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WOMAN'S PAGE. Making a Handy Dressing Sack BY MARY MARSHALL. Here is the dressing sack thet we have found so convenient and that can be packed as easily as a large hand- kezohief in one's vacation trunk or bag. We suggest making one for yourself now, and several more to use for Christmas presents or bridge party prizes later on. Perhaps you can get remnants of glnkd silk voile or other pretty fabric use for them. The material measures a yard and @ half the long way and a yard the THIS DRESSING SACK OF PRINTED VOILE IS EDGE! ‘WITH LACE AND TR! AT THE NECK. other way. You will need five and & half yards of lace, which is applied flat. and mitered at the corners. If ou do not want lace you can finish {h. edge with feather stitching done with silk to match the jacket. The slit is about nine inches long. Turn the raw edges of the slit back IMMED WITH ROSEBUDS | Sf running down almost to nothing at the ends, and cover with a strip of rose- bud trimming. Or else don't turn the edges back—just bind them with a plece of ribbon, soft, narrow ribbon, not more than three-quarters of an inch wide. And lay the rosebud trim- ming on over that. If you want you can bind the whole thing with ribbon, instead of turning a hem, and then bind the neck opening with the same ribbon and omit the rosebud trimming. (Copyright, 1930.) Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. July 16, 1790.—By the terms of the residence law, enacted by Congress and approved by the President today, the “seat of Government of the United States shall, by virtue of this act, be transferred” to the new Federal Dis- trict on the Potomac River by the first Monday in December, 1800. The law provides that the next ses- slon of Congress after the enactment of the law shall begin in December, 1790, in Philadelphia. All offices at- tached to the Govermment, under the terms of this law, are to remain in Philadelphia until the first Monday in December, 1800. It is.also provided that the ensuing sessions of Congress shall be held in Philadelphia from this time until the removal of the Capital City to the Federal District on the Potomac, 10 years hence. It is provided that a District 10 miles square shall be located on the Potomac River “at some place between the mouths of the Eastern Branch and the Connogocheague * * * and the same is hereby accepted for the permanent seat of the Government of the United States.” President Washington is authorized to appoint three commissioners, “who shall, under the direction of the Presi- dent, survey and define said District,” and they shall have power “to purchase or accept such quantity of land on the eastern side of said river (in Mary- land) as the President may deem gmper," for the new Federal Capital ty. ty. In this Federal District the com- missioners are directed to provide, prior to the first Monday in December, 1800, “guitable buildings for the accommoda- tion of Congress and of the President and w!gor the public offices of the United ates.” of such tates. “For defraying the expense purchases and buildin; fPeuys the Jaw, “the President of the United States shall be authorized to accept grants of money.” It is further provided that the oper- ation of the laws of the State or States from which such District shall be carved out shall remain in force there- in, until such time as Congress en the right side a quarter of an inch,provide otherwise. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Peptio Uleer. Every time I use this term peptic ulcer I am consclous of its unsuitabil- ity, but there is no more familiar word for it. It means ulcer of the stomach (gastric) or ulcer of the duodenum (duodenal), and in nine out of ten cases the ulcer is in the duodenum, which is the four or five inches of ali- mentary canal just below the outlet of the stomach. The best medical view s that peptic ulcer is caused by focal infection, and one of the important pre- disposing factors is a shortage of vita- mins in the diet, particularly vitamins A, Band C. Other ing factors are excessive use of tobacco, insufficlent mastication of food or loss of teeth and consequent inability to masticate food, the habit of using strong spices, con- diments and sauces, overindulgence in concentrated artificial sweets, and the habit of taking alkalis such as soda. A young man returned to his duty as & teller in & bank after what seemed to customers who had missed his pleas- ant face at the window a very short absence. He had been away taking the cure for tuberculosis. His trouble was quickly arrested because he placed him- self under medical care promptly. He could not understand where he had acquired the disease, but he said he often thought, as he lay on his bed or chair at the san, how fine it would be if people serving the public at win- dow grills like himself could erect a suitable screen of cheesecloth to stop the germ laden spray that shoots con- stantly from one mouth to the other across the three feet of space. At the next window a young woman bookkeeper Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. “De Senectute.” ‘There never was a sane man or woman, 40 or 30 as the sex may be, evidently had a severe code id the head. Yes, and she knew just how she got it, too. She had taken a warm bath and then . . this young woman robably never yearned for & screen at er window, but I did. The two cases well represent popular health intelli- gence and the lack of it. So far I have not been called se- verely to task by the ever ready oper- ators of our profession for my remarks about the comparative value of sur- gical and medical tre: t for peptic uleer. I except some of the hoity-toity boys who have considerable leisure time will get together and bring some kind of pressure to bear to stop my carrying on, as some of the complacent nose and throat specialists have .done about my newspaper discussions’of the tonsil- lectomy scandal. I say scandal—and that's the truth. 1t is my general idea merely that it takes a year to cure peptic ulcer. That is merely my estimate. And not only that, but it takes a year of very faith- ful and careful adherence to the in- structions and advice of your doctor. If you slip or relax or indulge in some unapproved food or otherwise commit some little infraction of the rules the doctor gives you, add & month of two to the sentence for each misdemeanor, Curing ulcer is resting tuberlosis, patient well and happy, or suppressing syphillis. It isn't done if the patients thinks he knows about as much as the ordinary doctor does. You've got to mind your doctor’s orders and that's the whole secret. (Copyright, 1930.) Oatmeal Macaroons. Beat half a cupful of sugaf into one egg until light. Add half a tablespoon- ful of melted g fat, a scant half a teaspoonful of salt, and one and one- together thoroughly. Shape in small rounds on a greased baking sheet. Bake in a moderate oven. This recipe makes Who didn't look forward to something | 18 cakes. lke a dwindling, inevitable old a ‘That famous poem about “Come alon with me” and “The best is yet to be” (I can't recall it for good reasons) never did sound exactly right, despite its sweet sentiment. Florida's first explorer was looking for a fountain of youth. That was long ago. Some 75 years ago Dr. Brown- Bequard surmised that the “fountain” somehow sustained invisible connections th the so-called ductless glands. This famous explorer never lost faith in the verity of the internal functions of the body. More research. here may yet prove worth while. Lately a number of enthusiasts have continued the quest from a variety of angles, purely psychological in nature, ‘Their findings are important. For one thing we are advised to keep our friendship fences repaired. It's a revival of the truth as Holmes saw it, when he intimated that “the last leaf” was old because “The names he loved to hear Have been carved for many a year On the tomb.” Better than this, in some respects at least, is the warning that old age is nothing more than a failure to keep up with the times. We are growing old faster nowadays because the world is making such rapid progress in art, literature, music, invention, religion. So unless some sort of adult education 48 soon inaugurated we will become a nation of mental senescents, (Copyright. 1930 My Neighbor Says: No matter how much gas you burn, you cannot raise the tem- perature of water above 212 de- grees Fahrenheit, or boiling-point. ‘Therefore, when the boiling-point is reached, reduce the flame. This effects a saving, Coarse emery board is excellent for cleaning suede shoes. 1f this is used occasionally it will not be necessary to use powder. Meat should not be salted he- fore cooking. Salt after the sur- face has been seared and the meat partly cooked. If a skirt is much splashed with mud or stained along the hem it should not be brushed until the stains are completely dry, prompt treatment while the mud s still wet only causing the dirt to sink into the material. If brushing does not eliminate the marks when the material is dry, sponging with denatured fourth cupfuls of rolled oats. Mix all | f THE EVENING MOTHERS AND TREIR CHILDREN. A Novel Play House. We had long had an upright pi box in the basement and one day it occured to me that it would make a fine | play house for the n. Daddy | moved it under a big tree in the back | yard and in his spare moments cut tiny windows in it. He extended the slant- ing part straight at the top and let the | front down to make a porch. This he | fixed so that it could be closed and locked at night to keep out the damp- ness and he fitted glass into the tiny | windows. ~ We planted quick-growing vines at the sides and I put up some | ruffled curtains. When the kiddies had | spread a rag rug on the floor and | moved their dolls and doll farniture in | they had a play house whicly was the | admiration of all their little iriends. Free pamphlet on meeting physical needs of your children, their games and play. Send stamped self-addressed en- velope to Mother's Bureau, care of this newspaper. k for Pamphlet No 4. (Copyright, 1930.) THE STAR’ DAILY PATTERN SERVICE A sleeveless sports distinctly characteristic of the new nch sports vogue is fashioned of men's cotton Afii'uunl. It is orchid and white color- ing. A purple leather belt marks the natural waistline, - % “ ‘Grouj plaits at the front. the skirt flare and m traigl hipline is interesting. Style No. 574 can be 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Yellow shantung is effective with collar and rever facing in cocoa brown shade and worn with matching brown suede belt. Aquamarine blue washable flat crepe, white silk pique, nile green jersey, dusty-pink rajah silk and French blue linen with white dots are lovely com- binations. For a pattern of this style, send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The ‘Washington's Star's New York Fashion Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty- ninth street, New York. You will have an attractive frock when you use this pattern. In our new Spring Fashion Magazine there are any number of equally charming models. I know you will be pleased with them. I hope you will get a copy. Just enclose 10 cents additional for the book when you order your pattern, S Mocha Jumbles. Four tablespoonfuls fat, one eupful light brown sugar, two "P' four table- spoonfuls coffee, one-eighth teaspoonful salt, two cups flour and one teaspoon- ul g powder. Cream fat and sugar. And eggs and coffee and beat two minutes. Drop portions four inches a) on greased baking sheets. Bake 12 minutes in moderate oven. ether should be tried, this method succeeding admirably both with serge end cloth costumes in dark colors as well as lighter fabrics. betha, lop dress & ../%Lre%/flefl suggestion for blach, char STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C, Historic Wise-Crackers of The Table Disappointment in Love; La Reyniere Turned to Gastronomy and Became BYJ.P. an Authority. GLASS. “THE TABLE IS A MAGNET WHICH NOT ONLY DRAWS TO ITSELF BUT JOINS TOGETHER ALL THOSE WHO APPROACH IT.” Among the most readable disserta- tions on the pleasures of the table are the eight little volumes by Alexandre- Balthazar-Laurent Grimod de la Rey- niere, collected under the title of “L’Almanach des Gourmands” (Alma- nac of the Epicures). La Reyniere might not have become a great authority upon eating pleas- urably had it not been for a love dis- aster. At 39 he was enamoured of an actress, Mlle. Mezeray. However, she repulsed his advances. He turned to gastronomy for consolation, with the result that he grew to be the arbiter of the Parisian dinner table. This was at the close of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth. An interesting fact about Le niere was that he had deformed hands and he had to do all his literary labors with an artificial device. He was a merry person, and he liked ;,ot\svlse-cl’lck. Here are some of his jests: “The stomach of a true gourmand, like the casemates of & besieged city, should be proof against bombs.” “Digestion 1is the business of the stomach, and indigestion that of the doctors. “Thirteen at table is & number to be BEAUTY CHATS Attractive Fingernails, It requires fairly steady attention to keep the fingernalls really attractive, especially if you use nall varnish. For even when put on by the most skilled manicurist, this stuff makes the edges of the nails hard, increases the ten- dency toward hang-nails, and a few days after the stuff has been applied it begins to discolor. So you'll have a faint brownish look about the finger- nails, and you'll be cleaning them often, t;llguely wondering how they got so rty. Keep a little box in your bath room in some convenient spot—I find that a table just the height of the tub, stand- ing by the tub, is a wonderfully con- venient place for all sorts of bath room odds and ends—and in the box keep a couple of emery boards, a pointed nail file, curved scissors, and a very small bottle of either cuticle softener or lem- on juice. Also a wee box of powdered pumice. This is by no means a real manicure set, but merely a group of articles for touching up the bad places on the nails quickly. If, when you've bathed or washed, ‘your nails do not look perfect, it is very easy then to run around their edges with the emery board, and the scissors are there for odd bits of skin that col- greud’ed when there is only enough food or 12.” “An overturned salt cellar is to be feared solely when it is overturned in & 800 me Kitchen 18 & country in which t.h:‘r!e re always discoveries to be ine’s the milk of the old, the balm of -céulu. and the vehicle of the gour- and” “Indigestions are virtually unknown to great pedestrians.” “Pastry is to the cuisine what fig- | dont. discow ures of rhetoric are to rse—an oration without figures and a dinner without pastry are equally insipid.” “It is as necessary that the master of & house should understand how to carve as it is for a young girl to dance in order to secure a husband.” “The table is a magnet which not only draws to itself but joins together all those who approach it.” “A good pastry maker is as rare as & great orator.” “True gourmands always finish their dinner before the desert; that which is eaten after the roast is done only out of pure politeness.” From these observations of La Rey- niere alone a philosophy can be og- tained sufficient for the cooking and eating needs of most persons. (Copyright, 1930.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES lect in the corners of each nall. Ordi- nary stains yield to cuticle softener or to lemon juice, both being bleaching. Difficult stains, especially under the nails, yleld to a combination of the bleach and the pumice powder, or the powder itself, rubbed under each nail with an orange wood stick (did I say one should go in the box?) moistened and then scrubbed out with the nail brush or else cleaned out with the file, At the conclusion of any treatment, even the quickest, cold cream should be Tubbed into and under and around the nalls and then wiped off. Mrs. P. M. N—Mrs. J. G—When using the white of an egg for a curling fluid, dilute it with about six times its quantity of water. It is not necessary to beat the egg, just mix water and egg until it is smooth enough to dampen the hair very slightly, and just such parts as are needed for curling or wav- Reader—To help fatten the bust mas- sage with any kind of a rourishing oll, using rotary and upward movements. Massage the legs also, or take exercise that bring the muscles of the legs into action. Your weight of 126 pounds, with height of 5 feet 2 inches, would be normal if you are about 30 to 35 years of age. Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. When to Trade In. Most women who own automobiles have a “trade-in” problem. The most important part of that question is “when.” We all know that cars are not made to last forever, and we all know that their last days are often their most expensive, On the other hand, trading in one’s car every year may be more costly than one would wish. ‘The first year of a car marks its greatest depreciation. Depending on the make and type of car, its depreciation may run from 30 to 45 per cent of its cost price. Depreciation is usually most marked in cars which present radical style and motor changes from year to year and AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “It ain't overpowerin’ love that makes a girl elope before school's out. She just takes the easy way o' hidin’ the fact that she couldn’t graduate.” right. 1930.) the erackling CEREAL KeLroe's Rice KRispies are so delightfully crisp they ac- tually crackle in milk or cream, Good for all the family. So easy to digest and nour- ishing. Wonderful with fresh or canned fruits or sweet- ened with honey. Use in macaroons, candies. At all grocers in the red-and-green package. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. TR O Hebloygs RICE KRISPIES in the less popular makes, which enjoy rather limited second-hand markets. ‘The second year one’s car de another 15 to 20 per cent in value, and s0 on until the fourth or year, when a car's value is perhaps a tenth to a fifteenth of its cost price. These are the facts with which every woman should be familiar. When to trade in should depend not only on the market value of the car, but also on its condition. If a car promises to give good service without prohibitive main- tenance costs, it is sometimes econom- ical to continue it in oYerltlon. 1t is not difficult to calculate the cost of transportation. A $1,200 car that one runs four years costs $300 & year plus repairs and replacements. If one trades it in the second year, it costs from $400 to $500 for the year one has operated it. It should also be remem- bered that after the third to fourth year new tires may increase the cost of maintenance another $100 or so. great deal depends upon the car, the care given it, its condition and its market value. These must be individ- rally determined in deciding when to “trade it in.” Tongue Crouquettes. Mix together one cupful of cold boiled rice, one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, one tabl ful of butter, one egg and one tablespoonful of flour. Form into balls, dip in roll in crumbs, and fry and place on a hot dish. can of deviled tongue, adding a little melted butter to make a paste. Make & depression in the top of each cro- quette and in each place one teaspoon- ful of the tongue paste. BEAUTY CREAM REMOVES WRINKLES An amazing new cleansing cream has been discovered called Marinello Tissue Cream. It is already the fa- vorite among leading beauties of the stage and soclety, as well as cos- meticlans everywhere. Doesn't look nor work like any cream you ever used. Melts the pores, lightens the skin slightly, cannot enlarge: the pores, cannot grow hair on your face, overcomes dryness, removes and prevents lines, king and wrinkles and wipes away beautifully, leaving the skin as soft and clear in color as a rose petal. Get a jar of Marinello Tissue Cream from the stores named below. Cleanse your face with it twice a day for 10 days using no soap or water. If you are not overjoyed at the way it removes wrinkles and gives new softness and beauty to your skin, send us the lid of your Marinello jar and we will refund your money. + The Marinello 'Com- pany, 72 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Sold at these beauty shops: Cathddral Mansions Beauty Shop 3000 Connecticut Avenue Corkery Beauty Shop 319 18th Street N.W. Vanity Beauty Shop 1348 Connecticut Avenue N.W. Eleanor Snyder Beauty Shop 1090 anlmél-;ll Press Building 735 “1oth : Florastelle Beauty Shop "s;:"' i Mrs. Malone's Marinello, 8hop ;:“ i olum Ames Beauty Shop e reet N.E. Marinello Daslisht Beauty sho D, Anne Campbell Beauty Shop "m b reet N.W. Colony Beauty shop - eoroia W, Marinello Approved '1'5%: - :’"‘: Lo The Cosmetigus Beauty Shop s, Sax See oo Alount Pieasant Street lomer Building Marguerife Belu".y unop")lo. 1 Lady Jane Beauty Shop -, e S 1304 F 5t N.W. Marti-Nita Beauty Shor York_Road, Baltimore Dorothea Mae ty Shoj 3648 Bath st Mount Rainter Helen Powers Beauty. | WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1930. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPR. ‘THE WEEKLY NEWS. ‘Weather. Pritty good SISSIETY PAGE Potts doing a Span: roy Shooster dol . 511 Hunt doing a In- dian war dance, and Mr. Skinny Mar- tin and Mr. Shorty Judge was just starting to do & Russian dance together when Mr, Simkinses mother chasel nvery:‘ody out. No refreshments Was serve POME BY SKINNY MARTIN My Mother Thinks I Was Pritty Whenever I feel discouraged 3 miomtly tes s ook at my picktures And feel glad I look as good as I do. INTRISTING FACKS ABOUT INTRISTING PEOPLE One time Sam Cross found a sample | in his vesterbule saying on it, Japanese Cooking Powder, and he un- dumped it in everything that was on the kitchen stove, and that nite his family had the werst meal they ever enjoyed. Benny Pottses father has a collection of 7 cigar lighters that almost werk but POME BY SKINNY MARTIN Otherwise Its All Rite If you hand me fish instead of meet Its nothing but a waist, The 2 things I object to the fishbones and the talst. P;upple Fritters. ‘To one egg yolk beaten light add a scant half teaspoonful of salt, one ublu‘poon:ul of sugar, one tablespoon- ful of lemon juice, and half a cupful of canned grated pineapple cooked. Stir in half & cupful and two table- spoonfuls of pastry flour sifted with half a tablespoonful of baking powder, and lastly fold in one egg white beaten very light. Take dnp the mixture by d | | “These three youn FEATURES, BEDTIME STORIES Peter Gets Things Straight at Last. Only knowledge that's ezact, Is acceptabdle as fact. —Old Mother Nature. “How can a White Heron be a Little Blue Heron?” demanded Peter indig- h | nantly. “He can, because he is in this case, replied Egret the Great White Heron. cousins of mine that you are looking at are white, aren't they?” Peter agreed that they were white, very white indeed. That was just the trouble. If they were white, they = “DO YOU REMEMEER, PETER,” SAID HE, “THAT WINSOME BLUE BIRD ONCE HAD A WHITE SON?” couldn't be blue. He was willing to admit that they were little Herons—at least, they were smaller than Egret. If Egret had called them Little White Herons, it would have been all right; but to call them Little Blue Herons, when they really were white, was pure nonsense. At least, that is what Peter thought. Meanwhile, Jerry Muskrat had been thinking the matter over. “Do_you remember, Peter,” said he, “that Win- some Bluebird once had a white son. He was white, but he was a Bluebird Jjust the same. Perhaps it is that way in this case.” Egret shook his head. “It lsn't just that way,” said he. “That white Blue- © 159 T & P, Grest Briuwin Riehis Rusorsnd foan looks all fagged out. She works too hard.” her job2?" demonstrator of labor-saving devices.” Children’s Clothes Wear Longe at Manhattan "We Save You Money By Saving Your Clothes’ e By Thornton W. Burgess. | bird probably was ‘white all his life. Probably his brothers and sisfers were not white at all.” . “That's true,” spoke up Peter. “He was uf.a only white member of the family.’ “1 though as much,” declared Egret. ‘Now, these young Herons are not al- | ways going to have white coats. In fact, if you look sharply, you can see that they are beginning to chsng: | already. "By next year they will not white at all. Now, both the father and mother of those youngsters there wore slate blue and by the time they are | three years old that will be the color of the coats of these youngsters. That is | why this kind of Heron Js called the | Little Blue Heron. Of course, the chil- | dren of Little Blue Herons must be Little Blue Herons, too, no matter what the color of their coats.” Peter scratched a long ear with a | long hindfoot. ~Then he turned his head and scratched the other long ear with the other long hindfoot, “I be- gin to see,” said he. “I'm glad you do,” said Egret. ‘Little Blue Heron is just a name, the same as Peter Rabbit,” sald Peter. “That's it,” replied Egret. “If you should see these young Herons with their parents, you would never guess from their looks that they were closely related.” “Did_the feather hunters kill the Litile Blue Herons, too?” asked Jerry Muskrat. ‘ “Yes,” replied Egret. “It got so that no White Heron had much of a chance to live. As I told you once before, there ‘was a time when many members of my family used to come up here to_the North, particularly in Summer. Now that we've been so pleasantly received up here. There seems to be excellent feeding here. Do those two-legged creatures with terrible guns ever e here?” > “No,” sald Peter. “Farmer ‘Boy will not allow them her: “And, who,” asked Egret, “is Farmer Brown’s Boy? ‘The friend of all, the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows, the Laughing Brook and the Smiling Pool,” replied Peter. “Here he comes now.” Sure enough, Farmer Brown’s Boy was headed across the Green Meadows straight for the Smiling: Pool. Egret spread his t wings and headed for the River, The others did the same, (Copyright, 1930.) SUB ROSA BY MIMI Brown's Minerva's Mirror. It is the mind which keeps love alive. Unhappy marriages, therefore, are due to the fallure of the mind, rather than a changed condition ‘of the heart, the change of heart itself being due to the : slow and almost imperceptible changes in one’s way of thinking. People will realize the full true value of love—and achieve it—only ‘when-they realize the full true value' of under- - The incurable curiosity of maliciously curious le is accounted for by the fact that tl never do satisfy their They arise hungry from every banquet table of neighborhood scandal; their luttonous appetites are never appeased, and indigestion of ‘their own natures, and reputations is the consequence of their indiscretions and excesses. It was Voltaire; I believe, who said - that- what is too silly- to say in is usually- put to music. ~ 2 « Maybe he should go down in histery « as the patron saint-of the.modern theme Nobody knows which came hen or the egg—and it may solace some of us to realize that even the hen is quite as stupid about the matter as even we. Perhaps the most . devastating. criti- cism that can be made of women is that they, as a sex, go fo “fortune-tell- ers” and men do not. Gratitude is the wine of the heart, "l::lu in the wood of an understanding mind. Talkative women are 3o busy talkirg gllt‘ obviously, they never have time All the world is & stage—but Shakes- peare forgot to point out that many of us _are actors, He travels fastest who travels without a motor cycle cop pursuing him. (Copyright. 1830.) HE daily grind of children’s play is hard on kiddies’ clothes. But Manhattan’s “‘Net Bag System” of washing is actually easier on them than rubbing and scrubbing at home. The kiddies’ suits and dresses are separated according to color and ma- terial and washed in individual Net Bags which protect them from all outside contact. € Pure Palm Oil soap suds and successive rins- ings of warm, soft water make the clothes clean and fresh as new. This gentle, modern way of washing seves you money by saving your clothes. € And don’t forget Manhattan’s famous, 3-Day De- livery service. Clothes collected Monday morning come back Wed- nesday afternoon; collected Wednesday, delivered Friday, etc:’ Among our manyservicesyouwill find one to fit your purse and need. MANHATTAN LAUNDRY Copyrighted 1930 'HERE THE NET GETS THE “.L—_——f”i— PHONE DECATUR 1120 AR AND THE CLOTHES GET THE WASH {