of rich, thick tomato licious desserts, why was it. they may | GOd, be faithful in your work, exercise | [" DIDN'T USED 10 HET ROWED WHEN DAD SPOKE SUGHTINGLY OF WOMEN. HERE 1S IS LATEST. “WOMAN IS A THING OF BEAUTY ) \AND A UAW_FOREVER" o~ “1 used mot to beccme roiled” is the | required form, not, “I dian't used to be- | come rofled.” Roll is pronounced as spelled. ROIL. not RILE. It means to render rurbid by stirring up the dregs, mud, or sedi- ment of; as, to roll wine in kegs; to | 7ol a spring. To disturb or ruffie the temper of: 8s the sight of & fur cost on & man rofls dad. Household Methods BY BETSY CALLISTER. We all like flowers. We like o have them shout us in our houses. But we find them expen- wive. However, with a little money wisely spent we can have a fairly steady dis- play of growing things about us -all through the colder months. ‘Some wom en—and I'm among them- -crave flower more toward Spring. when the days be- gin to seem really longer and there is the smell of coming warmer weather in the air than they do in Winter. So this is, for some women, the time of vear when something green and grow- ing, or colorful and flowering, is most desirable. Bulbs, of course, are an indoor stand- by and it 15 not yet t0o late to make | use of them. You cgn foree lily of the valley bulbs in fiber in a few days, really, and they are so suggestive of | Spring that they are a general favorite. Any of the vinelike plants make a 200d Winter showing. 1vy and wander- ing jew, or inch plant, give lovely and interes! growth and green. If you | sre ingenious a little in your arrange- ment of these vinelike piants you can | train them up the sides of windows or | let them fall in a long sheaf from the | top of a book shelf. They need plenty of light and air, but they are fairly “tough” and are not ruined by a fluctu- ating temperature. Wandering jew. especially, 15 bound to grow sturdily if you give it half a chance. ‘There are, of course, many interest- ing potted green things—some of them | gray, really—in the way of cactus and other odd lttle plants. As Whey nzually potted in pretty bits ofpottery they are & declded decorative asset.fo your rooms. al 1 e have wondered. that appetites lagged | NOTmal common sense and foresight SO0 hEaRn Totienr . PUE 80 | and you can safely say, T have no fear The thing wes, of course, that the Of famine, nor of poverty, nor or want.” Winter diet of those days lacked vita- | . mins. Vitamins, because they are xo!| largely present in lettuce and oranges, | SReNEY ERIARE IRKe. which are now Winter commonplaces | Beat the whites of five eggs to a with most of us, and in many other | froth and slowly add one cupflil of nowadays usual foods, are now much | Pure strained honey, beating constant- more numerous in our Winter diets |1y. Sift together three rimes one cuptul than they were, and we show the re- | Of flour, half & teaspoonful of salt and sults by not suffering from Spring | tWo teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Beat fever. | the egg volks until thick. Add the flour So be careful to take advantage of | mixture and egg yolke alternstely to the benefiis our wider diet puts before ' the white of egg and honey mixture. (you. And now that Spring is approach- | Bake in an ungreased tin in a mod- ing don't let yourself or your family | erate oven for not longer than an hour. Suffer because of o Nle'-down in_ dlet . care. Serve raw apples, raw cabbage, | {oranges, canned tomatoes as often s | Many Uses for Borex. you can make them tempting, raw milk | Borax has many important uses apart and whole-giain cereals, and then face | from its valuable service in the laundry | the coming of the sometimes enervating | to whiten clothes. Dissolved in bolling days of Spring with confidence that Spring fever will pass you by. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Orange Juice. Bran With Cream. Pried Eggs With Bacon, Oatmeal Muffins. Cofree. LUNCHEON. Ham Omelet. Stewed Tomatoes. Hol Baking Powder Biscuits, Gingerbread. Whipped Cream. Tea DINNER. Becf Stew With Dumplings. Bolled Potetoes. Cole Slaw. Queen’s Pudding, Lemon Sauce, Coftee. OATMEAL MUFFINS. Two cups flour sifted with four level tesspoons baking powder, little salt, one egg beaten in mix- ing_bowl with little sugar. Beat one cup cold oatmeal into egg, add flour and one cup sweet milk. Beal hard till all is mixed; add three teaspoons bacon fat or other shortening. Any cooked cereal is good in place of oatmeal. Bake in hot oven. GINGERBREAD, One cup New Orleans molasses, one teaspoon sodsa, one-half tea- spoon ginger, one-half tablespoon lard in two-thirds cup lukewarm water, one and three-fourths cups flour. Mix in order given and | | bake in a moderate oven. QUENN'S PUDDING. | One-half pint Breadcrumbs, | | one quart milk, yolks of two eggs, 1 grated rind 6f one lemon, one cup sugar, one-half cup rajsins. Bake | | #s usual and when done. frost €| | with egg whites beaten stiff with one-fourth cup sugar, and brown 1 slightly. | water 1t will open sink drains. Seat- | tered in clcsets it will drive away moths. Sprinkled i the tracks of roaches it | will drive them away. It will abSorb | prou ot ‘that e careng '} iyl { unpleasent. odors and it will cause mice | Bhe't' uflin to bagk it gaie anvioi t0 look elsewhere for board and 10dg- | else on the street ing. (Copsright. 1930.) l | | | | | | | | Nothing ever will take the place of quality in Wilkins Coffee. None but the finest Coffees are im- ported for this delic- ious blend. That is the reason for its ex- treme smoothness and richness. wERR'S OTHER oOF PELIGHT YOU—HNHEINZ . MADE FROM Fawsy TOMATOES spices! [GRANRATED CANE Sugar! (#TILLED VINEGAR ONIONS sag FREE FROM goodness. ‘Compare it with your own idea of perfect ketchup — and see if its tangy, spicy flavor docsn;t give you 2 whole new set of ideas about tantalizing goodnes Heinz Tomato Ketchup Week is a miglity good time to start nsing Heinz Tomato Ketchup—for a life- time of better tasting meals. THE R HEINZ Y PURE FOOD PRODUCTS MADE BY H.IHEINE CO PITTSBURGH PA s 57 THAT WILL OVEN-BAKED BEANS.

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