Evening Star Newspaper, March 17, 1930, Page 24

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WOMAN'’S PAGE. Smocks for Numerous Occasions BY MARY Two years ago wearing smocks dur- ing working hours was a fad. Every one wore them, from tne head b-okkeep- er to the errand girl—artists, woman PRACTICAL SMOCK IS OF GRAY COTTON MATERIAL WITH COL- LAR AND CUFFS OF BRIGHT FIGURED PRINT. doctors, saleswomen, school teachers and [ able and convenient for many occasions. There are timeés in the busy day of Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN Are You a Slave to Money? If_you think about money, and talk about money, from morning to night, be careful. Be careful lest you become 8 slave to money. If you dg enter that sort of slavery, you will b: serving & consider them. Acceptance of such gifts , lemon, and half a cupful of cocoanut. hard, cold master, While that “master” | nearly always makes one liable to sus- Place in a greased baking dish in a pan may give you the gold that you crave, he may exact in return loss of happi- mess, friends, love, and many other less possessions. ‘The woman is a slave to money who refuses to spend {reely where her health is concerned. She is the woman who will not rest becauss she may have to sacrifice some part of her salary, or spend a portion of the money she has saved. She is the woman who refuses to have needed dental or surgical work done, to save her money at the cost of her heaith if ‘not her life. Other women hoard and stint all of their lives, so that they may accumulate money. Pinally reaching a dried-out old age they pass on, and their heirs enjoy the fruits of the slavery. Other women dress all of their lives in dowdy clothes, and deny themselves common comforts in their abject slavery to dol- lars. At the. end, their money is a mocking tribute to their abjection. There are other women who permit | money to tie them down to places—for example, to old homes which are almost uninhabitable, to furniture and fixtures, and to all sorts of material things. By accumulating these possessions, ‘women simply make their slavery more complete and more binding. ‘The hoarder and the miser are not the only ':l!:es which become slaves to money. e improvident woman is Jjust as hopelessly enslaved. Women without the means to exert their inde- pendent wills and desires are slaves MARSHALL. most business women when it is a great icunvenknee to have a smock at han And the freshness of & new dress m be prolonged if it is worn. One should not, however, feel that any old smock, faded and wrinkled and , with buttons missing, may be Wwo with impunity, nor should one hope to | wear an out-of-date smock with baggy ; outlines and low waist line without | looking distinctly dowdy. { ‘The new smocks follow the new 1 dresses in their trimer lines, and Lhel walst line is placed at normal or ne: is somewhat | over which it | is . worn, thus going back to the origi- | nal arrangement—ifor it was only when | skirts grew excessively short that the | smock and dress met at the hem line. The sketeh shows & new smock made | | of gray cotton material with trim col- | lar and cuffs of figured material m‘ bright colors. The neatly buttoned belt is in sharp contrast to the full, w belted lines of the old-time smocks that | were inspired by the full working apron of the French peasant. This week’s circular shows how to make one of the new oblong scarfs from | a square scarf or & square of silk. If you would like to have a copy please send your stamped, self-addressed en- velope to Mary Marshall, care of this paper, and it will be forwarded to you. | (Copyright, 1930.) | My Neighbor Says: When cleansing celery use a | Phe bl Fidnapping. latest wews of the | | ent’ pay it, he’s too economical. BY LEE PAPE. Me and 8id Hunt and Puds Simkins «nd Shorty Judge was standing around the lam post and a man selling news- papers wawked pass yelling, All about ; kidnapping, 50 thousand dollers ran- som demanded. G, 50 thousand dollers, I sed, and Shorty Judge sed, O boy, 50 thousand dollers, Imagine 50 thousand dollers 1l at one time, he sed, and Puds Sim- kins sed, Imagine it even at diffrent times. { somebody kidnapped my fox ter- rier Teddy I wonder how much ransom my father would pay to get him back? Sid Hunt said, and I sed, G, thats a ideer, lets us 3 kidnapp him and Sid can be a pardner and get one 4th of the ransom. Everybody thinking it was grate ideer, Shorty Judge saying, Well how much ransom shall we charge, how would a thousand dollers do? Good nite the dog dident cost that much in the ferst place, I sed, and Sid sed, Besides I know my father would- How' about 500 dollers? Puds sed, and Sid sed. I don bleeve my father would pay it, holey smokes he’s even be.a kicking about paying 75 dollers for having the inside of the house painted. Well lets ask for 15 dollers, then, I | sed, and Sid sed, Well he mite pay | that, ony 15 dont divide into 4. Well 16 does, lets make the ransom ! 16_dollers, Puds sed. | Sounding like a pritty good of a| ransom, and I sed, We can get black | I masts for ours faces around at Mommy | Simminses for a cent apeece, we all i haff to have a black mast on our face. vegetable brush. It cleans the celery better than the latter can be cleaned otherwise. A small box of lime kept in | | the pantry will help to make the air quite dry and pure. It should be removed occasionally. When making muffins in iron pans, grease the pans and heat them in the oven before putting the batter in. Your muffins will then be much lighter, When painting a room the following hints may be found useful: Don't be in a hurry to finish; put down old. newspapers before beginning work and re- move all curtains and hangings; keep handy a rag soaked in turpentine to wipe off “mis- | | takes”: start painting in the darkest corner of the room and work toward the light; don't drown_your brush—immerse it about half an inch, use a plece of stout cardboard with a straight edge to protect the woodwork or | walls from splashing. | i Accepting Gifts. | Most business women offer an answer to the question “Should business women | | accept gifts?” by their refusal even to picion of “commercial bribery.” Many | commercial and industrial ‘companies state definitely that their employes shall | not aceept gifts without the approval | of a responsible executive. | __As a practice it is certainly dangerous. ! No matter how honest and incorrupti- | | ble one may be, continual acceptance of | | gifts opens one’s actions to suspicion. | {In any case it is difficult to remain the reciplent of favors for very long | without showing some sort of appre- ciation. Usually that appreciation is shown at the employer's expense. No | wonder he objects to the practice. { Some overzealous salesmen offer woman buyers a contingent fee in the event that they buy the merchandise offered by the buyers. This is a rather thin way to disguise a bribe, and in many States the acceplance of such a “fee” constitutes a felony, It is pat- ently dishonest and inexcusable. Commercial bribery takes many forms, {and the uninitiated ~business “woman | must be on the alert. The mere men- ion of rebates or ‘“arrangements” | should lead her at once to suspect the | speaker. In some cases favors are granted to buyers which are tacitly in | return for business or anticipated busi- | | ness. There is usually no question but | what the “favor” is expected to be re- | | turned. Few woman buyers accept these | | favors any longer. They -are costly in | | the end. Christmas gifts of a personal nature ! | | | or baking dish. Bury in the beans a | pot. Mustard or catsup may be added if 10 lack of money. That is just a dif- from friend to friend in business are ferent form of financial slavery. | not_objectionable, and no obligation is What is the cure for slavery to | entailed, because usually there is an money? Go.somewhere—preferably in | interchange of gifts. anyway. But when the woods or outdoors—and learn how a Christmas gift has the appearance easy it is to live without most of the (of a bonus, or commission, or a fee, ' things that money can buy. Camp by calculated to exactness on a fixed per- a trout stream, near a spring, and bring | centage, it is certainly offered in an All except Sid, he’s the spy and just has to look innocent, Puds sed, and Shorty sed, But he has to know the passwerd, though. G, that reminds me, we havent goi any passwerd yet, he sed. And we thawt till we thawt of one, | being Beware, | Boston Baked Beans. Soak one cupful of beans overnight in water. In the morning add fresh cold water and cook slowly until the skins | begin to burst, then pour off the water | and put the beans in a greased bean pot piece of fat salt pork. To one-half a cupful of bolling water add one tea- | spoonful of salt, one teaspoonful of molasses, one and one-half tablespoon- fuls of sugar and pour over the beans. Add enough more bolling water to cover the beans, and add more if needed dur- ing the cooking. Cover the bean pot and bake the beans slowly for several hours. according to the amount in the the flavor is liked. Pineapple Pudding. Cube one No. 2 can of sliced pine- apple and add two_packed cupfuls of soft bread erumbs. Reserve one slice of pineapple. Beat three egg volks, add Dhalf a cupful of sugar and two cupfuls of milk. Blend with the pineapple and bread crumbs. Add two tablespoonfuls of ‘lemon_juice, the grated rind of one of hot water. Bake for 45 minutes in a medium oven. Beat the egg whites, and | add three tablespoonfuls of sugar. Place the slice of pineapple on top of the meringue. Bake until brown. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. | i \ { | Daddy say, “pups will be pups,” but I don't know will he be so charital | | when hefinds puppy has chewed up | MONDAY, MARCH 17, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX \EAR MISS DIX.—My husband and I lived happily together for three years. Then Junior came and we have never been the same since. My husband has even moved to another town to live, and when we were together we were miserable. Before the baby was born he liked to stay at home, and when he went out I went with him.” After the baby was born he never stayed at home. Went out every evening to places of amusement alone. Why did the thing that should have made our life the happiest wreck our home? MRS. A, C. Answer.—There are some men who just have no paternal instincts, and who feel that babies interfere with their comfort. They won't stay at home of an evening because the baby's crying annoys them, or the noise of children gets on their nerves. They resent the house being run on a baby schedule instead of for their own pleasure. It infurlates them that their wives can’t pal around with them as they dtd before the baby came. Other men are jpalous of their children. Before the babies came their wives devoted their time and attention to flattering them and doing everything they wanted. But the advent of the baby naturally put them in the second place, as the baby's needs had to be attended to first, and they couldn’t stand that. And sometimes, we must admit, the wife gives the husband cause for re- sentment by neglecting him for the youngster. There are many women, who, after the first baby is born, see their husbands only as the baby's father. And there are plenty of households in which nobody’s comfort is ever considered but the baby's. It is by no means true that children are a bond between husbands and wives. Just as often they are the wedge that drives them asunder, and, gener- ally speaking, childless couples are more fond of each other than those with children. Children keep many married couples from 'etunl(x;xflhorce, but they do,_not always unite them in spirit. . Y DIX. EAR DOROTHY DIX.—I have been married 13 years and could not ask for a better husband, and I have two fine, healthy children, but some of my husband’s people had tubcrculosis, and I am so afraid that my husband and children will have it that I cannot look at them without crying. 1 cannot eat or sleep and the least thing gives me a nervous chill. What shall I do? A WORRIED MOTHER. Answer.—Scientists do not_consider tuberculosis to be a hereditary disease. There is no reason why vour husband and children should have it any more than any one else. Thank God that they are well and healthy, feed them plenty of good, nourishing food and see that they are out in the fresh air a lot and you need never worry over them. » You are the sick one. You have let yourself get morbid, brooding over imaginary dangers. Brace up. Quit borrowing trouble. Try to look at life more sanely and cheerfully, and for heaven’s sake dry your eyes. A melancholy, weeping wife and mother is worse, than T. B. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyriht, 1930 BEAUTY CHATS BY EDNA KENT FORBES Your Lips. There are all sorts of lipsticks for the girl who can usé one. one can—I, for one, have yet to find a lipstick that will go on, look natu and stay on without spreading all over Not every | well out of their very edges. If you are clever you can improve the shape of | your mouth by the way you paint it. But you must be very clever, and you must not use mueh color or the effect will be too artificial. The lips are usu- ally improved by accentuating only the along the necessary utensils. With the aid of a few good catches, a lucky cast or two, and whatever you brought along b- way of provisions, you will find your way clear to freedom from the bondage of money. There are more ways than one to be rich and free. SUB ROSA Green Goddesses. ‘Two treports from London should be of interest to us. The men have fallen | cne ob his good gloves. unacceptable way. { (Copyright, 1930.) ‘There should be no doubt in a buyer’s | mind about accepting a gift. When- ever doubt exists one should consult | with her superior and ask for a frank | and authoritative opinion, LITTLE SISTER BY RUBY HOLLAND | DAILY DIET RECIPE SWEET POTATO SURPRISE. Sweet potatoes, medium size, four. Salt, one-half teaspoon. Marshmallows, four. Deep fat, one cup. SERVES FOUR PORTIONS. Boil sweet potatoes in their that part of my face. There are.orange | center portion of them, blending the color sticks, light, rosy and deep red | color out toward the ends of the mouth. ones; there is scarlet that makes the | Only a very small mouth is improved lips look like a vivid gash (very ugly, | by having the color spread all over it, I may, add) and faint rose red lip| e cream that does not color, but merely| John G. K.—It would hardly be nec- keeps them from chapping. And therc| essary for you to consult & plastic sur- is white cold cream, also for chapped | geon to make your skin firm, so there lips. And there are tiny flat compacts | Would not be those two lines on either of lip cream, which must be put on|side of your mouth. I judge that they by using the fingers. These mess up i show because of some flabbiness of the the fingers, but they are splendid for facial muscles, and if you build up all tinting the lips, since the shape can|over, your face will be filled out and be followed better by using the finger- | these 'lines disappear. Young people tip to spread the color. like yourself never have folds in their You should always keep & small | facial muscles if they are in full health, amount of camphor ice handy. This is| and whenever there is this tendency, it an awfully good thing to massage into | should start an inquiry as to just what the lips last thing at night. I believe | is causing the trouple in the system. A jackets until tender. Drain, peel and mash and se; Mold into four cakes so that a marshmallow is _hidden center of each. Drop th into hot fat so they will quickly browned. Drain serve hot. at last for the cross-word puzzle. The women are discarding rouge and going in for green face powder. These are | the latest tips from the balliwick of | the Prince of Wales, who himself is off | in Africa. His royal highness should worry about puzzles and powders. be and We know the puzzle craze and the way it intiigues our vocabulary. We're fed up on such alphabet soup and are out after real problems. bit flabbergasted by this report of the green face powder. How come, sister, over there? The cable dopes down the further information that the Anglican dames who have gone from pink to pale green want to cast a tinge of mystery into their countenances. Those English girls usually have fine complexions and don’t need much help from the white of powder and red of lipstick. But why the sickly tint they are now af- fecting? This change in the color scheme of our English cousins seems t0.be due to idea of looking pale and mysterious. Apparently the English . wing. in the house of “womanhood has the feeling that the modern woman has made her- self a little too obvious. When she dresses a la common seénse and lets the drug store give her charms a t. men vill get some idea of what she is like. =Hence the unearthly tint which the British belle has adopted. There ate timid insects which culti- vate green coloring s0 as to_resemble the follage and thus escape the eye of :1'1“1 bird that’s on just such an insect et. But we are & | The leaf green is its protective | | DIET NOTE. | Recipe furnishes carbohydrate in large amount. Phosphorous, lime and some iron and vitamins A and B present. Recipe can be eaten by normal adults of ave- rage or under weight. Useful in diet to increase weight. 1rbil-in|< Grape Juiéé and keep your o e . 3 Girlish Figure . amous diet author- ity says Welch's pure | juice of luscious Con- | cords should be on | every reducing or ~ weight - control diet. Keeps your body energized, nourished, regulated. Absolutely | { | | “Muyver said she wuz worried tause | I wuz so quiet, but I had to be to hear | my kitty cat’s motor runnin’.” (Copyright, 1930.) CRISP So crisp every delicious bubble crackles when milk or cream is poured on it! Rice Krispies are toasted that white cold cream lipsticks are now made containing camphor which can be used like ordinary lipstick to pre- vent chapping during bad weather. Even the ordinary white cold creani will prevent this if generously use during the day. physical examinatin is a good invest- ! ment at such times, as whatever Is keeping the health down will be shown and may be corrected. Witch-hazel is d after shaving as an astringent. | Prices realized on Swift & Compan; Do vou kni look thinner? to their edge: centuate thi v how to make thick lips sules of carcass veer in Washington, D, Rouge” the 1ips not, quite | for week ending Saturday, March 15, ‘1936 The Triple-Sealed carton Keeps a/ the good cents 1 1930. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. I am always pleased, but dubious, | when readers act as if a word from me would correct all the abuses which | bables have to suffer. “Please write about the foolhardi- | ness of tossing children from one per- ! son to another across the room,” sug- gests one Teader, “or about picking baby up by his feet and dangling him with his head down” (evidently we all saw the same motion picture of the acrobatic baby). | Another says, “Please write some- | thing in your column that my mother- to give children food from the grown- | up plates—rich gravies and bread, cof- fee, fat meats and anything that hap- of my readers are 365 days in the year. For those are the abuses about which this column talks to the point of being | actually boring. Perhaps not in those | exact words, but if we say that chil-| dren should have their own meals at | their own hours and should be given only those foods which are suitable to | bables, we are certainly saying that they | should not be fed from the family | table, and from every standpoint of | hygiene never from an adult’s plate! | Every day we say, not one word, but many hundreds of them on the subject | of the best way to care for a baby, the | proper way to feed him according to | our best 1930 standards, how to train | him to bring out to the best advantage the child’s own nature and varying in- dividuality. Never have we said that it is a good idea to turn a baby upside down and shake him around, and we have never seen any authority on baby exercises who seemed to favor this particular pro- cedure. Obviously, if the baby enjoys 1t as an exercise and shows no harmful effects from it, such as increased nerv- ousness and irritability, then who can say it is actually bad for him? Most | of us aren’t training to be acrobats and don’t know the effects of such violent | exercises. ‘The mother-in-law situation rages | everywhere. The mother, as well as | mother-in-law, acts as if growth stopped | with her generation and as if new practices were an insult to her, That, of course, is an attitude assumed only by those persons, whether they are 40 or 100, who have ceased to adapt them- | selves to new ide: Now, dear Mrs. W. C. P., your prob- | {lem is different. You know you are | right, so why fume and fret because yvour mother-in-law” won't admit it. | Have the courage of your convictions and simply refuse to be hered. The situation you need to er is living with your mother-in-law. You admit it is possible to move, but your hus- band doesn't want #o. If your husband is going to let his life and the rearing | {of his child be dominated by his| mother, then he is still an infant, and | for an infantile adult there seems V!r_v“ little help. I think you have taken a | wise step, and perhaps if you show your | willingness to work and support your child he may see the light of reason. To escape & flogging which was part of his sentence for robbery, James E. Spires jumped from a balcony to his death at Wandsworth Prison, in Eng- land, where he was serving 10 years | for the same crime. AUNT HET |12, | Think of your soul; there is no help for it | contemptuous of his sovereign. Louis | FEATUR 4 Br A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK ;' BY HERBERT PLUMMER. VWHEN Senator Goff of West Virginia turned his wrath upon Democrats and insurgent Republicans who make the Senate tariff coalition, he called Toll of the insurgents “in order that there shall be no doubt in the public mind” as to who they are. There wasn't much of & Senate audi- ence at the time. None of the in- surgents was there to hear Goff accord this “distinction.” as he put it. But 5. when he went over the names, from Borah to Schall, = ‘Wheeler from the in-law will read about how awful it is | & Jack- their names, but not what th= Senator said - about them,” Wheeler said. “My mental evolution has never reached the ‘wild jackasses’ stage,” Goff answered, ana refused to yield further, Possibly if the Republican regulars had kept track of affairs down in the Senate restaurant over quite a long period of time they would not have had occasion for any surprise that the insurgents showed a well organized front. There is a big round table down in a sort of supplemental room of the Little Men Who | restaurant, off by itself, that. is re- T ‘1"?:-.‘:" e ts, “headed b}r; oup of insurgent George Norris of Nebraska. | "It a passerby has the Juck to find the door open, there about that table | almost any afternoon he will see six or | seven of the coalitioners from the Re- | publican side having their bread and | cheese_together, a happy family. Nor- | ris, Johnson of California, Nye, “Young | Bob” La Follette and, more often than not, Wheeler from the Democratic side | of the political fence are usually on | hand. | Round tables have been notable pro- moters of joint_entes since King | Arthur’s day. That senatorial restau- | rant table is no exception. The strat- | egy of many a hard-fought tariff battle- !field may have been pondered out about it. What a tale it could tell, that table, had it the gift of tongues. Measured by experience in political lln!\lmency. Senator Norris clearly { should preside at the table of dissent- | ers. He has been insurging so long | that all of his luncheon colleagues are | mere juniors on the job. He probably | is the autocrat of that table, but a | very genial autocrat at that. That is the Norris way. | Senator Borah once foregathered at the round table. The story goes that there was so much wise-cracking by h | colleagues at one time that he retire from the pleture. What a pity there is no Congressional Record to report what Is said at that select gathering. Balked Big Men Doctor and Barber Threw Fear of Death into Louis XL | BY J. P. q % OXX Q K ¥, GLASS. ‘YN THE KITCHEN HE OBSERVED A LITTLE FELLOW, NOT MORE THAN 14, TURNING THE BEING PREPARED." As he saw his end approaching, Louls XI of France begged his servants that |* whenever they saw him very ill they would never mention the dreadful word “death.” He made them promise that they should only “Don't talk much,” which | he would consider sufficient warning. To be very sick meant to Louls an- other of the apoplectic strokes which were carrying him to the grave. ‘Two men were there—humble men, too—who flouted the King's wishes. One was his doctor, James Coettier, and the other, Oliver, his barber, frequently called “The Devil.” This pair, knowing his terror of dylng; and his dependence on them, did not hesitate to notify him of his approaching demise in harsh te rms. “Sir,” they said, “we must do our duty. Assuredly all is over with you. T have hope in God that He will aid me,” said Louis humbly. “Peradventure, I am not so ill as you think.” For a long time Coettier had been might be cruel and brutal to his chil- dren, the princes of the blood, his ser- vants and his counselors, but he feared | to visit his wrath on his doctor. He | dared not even to complain to him, SPIT, ON WHICH AN APPETIZING ROAST WAS ence to the nobility. He could trust hem 9 ‘There is a famous story of an obscure | individual who won a fine post near the | King by his fearlessness. Once Louis took it into his head to pay a visit to his kitchen to see how things were being run. He had a horror of unnecessary expenditures. In the kitchen he observed a little fellow, not more than 14, turning the spit, on which sn -rpeu:inl Toakt was being prepared. This child was hand- "l’lnt“ and of a most engaging person- ality. The King went up to him. “Well, my little man,” said he, “where do you come from?” “From Berry,” said the boy. “And what is your name?” “Stephen. ‘How much do you earn?” “I earn as much as the King.” This answer greatly surprised X “What, then, does the King earn?” he asked. ‘To which Stephen of Derrymfl::“y replied: “His expenses—and L . Louis saw so pleased with this an- swer he promoted the boy to a position near him, and later gave him one: of his most important places—groom of the bedchember. Because he says he intends to give the why and wherefore of Christian be- though he grumbled to his servants. ‘When word of this was carried to Coet- | tier, he told Louis: ! “Some day youll send me where | you've sent so many others; but, 'sdeath. - you'll not live a week after!” Louis coaxed him, caressed him raised his salary to 10,000 crowns 2 month, made him a gift of rieh lord- “I don’t want nobody invitin’ m & bridge party an hour beforehand. looks too much like I was needed « cause somebody else couldn’t come. (Copyright. 1930.) 1 Fresh ships and finally elevated him to the post of president of the court of ex-| chequer. The barber he ennobled and | enriched under the name of Oliver le ' Daim. | Louis was mad. But always he had had a respect for those who would speak ' up to him fearlessly. Incidentally, he kept huml: people about him in prefer- | strawberry pie with a meringue of '“Philaclelphizl” liefs in his new church in London, Rev. F. C. Baker will name it “The Church of the Why and Wherefore.” RAY-HAIR adds years to your age. Can be tinted any color quickly and easily with popular BROWNA'I’O NE GUARANTEED MARMLESS e Cream Ch €CsC Prruars you've never tried it— rice—filled with flavor and crispness—whatabreakfast! Rice Krispies fascinate children. They are ideal for - early suppers. Order a red- and-green package from your grocer to- day. Made by Kellogg in Bat- tle Creek. tint. It may be that the daugifters of John | Bull don't want to be so much in evi- | dence. We'd suppose that they could slip by unnoticed in the London fog, but evidently these overmodest maids are keen for the new camouflage. But no woman need worry about the mystery of her nature where man is concerned. Long ago Mother Eve took on a form of protective coloring which Was bound to mystify man in the ages to come, and woman has never forgot- ten the color scheme of Eden. | Of course, it's sllly to doll up in int to make the face look like a Japanese sunset, but no amo is going to reveal a ‘woman's real nature. Man will ever be mustified. He will follow her blithely *"me Englsn another girls have guess coming their way. Men will be inter- ested in , no matter whether the face is as.open as plath glass or @ tinted as a stained-glass window. non - fattening! The | more you drink, the better you look and feel. Write to Welch's, Dept. W, Westjield, New York, Sor scientifio weig menus, Free. Insist on Welch's—pure, unadulterated grape juice = pasteurized. Six liberal portionstothe pint..more if diluted with one-third water, and many prefer it s0. Greatest breakfast fruit drink in America... at less than Sc a portion! ‘Philadelphia’’ Cream Cheese on a fresh fruit pie! Thin the cheese slightly with milk and spread it over the berries. It's like 2 whipped cream meringue, with an added tang! Try the velvety goodness of smooth “‘Philadelphia’ Cream Cheese on your oven-fresh gin_firbread .. frai spring salads. cool savory Cheese is simply indispensable for sandwiches, . it spreads like thick cream or sweet butter. Keep it in your refrigerator . . single pachg’;louheconveniegsé‘—puhgebgn A KrArT-PHENIX PRODUCT FRESH . . in the small wrapped package, {Iu-qu pLinbv fll‘li‘ “PHILADELPHIA" Never sold in_ bulk a!

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