Evening Star Newspaper, June 30, 1930, Page 31

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WOMAN'’S PAGE. Blouses for Summer and Autumn BY MARY ! There is no need to hesitate about jing more sleeveless blouses and ing as many more yourself, because [heir usefulness is sure to outlast the warmer days of useful under the loth-suit jacket, and in cooler weather Summer, During the ulunmfluywifibe ELEEVELESS BLOUSE OF LIGHT BLUE HANDKERCHIEF LINEN HAS THE NEW PETAL COLLAR THAT MAY EASILY BE MADE BY THE CLEVER HOME DRESSMAKER. A B % o 'y may be worn conveniently under the lightweight cardigan type of jacket 1o make a useful indoor costume. Once you have cut out -flplttzm for a plain slip-on blouse that fits you, there is an almost endless variety to be gained by different arrangement of the collar and the addition of various sorts of frills and jabot trimmin% The blouse or blousette shown today was made of fine handkerchief linen— & soft shade of blue to be worn with a dark blue linen suit. Of pale yellow or MARSHALL. green, it would be a smart complement to the popluar black pique suit. Paral- lel tucks trim the front the becoming neck finish. The accompanying diagram shows how to make the tabs. exactly two inches, Be and Ac inches and a line drawn from the cen- ter of AB to D should be four inches in length. In cutting out the tabs make two for every tab needed. Sixteen tabs are used for a blouse of ‘average size, so th: | in that case you-would need 32 pieces of ‘unen. Allow an eighth of an inch on | all sides for a narrow seam. Placing | two of the pieces together seam along | the sides B, DE, Cd and Ac. Turn in- | d press. Then gather sli{?;‘.ly and fasten along the neck and | fini with a bias fold of the mate: | (Copyright. 1930.) | Skper | Roast Veal. | Stuff a five-pound breast of veal with | bread-stuffing. Season well with salt, | pepper and ginger. Heat some fat in | & roasting pan, put in the veal, and cook in & hot oven until brown and crisp, basting frequently, When brown, add one cupful of hot water, cover and | cook until tender. If desired, a few | slices of onion may be placed on top of the veal. Serve with gravy, made | as follows: Pour off all the fat except | two tablespoonfuls, to which add two tablespoonfuls of flour. Brown well, then add two cupfuls >f boiling water, bofls. Season with salt and pepper, | and if desired, a tablespoonful of tomato | catsup. Strain, add one tablespoonful | of chopped parsley, and serve in a gravy boat. DAILY DIET RECIPE LIVER ROLL. Lamb or calves’ liver, one pound; bacon slices, three: bread crumbs, one-half cup; raw egg, one; chopped parsley, one tea- spoon; chopped onion, two tea- spoons; butter, one tablespoon; Iresh tomatoes, two, medium size. SERVES 5 OR 6 PORTIONS. Have the liver cut fairly thin and In about 10 slices. Fry the bacon slices and chop them fine. Make a paste of the chopped bacon, bread crumbs, parsley, onion and raw egg. Spread about a teaspoon of this mixture on each liver slice. Roll them up and fasten each one with a skewer or toothpick. Place butter in frying pan. When butter is hot put in liver rolls and brown on all sides. Add sliced tomato—or about one- half cup canned tomatoes—cover pan and cook slowly over a slow stirring _constantly until the mixture | and tabs give | dont you dare go to skool without your AB should be | three | ¢ THE EVE LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. It was starting to drissle this morn- ing and ma called downstairs, Benny, rubbers, Well G, ma, gosh, the streets aint hardly even wet yet, I sed, and she sed, theyll proberly be soaked later, and so will your feet. Why dont you think of the future for once in your life? she sed. Well G, ma, theres no time like the present, and anyways, gosh, I dont bleeve I know where my rubbers are, I sed, and she sed, of corse you dont, unless youve changed your intire car- acter over nite. Now go ahed and look for them, she sed. . Wich,I started to agenst my will, and after a whi!» I called up, I cant find them anywheres, ma. O my goodness, did you look in the hall ra<k? ma sed, and I sed, Yes mam, sed, Well then look there again. Well G, ma, they couldent get there by themselfs since I looked, could they? I sed, and ma sed, Do 8s I say and stop that continuous streem of endless ar- gewing. And I looked again, saying, They aint there, ma, I told you they wasent, and ma sed, I sippose Ill haff to find them myself as usu And she started to come down, saying, Wont you ever lern to remember where you put your things? and I sed, Well thats just the trubble, ma, I remember s0 many places I can pever remember wich was the last one, and she sed, Well then try to remem- | ber theres a place for everything and everything should be in its place, thats | the secret of being orderly. | Well thats just the thing, ma, Ive got | too many places for everything, Im too | orderly, thats a trubble with me, I sed, | and ma sed. Here they are, rite here in | the hall rack in full view like the ris-| ing sun, the very ferst place I look. | Well its darn funny, ma, I looked | there twice, I sed, and she sed, O, put | them on and go to skool. Wich I did. SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Beauty a Fatal Gift. A very unusual verdict was rendered recently in a Brooklyn court. A young man sitting next to a young woman in a motion picture theater flirted, or at- tempted to fiirt, with her. He was arrested It was his first offense. The magistrate said the young woman was as much at fault as the young man. Addressing the young woman, he sai “You are very beautiful. nature of young men to be by beautiful girls. Since this is so, I cannot blame the young defendant. He fire about 20 minutes. Rapid cook- ing toughens liver. Remove skew- ers and serve the rolled liver with the tomato gravy over it. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes protein. A very, very little starch and fat over and eaten by normal adults of average or under weight and those overweight if bacon were omnlxed and no bread eaten al meal. £ A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBER' ON! of the most spectacular figures Capitol Hill ever has known is béick on the job. Thomas Lindsay Blanton of Abilene— more familiarly known as Tom Blanton of Texas —has experienced dozens of congres- sonal disputes, and he was plunged in- to another one be- fore they allowed him Texas. He took his old t only after a goute hat con- [*¥ned al things, lection certificate. [Representative Clancy of Michigan gaid it should have read “Represent: ive in Congress,” instead of “Congress. jection in a viva voce vote. ‘The fiery Texan has changed. little nce he left Washington more than a r ago with the statement that he as through with politics for good. He still is the robust, flered, straight-haired Blanton of old. bThat audacity and pugnacity which ‘arned for him during his previous itay in Congress the title of “stormy trel of the House” is yet evident. There have been few men in Con- 5 n” but the House overruled the ob- | broad-shoul- | T PLUMMER. | gress whose terms have been as colorful as Tom Blanton's. He had the reputa- | tion of Kkilling more bills, on points of order, than any other memi o missed expulsion once by a margin of eight votes when he was accused of printing unprivileged remarks -in- the Congressional Record. | . He has had personal altercations with his colleagues in the cloak rooms of the House. His verbal clashes with col- | leagues on the floor have been many | and bitter. Fearless, always fighting, nothing has daunted Tom Blanton. a& a member of the House committee on the %"k’; of Ool}lmhl:i whden he was pushing charges of graft and cor- ruption in the Washington Police De- partmeat, he took up his abode at the | headquarters of a national woman's or- ganization and remained there until the storm had blown over, | Back in 1921, when the House voted | unanimously to have Speaker Gillett | censure him, Blanton fought back sin- gle-handed to prevent such an action being taken. After being censured he found his | way out of chamber into the cloak room. There he fell in a faint, tears streaming from his eyes. But one hour later he was at his office, coatless and | collarless, tackling a huge stack of correspon lence. | _ He has snnounced that he is back in Washington to put & stop to what he calls raids on the United States Treas- | ury by Congress. This statement kept { him from being seated at first—forced | him to wait until the election returns | | of his district could be canvassed. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Are You Immune? Every infection, such as typhoid fever, tuberculosis, diphtheria. inevi- tably causes an immunity reaction or response, the severity of the reaction depending on the size and potency or virulence of the dose of infection. If infected individual develops typhoid jgver, tuberculosis or diphtheria it is cause the number of germs or their ence was sufficient to overwhelm e individual's immunizing forces. Bhere is no doubt that when such infections occur with a small number of germs or with germs of feeble potency or attenuated or weakened disease-pro- ducing power, theimmunity reaction takes WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. BRADY, M. D. | place although the individual's physio- logical equilibrium is slightly or not at | all upset and he is not ill enough to bother. Thus many of us scquire im- | munity without being aware of it. Thus, too, many of us submit to vaccination, | or some other artificial process. in order to gain the desired immunity without actually having the disease in the active form. . I have more than once felt a kind of intuition that I was infected with | typhoid, but tI ks to the small dose | or the feeble virulence of the germs, I did not develop the fever—just felt | kinda mean and sorry for myself for | a few days. Haven't you ever imagined | something like that, reader? It is not such a wild notion, after all. It un- doubtedly happens. Perhaps it is not | 80 common in the case of typhoid, but we know it is common in the case of tuberculosis. The trouble with these casual immu- in"v reactions is that they are com- paratively slight in many cases. The immunity one accidentally acquires in this way may help some, but is not necessarily sufficient to prevent subse- | quent reinoculation if one happens to be exposed to a large or virulent in- | fectign. This indeed is precisely what happ®ns in many cases of chronic pul- monary tuberculosis. The patient sus- | tains one or more mild infections in in- | fancy or early chidhood, and these | immunity reactions are so feeble that | they fail to destroy the tubercle bacilli At one time, | be | isn't at fault—at the same time neither should you be held responsible. The responsibility is nature's. “Young man, stop flirting. T forgive you this time—but don't let it happen again. Young woman, you should wear a veil. You are very pretty. This young man disturbed the peace—but you caused him to. Case dismissed.” The young man had trembled at the possibility of a term in jail. The young woman blushed—they both went their different ways. It would indeed be interesting if they should somehow be presented formally | to each other—fall in love—and live happily ever after. It is unfortunate that | this episode did not happen within the | covers of a novel. In. fiction there | would be a happy ending. | The perfect fade-out of the story would be for the couple to be married by the magistrate before whom they had appeared. Beauty, said Lord Byron, is “a fatal gift.” All women aspire to be beautiful— and those who aren't try every known means to be as beautiful as possible. Powder and rouge help. The hair- dresser is a public benefactor. But if what the magistrate said is to be taken seriously, it may conceivably happen that some time a law will be passed prohibiting beauty parlors. Powder puffs will have to be carried as some men now carry a hip flask. Those of us who are inclined to break the law can brew permanent waves in the home! Vanity cases will taboo. Second offenders who use a lipstick will be sentenced to dark bou- doirs in which 1',hhel'ehlre no mlrtrors!h 1 of this might happen—but such a l.ywfll never be passed. The distin- guished gentlemen who si¢ in our highest courts are human—and I am certain they would declare the law un- constitutional. ‘The author wishes 'to help her read- ers whenever possible. Write her, send- ing stamped, self-addressed envelope for personal reply. (Copyright, 1930.) JOLLY POLLY A Tesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. ' FELIQTATED A . WELL-KNOWN MILLIONAIRE ~( ON HIS BIRTHDAY. 35\ HE 15 A BACHELOR . 7Z ot N2THAT EXPLAINS WHY HE 15 STILL A MILLIONAIRE ¥ SA\D DHD}J L. C.—There is a difference between felicitate_and congratulate. To felici- tate (fe-LISS-e-tate) is simply to wish one joy; to congratulate is to express hearly sympathy in another's joys or hopes. Felicitate is the colder of the two. One who has lost the object of his affections by marriage to a rival might felicitate that rival, but he could | hardly be expected to congratulate him. | ‘Ten thousand men and women cyclists | from all parts of England attended the | recent,_service in memory of wheelmen | who died in the World War, the obser: ance being at Meriden, the reputed geo. graphical center of the country. Psychic Adventures of Noted Men and Women Galli-Marie Has Vision of Dying Bizet As She Sings “Carmen.” BY J. P. GLASS. Of the millions who have heard the opera, “Carmen,” how many know the strange story of the vision that came to Mme. Galli-Marie, creator of the character of Carmen, on the night that Bizet, composer of the opera, died? All the Paris newspapers carried ac- counts of the incident. M. Flammarion, who has written voluminously on psy- chic phenomena, made an investigation and verified the story. After composing ‘armen,” Bizet's first care was to obtain the proper sing- | er for the title role. He was acquainted with the talents of Galli-Marle and it ‘Was upon her that his choice fell. During the rehearsals the composer and the singer naturally were thrown much together. Their friendship was | first exclamation was: Galli-Marie was on the stage and singing, when suddenly she was seen to gasp, turn pale, press her hand against her side and stop singing. A murmur of anxiety ran through the audience. On the siage a fellow artist whispered, “What is it? What is it?” “A shooting pain in my side,” ex- plained the singer, “It was like the blow of & hammer in my heart.” For a moment it was thought that she must leave the stage, but by a ter- rific effort she regained control of her- self and went on. She finished the act, bowed to a splendid encore and then retreated to her dressing room, which was quickly crowded by her anxious associates. To their surprise, Galli- Marie did not talk about herself. Her “Some misfor- y ,-rl “SOME MISFORTUNE HAS HAPPENED TO OUR BIZET!" the more thoroughly cemented by the success of the opera, which was first prefented at the Opera Comigue In Paris on March 3, 1875. Mme. Galli-Marie scored a tremen- dous hit in her part and shared in the celebrations that attended the popular admiration of the opera. In the early evening of June 2, 1875, Just three months after the opening presentation, Bizet was about as usual. There was no suspicion of his being in anything but good health. He was not at the opera that night, but, of course, after “Carmen” had es- tablished itself, this was often the case. My Neighbor Says: Remove the side shoots of to- mato plants in order to make strong plants. When these shoots are removed the plants bear more fruit. If you live so close to the high- way that passersby can look into your house, try painting the screen doors with a very thin coat of white paint, and you can look out, but people passing by cannot see into your living rooms. ‘When tin cake and bread boxes become scratched and worn look- ing, give them a coat or two of metal paint. Paint the inside white and outside any color you desire. Allow the paint to dry well before the boxes are used. To remove rust from a tea- kettle dry it, then completely cover it inside and out with a coating of fresh lard, packing the nose with some. Then put it in the oven and bake all day for two or three days with a hot fire, S0 that the lard makes a glaze over the rust. Then, if the glaze is good, the teakettle is ready to wash and use. Buack FLac Liquin DOOMS INSECT tune has happened to our Bizet!" “What do you mean?” asked every one. She replied: “As the blow seemed to strike my heart, I distinctly saw Bizet's face in front of me. It was for just a My God! My God! second. ... How pale he was!” It was not until after,the. perform- ance was concluded that any one thought ‘to make inquiries about the composer. Then it was learned that, about the hour of Galli-Marie’s vision, he had been stricken by a heart attack. He died on the morning of June 3. (Copyright, 1980.) Bran Bread. One cup bran, two cups flour, one- third cup sugar, four tablespoons molasses, one-half teaspoon salt, one teaspoon one teaspoon baking powder, one and two-third cups milk, one egg and one tablespoon fat, melted. Mix ingredients and pour into greased loaf pan, Let stand 156 minutes. Bake 50 minutes in moder: slow oven. THE REAL THING IN Bran FLakes ‘WHEN you taste Kellogg’s Pep Bran Flakes your search for perfect bran flakes is at an end. You taste the flavor of PEP such as no other bran flakeshave. Theystay crisper in milk or cream. You get the vitamins, the mineral salts of the wheat. And just Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. June 30, 1861.—Manuel C. Causten of this city has succeeded in sending through the Confederate lines a letter to his father here. Although the letter is dated June 9, it has only been re- ceived in Washington in the last 24 hours. Mr. Causten the younger is & members of the President's Mounted Guard, oneof the local volunteer or- ganizations which have been on duty near this city. ‘The son says in his letter that he was captured by the Confederates near Darnestown, in Montgomery County, ! Md. He does not mention his present location, but he says that he has been ~treated very kindly by every one” since he was taken prisoner. Volunteer troops from the Northern and Western States continue to pour into this city In a steady stream. The 30th New York Regiment arrived here by train at 1:30 o'clock this morning. The men look smart, active and well disciplined. They have come mostly from the mechanical branches of busi- ness in New York State. ‘This regiment number 840 men. They are armed with smooth-bore muskets of the Springfield pattern. They have brought tent equipage and full camp appurtenances. They are accompanied by a fine regimental band and an ex- cellent drum L‘Orz Col. Edward Pris- by of Albany their commanding officer. Only one hour and a half later this morning the 32nd New York Regiment arrived here by rail from Staten Island, N. Y., where it has been in camp un- dergoing training. This regiment has 800 men, who are furnished with mus- kets from the Springfield works. They, too, have complete camp equipage. Their commanding officer is Col. Rod- erick Matheson, The 32nd New York Regiment is popularly known as the “ist California Regiment,” because all of the staff, sev- eral of the line officers and about 400 of the rank and file are men who re- turned to New York from California to enlist in the Union Army. They went into camp today on the Corcoran prop- erty, near the tollgate, which they promptly named Camp McDougall in honor of -Senator J. A. McDougall of California. ‘The 15th New York Regiment, con- | sisting largely of Irishmen from the | mechainical trades, got in at 6:30 a.m. | today. commanding officer is Col. John McLeod. This is a regiment of “sappers and miners.” | Fashions of Today BY MARIE SHALMAR. Exactly Right Length. To the woman who realizes the im- portance of taking pains with the de- tails of dress the exact adjustment of the skirt length seems well worth while and the expense involved in having the skirt of a readymade dress adjusted by an expert fitter seems small. How precisely can this most, desirable of skirt lengths be determined by the individual woman? Certainly not by giving mere inch measurements of skirts for -different occasions. Meas- urement of skirts below the knees would more nearly apply to women of different heighte were it not so diff- cult to define the precise location of the knées. The number of inches from the ground or floor comes nearer to the mark, only this, too, varies to some extent with the height of the woman. Eight inches from the floor on a tall woman means a skirt that in effect is considerably longer than a skirt with| a hemline eight inches from the floor a8 worn by a short woman. Then, too, something depends on the proportions. The very short-waisted woman should retain shorter skirt lines, while the woman with a long waist should be well disposed to skirts of the longer sort. With the aid of a dressmaker or a friend with a flair for dress you can set- tle the mater of skirt lengths in a way that will prove satisfactory at least through the present season. Stand up in front of your mtrror in a street dress or sult skirt the length of which seems satisfactory. As you stand there come pare the reflection with an authorita- | tive fashion- drawing. | Possibly on closer analysis you and your confrere will decide that it should | be a trifie longer or shorter. Then take A foot rule and, resting one end firmly on the floor, measure the length in inches. For your convenience in home dress- making you may buy a metal device on which the desired distance from the floor may be marked. This convenient little measurer stands of itself on the floor and makes it possible for you to adjust hemlines without expert as- sistance. Eggs in Ramekins. Melt one tablespoonful of butter, ahd add ene tablespoonful of flour. = Stir until smooth, Add half a cupful of cream and stir until thick. Add four hard-bolled eggs, chopped fine, Season with salt and paprika. Put into but- tered ramekins, cover- with a thick layer of grated cheese, sprinkle with buttered crumbs, and bake until brown FEATURES “THIS TOWN'S “Hot weather is here again,” writes one of my beauty fans, “and I know you think it queer, but one of my big- gest beauty problems in hot weather is that my hands perspire so much. I would just give anything if they would keep cool and dry, but they won't. The palms are always damp and clammy, and, as I work in an office, their con- dition even hinders me in my work.” ‘The problem of perspiring hands is such a common one that I find it nec- essary to help many of my readers with this beauty problem from time to time. It is usually the business woman to whom this problem is most annoying, for it is not so convenient to her to ap- ply an astringent to her hands several times during the day as the home woman may do if she wishes, In order to keep cool and dry hands that are inclined to perspire excessively, it is necessary to lotion to them when completing the morning toilette. The following lotion is excellent for this purpose: One dram 4 ounces witch-hazel, 4 ounces rosewa- ter. Shake well. Apply the lotion gen- erously to the palms of the hands and between the fingers, and also massaf the backs of the hands with it. It is a good plan to keep a bottle of this so- lution, together with a good hand lo- tion, handy at the office as well as at home. During the warm days it may be nec- essary to apply it not only in the morn- ing before leaving the house, but again at noontime and again at bedtime, in order to keep the hands comfortable, cool and free from that clammy, moist feeling. Another very simple home remedy for perspiring hands is made by dissolving an ounce of powdered alum in one quart of warm water. Allow it to cool and use this as a wash two or three times a day, allowing the lotion to dry on the hands. A good way to keep the hands in good condition and youthful is to use a good skin lotion or hand cream every | time they are washed and dried, and to use an oily cream on them at night, to- gether with a bleaching and massage treatment once a week. Every time you wash your hands gently press the cuti- cle back from the nalls with the towel. ‘This reveals the half moons and pre- | vents hangnails. To remove stains from | the hands or fingertips the following | lotion will be found helpful: Four tea- | spoonfuls lemon juice, 1 ounce glycerin, | in & quick oven. 2 ounces witch hazel, 1 ounce peroxide th REDUCING GARMENTS ARE LINED WITH COTTON MESH AND pply an astringent | tannic acid, 4 drams eau de cologne, | JUST A SHAM.” MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. 4 ounces rosewater. Shake well. Keep in a bottle at the office, as this lotion will remove stains from the fingers and nails after typewriting, changing the type ribbon or after using ink which has stained the tips, nails and sides of the fingers. ‘While the majority are troubled with perspiring hands only during the hot, sultry weather, there are those whose palms seem to be always damp and clammy. This is most emba: as well as uncomfortable. When this is the case, very often the cause is il health, nervousness or emotional com- plexes, and though the above local treatments will give temporary rellef and should be used, it is well for those who are affiicted to have a thorough physical examinatidn. While local treatments are very good and should be employed, it must not be Inrfonen that good health is the foun- dation of all beauty and it is the first duty of every woman who would be lovely to look first to her health. When | she “eats the right foods and a suf~ ficient, amount of fresh fruits and vegs etables, sleeps sufficiently in a well ven- tilated bed room and exercises every v& in the fresh air and sunshine, a constipation, drinks plenty of water and takes her cleansing and stimulating baths, she has Iaid the foundation for beauty and charm. (Copyright, 1930.) Rich in froit nourishment and the mineral salts your body needs. Pure....and deliciousty um’pfiu! Six liberal portions to :bo ::;‘—mn if di- lute: many m it so. Less than Sc o glasst Insist onWelch’ unadulterated W pure, 'S GRAPE JUICE S O GR R e newest INTER-LINED WITH COMFORT! These new Kleinert's reducing garments are lined—with the softest, downiest cotton mesh — to absorb every bit of moisture and cushion your most rebellious curves in perfect comfort while they're being gently but surely reduced. For $5.00 you can purchase the Kleinert's Step-in Reducer illustrated — in all the better department stores and specialty shops —as well as other styles variously priced. Any of them will mold your figure to conform with the new fashions and help you to lose your unwanted pounds easily and safely. Remember: Kleinert's are the reducing gar ments lined with cotton mesh ...and inter-lined with comfort! 24 to 36 inch waist measures—by the inch. L B. Kleinert Rubber Co., Fifth Ave., New York, N, Y. “PERFECT AS ELEINERT’S Z4 | entirely; a few tubercle bacilli remain | somewhere in the body, viable, that is, living though dormant, too feeble to do | more than just survive. | Repeated infections of that sort oc- | cur, if the individual remains in the ‘pnvimnment of infection, until even- tually the sum of infections, or possibly | an unusually heavy or virulent dose, | overcomes the balance and the patient | develops active signs or symptoms of | the disease. Knowing the nature of immunity | and how it occurs we can understand that, quite likely, a majority of cases of ‘active tuberculosis of the lungs es- | cape recognition, because the iliness | happens to be slight and does not last | more than a few weeks or months. | If the laity in general had a clearer | understanding of the meaning and nature of immunity, it would be of dis- tinct advantage to many patients, be- cause intelligence t:mlm; :et;.g fr(;;gg; WHEN THE EMPTY SHOE BOX | eration by the patient ant 'AS IN DEMAND TO CARRY SAND- and more faithful adherence to the ad- : IN WHEN WE'D GO ON AN/ vice and instructions of 'URSION TO RIVER VIEW. (Cepyright, 1930.) PESTS-because “IT PENETRATES” Black Flag Liquid kills flies, mosquitoes, moths, roaches, ants, bedbugs, fleas—gquicker! It penetrates their tiny breathing tubes. Not one escapes. Always costs less than other well-known brands. Money back if not satisfied. eno bran to be mildly laxative. Sold in the red.and.green Echhs; Made by Kellogg 9 Kleinert's Phantont Kleinert's Mode Dress Shields in all colors, DRESS SHIELDS) Kleinert's Mirelle Powder—the delight-

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