Evening Star Newspaper, August 11, 1930, Page 22

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Painstaking Ha BY MARY The home dressmaker—or, rather, the | woman who makes some of her own | elothes at home—has a very decided | advantage now-a-days. due to the fact | that so-called dressmaker touches of the sort that call for rather painstaking hand work are so much admired. The Teason thcy are admircd, of course, is | | | stamped envelope Inclosed with her re- | but | might be tricd out if a child is develop- ndwork Shown MARSHALL, edges of the silk are left raw and the bandwork must be done with a dex- terous, sure hand to prevent a botchy | effect, but it is by no means beyond the scope of the average amateur. You have no idea, unless perchanc you have scen a dress trimmed in this way. how smart and effective the ap- pliques look, and, of course, you can carry out any color scheme that ap- peals to you Black organdie is one of the smartest erials for the late Summer and ecariy Autumn evening dress, and many of the smartest of the new figured chiffon evening gowns show pink, or pink and green on a black background Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. | the Stammering. Stammering is the sort of nervous afiction which has so many causes and is influsnced by such seemingly small things that the experiences of mothers with stammering children are of enormous importance and interest to otwers. The following letters offer no particular panacea, for there is none. they do suggest methods which | ing into & stammerer. We offer a leaf- | 1et cn the subject of stammering, cover- ing the common causes and suggesting some helpful books. Any reader may obtain this leafilet for a self-addressed, | qQuist. | Mrs. G. W. B. writes: “My son, sged | 41, has twice gone through the stam- mering stage. One book on psychology (I am sorry you didn't mention which | one, Mis. G. 'W. B.) suggests that this | | | ? | and recites poems. | | to the most children. APPLIQUED DESIGNS OF PINK TAFFETA SILK PROVIDE SMART TRIMMING FOR A FROCK OF BLACK ORGANDIE. A BLACK CHIF- FON DRESS IS APPLIQUED WITH LARGE PINK LINEN DOTS. because the very great majority of women of all classes wear ready-made clothes, made® in_quantity, on which it | would be out of the question to use much handwrought trimming. | It is, for instance, only on the ex- pensive dressmaker dress or the less expensive homemade dress that ap- | pliques like those shown in the sketch would be found. They are cut from | taffeta silk and applied by hand. The | | | BEDTIME STORIES Peter Doubts His Eyes. | Your eses, alt schooled, Are ot imm Old Mother Nat Peter Rabbit thuks his eyes are pretty good. Yes, sir: he thinks thoy are pretty geod. He knows they are nat as goog as the eyes of some of the other little | people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows, but he believes them good enough to have faith in. He knows that they do not compare with the eyes of surh people as Redtail the Hawk and othir members of the Hawk . But when he sees a thing he is sure of what he sees | So it happened that Peter was very | much puzzled. He had been over to the Old Orchard, and while he was “WAIT A MINUTE A MIN- UTE!” SAID WAIT PETER. sitting near the old stone wall that is on one edge of the Old Orchard he saw Striped Chipmunk whisking along the old well as only Striped Chipmunk can. Peter and Stiiped Chipmunk are old friends. Striped Chipmunk didn't stop to speak. He was in a hurry. He dis- appeared between the stones af the old wall. Peter knew that somewhere down underneath Striped Chipmunk had 8 hole in the ground and that his home was there. Peter had almost Chipmunk and was sitting, half dream- ing, when he caught just a glimpse of some one popping out from between the stones of the old wall and almost | at once disappearing again eyes flew wide open. Yes, fiew wide open. He stared ar and hoped that peared would reappear That wasn't Striped Chipmunk, but it was a Chipmunk,’ declared Peter. *it must have been a Chipmunk. It was just the shape of Striped Chip- munk, and ran like Chipmunk it was black be. Chipmunk be that I forgotten Striped sir; | id stared Of course. that couldn'( r . It must ep than I | living which contributes to the child’s | whoever had disap- | Striped Chip- | But, unless I'm color blind, | be caused by the child’s need for | ore extensive vocabulary. I found | this to b> true in my son’s case. When | e started to stammer I tried to calm | him and told him to take his time. In | short time a few new words blossomed T have noticed this in other chil- “I'am past 50, writss Mrs, M. E. W.. | “but I always read your department, for I hope some day to have grandchildiren. | 1 noticed that my children stammered | after they had been tickled by any one. | This went on until I was certain of it | and then I put an end to tickling. It may be enjoyable to an adult to see a child doubie up with laughter, but it is certainly hard on the child’s nervous system.” Mrs. M. S. says: “My procedure is contrary to the usual ones but it has given satisfactory results. My daughter has stammercd since about 2 years of age. I was advised to ignore it, but I feit that the habit was becoming fixed by repetition. “As a last resort I began reminding | her gently not to repeat words and to talk like mother. I was emphatic in praising her for the way she cares for her dolls, puts her_ playthings away Now the defect is She takes this scarcely noticeable. as she takes all suggestion _exactly other suggestions, and she goes for hours without stemmering. I try to guard against overfatigue to keep her better tempered and more co-operative. My method may not be scientific, but it is working.” It is always reasonable to use a method that is successful with the in dividual child. Science can do no more than suggest the ways deneficial On the heels of these letters came another from the | aunt of & boy of 17 who was very bright, had an excellent vocabulary and was not stuttering temporarilz. Hitch- ing this to the first letter we see & con- nection, for this boy may want to use more words at the moment than come quickly to mind and in his effort to use exactly the right word he has to stop and think, causing him to lag in | his speech. Perhaps less effort to use unfamiliar words, adding to his vo- cabulary only a few new ones at a time may end his difficulty. Any way of | general good health and calm should | also bring about an improvement in| Jerky speech. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Chipmunk as well as a white Red Squirrel?” demanded Peter. Chatterer didn’t know just what to| say. You see, he had once had a son | who wore an all-white coat. It had| happened only once, but that once did | prove that a Red Squirrel could be white, “That's different,” said Chat- terer lamely. “White coats do happen | once in a while. | “So_do black coats happen once in & | while,” retorted Peter, who just then happened to remember that Reddy Fox | had once had a son with a black coat. Chatterer remembered at the same minute, and so he couldn’t say a word of denial. Still, he wasn't ready to be- lieve that Peter had seen a black Chi munk. “Peter,” said he, “you were, dreaming. There may have been a| black Fox, for I remember now that Reddy Fox did have a black-coated son. And, now I think of it, I believe that| I've heard that in some places there are black members of my cousins’ family. | Happy Jack and Gray Squirrel. But I | have neve known of & black Chipmunk, | and 1 don't believe you've seen one. “Neither do 1.” said Peter. “I must have been mistaken.” (Copyright. 1930.) _ MENU FOR A DAY. | BREAKFAST. Raspberries. Dry Ceresl with Cream. Blueberry Muffins, Coffe LUNCHEON. Nut Loaf, Tomato Sauce. Graham_Bread. Iced Melons, Wafers, Tea. DINNER. Cream of Corn Soup. Hamburg Steak Smotherd in Onions. Mashed Potatoes. Beets, Picuant Sauce. Lettuce, Russian Dressing. Peach Pudding. Lemon Sauce. Coffee. | BLUEBERRY MUFFINS. One cup_yellow cornmeal, one cup white flour, one-half teaspoon ealt, three tablespoons sugar, three teaspocns baking powder, one egg, one cup milk, two table- spoons shortening, snd one and one-hall cups blueberries. Sift dry ingredients, add beaten egg and milk enough to make a thick batter. Beat well, add melted shortening and blueberries which have been dusted with flour. Bake in greased muffin tins in hot oven 20 to 30 minutes. | NUT LOAF. Mix one pint of ground almonds and English walnuts with an equal amount of soft bread crumbs that have been moistened 1 with a little cold water, Season with salt_and a litle powdered | | nerbs, add one cup of milk and | worth when they are opened up, others | haa breken out of the paper package. | and camp hatchets'at 117 | this pattern you inclose 10 cents ad- ! magazine. | off the fat, leaving two tatlespoonfuls in | until thoroughly heated. Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. August 11, 1865.—The sale of un- claimed packages at Adams’ Express Co continued today With undiminished spirit here at McGuire's auction rooms. While many of the purchasers are badly disappointed, paying much more than they find the packages to be get splendid bargains, A §2.25 package today was found to | 25 worth of gas-burners. A $1.25 package on being opened was discovered to have two pairs of boots, one bottle of claret, a box of cigars, a pair of gloves and the photograph of an actress. 1 At one point in the sale a box was opened containing cayenne pepper that For a considerable time it interrupted entire sale, causing auctioneers, buyers and onlookers to sneeze inor- dinately Lieut. Col. Lee of the Army Quarter- Department has fust sold in a a Jarge quantity of con- demned tents, clothing, harness and Similar articles, The hospital tents sold at 9'« cents a pound and common | Army tents brought 7', cents a pound. Other tents of special make brought various prices, ranging from 6 cents up to 7', cents a pound. Axes were sold at 23 cents aplece, spades at 8% cents, shovels at 7 cents. Shirt: were sold for 40 cents each. Harnes realized {rom $2.02 to $2.40 for a single set. Wagon covers were sold at 15| cents a pound. All the other articles brought similar prices, which the Army officials considered adequate. | It was announced here today that the repairs to the Lynchburg (Va.) | Railroad are rapidly approaching com pletion. Cars will probably be run from | here to Lynchburg within three days. | . M. McCafferty, superintendent of | the Orange & Alexandria Railroad, has | also been made superintendent of this | line. THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE to as Fry [ Jacket Suits. The model illustrated is decidedly chic | to wearer with tuck-in blouse and be- coming jabob-collar. The jacket and skirt with tight hip | band buttoned at sidg are of sports- | weight linen in orangey-red tones. | The tuck-in blouse of sheer white | linen is printed in red polka dots. Plain | red crepe bow te adorns the Vionnet neckline. | Horizontal tucks across center front | of the bodice are decorative. | This jaunty outfit, style No. 389, is | designed 1 sizes 16, 18, 20 years; 36, 8, 40 and 42 inches bust. | Youw'll find it extremely easy to make. | The straight jacket is merely closed at | sides and shoulders. The front are un- | derfaced and the collar is stitched at | neckline. Only two major parts 1 | blouse. The skirt is seamed and stitched | to_hip yoke. | For active sports, wool jersey is smart in soft cocoa brown shade with blouse in chartreuse green, lacy-weave jersey. Watery-green crepe silk, dusty-pink shantung, skylark blue tweed and print- ed voile in navy and white are smart. For a pattern of this tyle send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The Washington Star'’s New York Fashion | Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth strect, New York. ! We suggest that when you send for mi pi ditional for a copy of our large fashion | p Breakfast Dish. Fry enough bacon for serving. Pour the skillet. Add half a package of | noodles which have been boiled in salt water until tender, and then drained, and a half a cupful of white sauce. Fry Pile on the | wk center of a platter and arrange the ba- | in con around the edge. Chop or slice two | cold hoiled eggs and put them on top | of the noodles. Sprinkle with salt and | pepper. _Serve with buttered toast. | The noodles, white sauce ard eggs may | be cooked the night before to serve in| & | in ot in FLAGC P ——— because “IT PEN S Jus Do You Treat Your Husband? orothyDix | | PAR.IS UWhite georg e evering | drerr urith dre decollete and long fll | i dart, desigred by | ]r Mrande, In front the ‘ i\ corrage J:Z/EQ/ Sfilled | e | | | Urges Wives to Use Courtship Tactics LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PA Me and ma was coming home from downtown and we saw Leroy Shoosters mother on her frunt steps, ma saying Something tells me her grand dawter has had her tooth and I just know she’ll crow over me like a merciless fiend because little Willy hasent had his yet. Well, Id love to find out but Im determined not to give her the sat- tisfaction of asking her outrite in so many pointblank werds. And when we got up to the Shoosters house ma stopped going pass, saying, What did you think of the heet today? I dident think much of it, to tell the truth, Mrs. Shooster sed. But I sippose we've got to expect it at this time of year. she sed, and ma sed, I sippose so, but it would be nice if we could save & little of it for winter. Yes, thats what I always say, Mrs. Shooster sed. And they both kepp on looking at each other like 2 grand- mothers wondering something and not wunting to ask, Mrs. Shooster saying, Hows all the family, everything’s about the same, I sippose? Everybody's well, thank you, ma sed My husband had a bad cold last week and you know how a man with a little cold is, vou mite think it was a broken leg at least. Tzzent it the truth, Mrs. Shooster sed, and ma sed, Nuthing new with your fokes, T sippose? No startling changes 1 imagine, she sed, and Mrs. Shooster sed, Nobody needs a doctor, touch wood, thank goodness, while we have our health we have everything, thats vhat T always say, and ma sed, Well, I must be on my way, And we kepp on going, ma saying, It izzent out vet or elts she would of jumped at the chance to tell me like a drowning man jumping at a s4aw. Hee hee I ean reed her like a book, she sed. Wich just then I looked back and Mrs. Shooster was still there looking after ma with a satisfied expression as if she .was thinking the same thing. NANCY PAGE Yo Ho for Bed and a Bunk, Me Lads! BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. UPPOSE, Madam Wife, you had treated your husband before marriage as| you treat him now. you? When you were trying to catch possible. o, ench doll. Do you think he would have popped the question him you made vourself 1.ok as attractive You spent hours primping before he called and you wouldn't have | dreamed of letting him see you without your complexion on and your hair done | and you were always as dainty and fresh and crisp-looking as a | together, That whs the kind of ravishing vision that he expected to gaze upon across | the breakfast table, Do you think that he would ever have taken on your support | if he had known that the woman he really would confront every morning would | be a lady in a soiled house dress and down-at-hrel slippers, who thought it too | much trouble to fix herself up for a mere husban! | | Before you were married you were so mild and amiable that butter wouldn't wife. Do you think he would have marr time you were crossed and if you had even let him suspect that you had a temper concealed about your person that was liable to explode at any moment? | have melted in your mouth. You deferred sweetly to all of John's wishes and fell in with his plans, and he thought he was getting a regular yes. | veser for d you if you had had tantrums every | ‘When you were fishing for your husband you baited your hook with flattery and you made him feel that whatever an unappreciative world might think bout him, you censidered him just about all right. Do you think he would have married you if he had known that as soon as you got him home you would try to take him to pleces and make him all over again and that you would criticize everything about him, from the cut of his hair to the kind of shoes that he wore and censor his manners and his morals and | his grammar and his pronunciation? Before you were married you listened to his conversation with bated breath | and langhed at his jokes and encored his good stories and begged him to tell over again those fascinating reminiscences about when Le was a small boy with | een warts on his hands. Do you think he would have married you if he had known that every time | he started on a favorite anecdote you would say: going to tell that old chestnut over again? when we go to the Jones' to dinner tonight, for pity’s sake don't try to be funny. “For heaven's sake, are you | I have heard it a million times, and | Before you were married you were interested in your husband’s hopes and | ambitions and you would lend a willing ear while he discoursed about all the great things he was going to do, and you made him believe that you had faith in him and would be an inspiration to him. | Do you think he would have married you if he had known that you would yawn in his face every time he tried to talk to you about his business or career and that you would wet-blanket every plan by prophesying failure? Before you were married vou made your husband believe that he was your ideal and the one man you would have chosen if you had had the pick of the universe, Do arriage think he would have married you if he had known that after you would be continually contrasting him h‘“hl;\‘:l." and wondering why he couldn't make as much money as some other man did? invidionsly with other (Copyright, 1930.) HOME IN GOOD TASTE BY SARA HILAND, When we vealize what an fmportant | the little silhouettes at each side of the was those brave settlers in early America, | b we cannoi help but feel that we must | Of Preserving likenesses. iece of furniture the chest | preserve this piece and Juckily it is one ?("rélth Is in keeping with our homes of | for clothes, articles of value ay. In the illustration is shown a chest| goods which could be crowded into it, | for the lower part of the bunk. Con- of early, though not of the earliest, tvpe, | especially in time of raids by the In-| nections were made for individual read- hich would prove eminently practical cither a small apartment or iarge home Made of pine, this chest is delightful a room in which background and her furnishings have been carried out the spirit of the early times. The ruffied curtains shown are sim- e and charming for t (Y7 THIS LIQUID SLAYS FLIES and MOSQUITOES quicker ETRATES” V= | how the scheme was worked out. window remind us of primitive methods | In the olden times the chest was used | | (such as| | PApers) and every bit of the household | dians. Now, however. we find the chest | & place for' the household - linens, for | which purpose it may be kept in the dining room or upper hali. | . (Copyright, 1930 ! - Chicken Tamales. | Cook & chicken until it falls from the bones. Cut up fine, add one ground onion, one teaspoonful of red pepper, and one cupful of catsup. Cook two cupfuls of cornmeal In two quarts of broth until thick, pour boiling water over some corn husks, and let them stand for 15 minutes. Spread the corn- | meal one-fourth inches thick on the | husks, then a layer of chicken with an | | olive in the cenier, then another layer of cornmeal on top. Roll up and tie with strings from the husks. Serve hot. If you want bright new color or hou Tintex. But what about your white 1 t bluing will whiten even * and woolens on which ordinary no effe: And Whitex is quite as easy Tintex To Give It Color — Whitex To Keep It Whitel ehold fabrics, of course you use e or tubbing have yellowed ? Do you know that Whitex will restore them tosnowy whiteness almost instantly ? Do you know that this remarkable new yellowed” silks The Jeremy boys were so close together in age that many people took them for twins. They were in same grade at school, played with the same “gang” and generally shared in- terests. rs. Jeremy did not believe that it was good for children to sleep but the boys’ room in the old home was not large enough for twin beds. When they built the new house she saw to it that the boys shared a room, but not a bed. Their great-grandfather had been a sea captain and the boys were accustomed to all things nautical. That may have given their mother the idea for the ship bunk beds. She had the beds built in. A niche was put into each wall beside the bed and here | each boy could keep his favorite book. his favorite bird’s nest or newest find in arrowheads. Mrs. Jeremy had the bed niche built to resemble the bullt-in provincial French and Breton type of bed. The Jeremy boys bragged so much about their beds that all the other “oys in the neighborhood became jealous. Mr. Lampson came over to see went home and had a bunk made for his_boys. He had to build the framework out into the room. To give & certain shut- in feeling that the boys wanted, Mrs. Lampson hung draperies similar to those used on four-poster beds. She used the same chintz to make a valance ing lamps, so_that each boy could turn out his own light when he was ready. In this way one prolific source of squab- bling was done away with. Green Gage Appetizer, Remove the stones from some green gage plums and measure two cupfuls of the plums. Mash through a strainer and add one cupful of orange pulp and | one tablespoonful of lemon juice. Mix well. Put a spoonful of shaved ice into cocktail glasses and fill with the mix- ture. Place half a maraschino cherry in the center. Serve very cold. Pow- dered sugar may be passed if desired. Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcass beef in Washingion, D, C.. for week ending Saturday. August 9, 1930, on shipments sold out. ranged from 1000 cents to 18.00 cents per pound and averaged 14.17 cents per pound.—Advertissment. in clothes g8 that hluing has 1o use as the | He | SEREAE ) - CELEBRATED GOLD-DIGGERS BY 1. P. Mme. Junot Took Extravagant Favors From Then Conspired Against Him. apoleon and GLASS. | The overthrow of ‘the old regime in| France by the Revolution produced a Tearrangement of fortunes in which familiss” and individuals of compara- tively humble estate rose to unexpected opulence. Of alkthose who were dragged to glit- | tering heights by Napoleon Bonaparte, Qne fared so spectacularly as did An- dache Junot and his wife, the former | | Laure Permon. In the case of Laure Permon, we ob- serve a daughter seizing opportunities for worldly advancement, which her mother had rejected. In the early days of his prominence, Napoleon was a frequent visitor at the home of Laure’s mother, who had been the friend and intimate of his own mother. Mme. Permon was a beautiful woman and so \.ell preserved in middle age that | she was often believed to be her daugh- | ter’s sister. Napoleon fell in love with her, and despite her greater years, asked | her to marry him. She ceclined. Pos- sibly, had she foresezn the future of #he | rising general, she would’ not have done so. When Laure Permon reached mar- | riageable age, Napoleon was no longer | available as a husband, as he had mar- ried the beautiful Josephine Beauhar- | nais. The impaired Permon fortunes had to be retrieved. Laure did the best thing possible by marrying the dashing | oficer,” Andache Junot This brilliant knight of battle was the favorite of Napoleon. He had been the general's secretaary at the - siege of Toulon, his aide-de-camp in Italy, and one of his generals of brigade in Egypt. On their return to France, he | had fought a duel in Napoleon's behalf | His services earned him the post of | commandant of Paris and a commission 28 general of division. His later serv- ices included the invasion and subjuga- | tion of Portugal. Napoleor: made him the Duke, and his wife the Duchess of | Abrantes, and lavished princely estot-s | and gifts from the spoils of war upol | them. As wife of the Governor of Par Mme. Junot was the second lady of the empire; her hotel- was imperial in its splendor; her toilettes were as elegant | as those of the Empress: her banquets | and entertainments were historic in | their sumptuousne: Napoleon's liberality could not keep | pace with the financial needs of the | Junots. The duke, importuned inces- |santly by his heedless wife, obtained | more and more perquisites and still got overwhelmingly in debt. Perhaps it was & relief to Napoleon that, in 1813, Junot, while suffering from brain fever, ! SAFE OR SORRY | | My friends had warned me mahy |times to shun the speeder’s foolish L crimes. “This foolish haste,” my grand- | sire said, “has strewn the highway: with the dead. There is no reason w |a man should travel in his cheap tin | can at more than thirty versts an hour, | | unless to show his motor’s power.” The | speed cop sometimes called me down. | “The way,” he said, “you whiz through town, will land you in the donjon ke:p where all the scofflaws wail and weep. A man may speed around a while and not be seen in durance vile, but some | fine day he'll hit a gait that no good | cop can tolerate, and then he'll languish for a spell down in the tolbooth’s dark- est cell.” The coroner. a wise old man, beheld me in my whizzing van. “Why all this frenzied haste?” he cried; “ten thousand delegates have died, have been cut off in midcareer, because some speed-mad boobs were near. Some day you'll smash a tinsmith’s frame, or | some good auctioneer yow'll maim; and | then your victim., night and day, will haunt vou till you're old and gray. All through the watches of the night you'll moan and gibber in affright; the tin- smith's specter will arise reproachfully oefore your eyes: the mangled auctioneer will stand and beckon you with phan- tom hand. Oh, gee, it is a frightful | thing to have such specters form a ring | around your couch when nights are black and there’s no light in all the | !shacf.” So people warned me, and I, | grin {>d; I thought their sage advice mere] wind. But I regret my conduct now{ one day last month T killed a cow; | and Jow I hear the critter’s sighs, and | see fer sad. reproachful eyes; in quiet | duskf, in golden morns. I see the brass | knokrs on her horns. WALT MASON. | NAPOLEON FELL IN LOVE WITH HER, AND DESPITE HER GREATER YEARS, ASKED HER TO MARRY HIM.” jumped from a window and killed him- self. The duchess was no sincere friend of the Emperor. Indeed, when the davs of his misfortune bagan to arrive, she was among those who intrigued for the return of the Bourbons. Gold and mor gold were necessary to her, for luxury and magnificence in living had become essential. Foresceing the fall of the empire, she sought to curry favor with the returning monarchy. She failed. Sale of her vast treas- urers of art and jewelry realized great sums, but she squandered them. —Her last years were spent in comparative poverty, from which she emerged as & writer of mem=irs, fiction and articles. _,-_IN\ P 4 On the Diet-List of Leading & Hospitals f=a J > ;' ) Sleep Soundly Smile In Your Dreams? ‘This pretty nurse to say “good-night" is undoubtedly a help—not only be- cause of her good-night smile, but because she brings a glass of Welch's. Taken just before retiring, this pure juice of luscious Goneord” grancs quickly leads to restful siumber. ‘While you sleep, its rich fruit nourishment and mineral salts are rea digested and quickly assimilated into the blood-stream. They restore your broken- down body-tissues, build you up. Make this Each night before retirin of Welch's—addi . Before long you'll find your- ing like a top and waking up feeling iike a million dollars! Tryitalsoasa breakfas fruit. Six liberal portions to the pint make it the most temptingly delicious Sc drink in America. Recommended by physicians, and on the diet-list of leading hospitals. Write for free health recipes—to Welch's, Depe. C, Westfield, N. Y- Just pour milk or cream a bowl of golden brown Rice Krispies and your own ears will tell you how crunchy every toasted bube bleis. So crisp they actually crackle out loud! Try the recipes on the package. Rice Krispies are delicious in dozens of ways. At your grocer’s. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. RICE KRISPIES SUNB W can get sure, immediate relief? They all agree on Noxzema Cream them all! City Beach Patrol says our First Aid Sttion for s e bave used URN? Beach First Aid Stations always advise Noxzema Atlantic City Beach First Aid Station—Captan Damicom ovel Relieves pain instantly doesn’t stain clothes 'HY SUFFER with painful sunburn when you Treat it the way Lifeguards and beach First Aid Stations do. as the best sunburn remedy in the world—and they have tried For example, Captain Damico of the Atlantic Noxzema at ven seasons. It is won- thought I was, aps 1 was wholly | | {we tablespoons of melted butter, sleep and dreamed it” £ Mix thoroughly and bake in & tn. Just then Chatierer the Red Squirrel | | Scrve with hot tomato sauce, hisking along the old stone wall. | e o PEACH PUDDING. At once he saw Peter. Peter saw him. Chatterer made a face at Peter and was Pare and cut fine ripe peaches in halves, Crack a few ol the gOIng to run along when Peter spol “Did you ever see a Black Chipmunk pits, remove and blanch the ker- demanded Peter. nels. Butter a deep baking dish, Chatterer stopped abruptly. “No.” | put in two layers of the fruit, said he, “I never did, and no one else | | dredge each layer with flour, ever did.” sprinkle generously with sugar, “Wait a minute; wait a minute!” said | | dot with bits of butter, then add Peter. “How do you know no one else | | the kernels and one cup of water. Place & dish over the peaches, ever did?” cover with & rich biscuit dough “Because Chipmunks are not blac] declared Chatterer in his most decided | | and bake In a hot oven. Serve | | with lemon sauce. Black Flag Liquid kills quicker. It pen- etrates the tiny breathing tubes of flies, mosquitoes, moths, roaches, ants, bedbugs, fleas. Not one escapes. Always costs less than other well-knowvn brands. Money back if not fiew © 1930, B F. Co, BLACK FLAG LIQUID Kills quicker — Always costs less ... MADE BY THE MAKERS OF BLACK FLAG POWDER T 5 S D L S L e 3588 B 0 55 derfully cooling and soothing the instant you put Noxzema takes all the fire and pain out immediately—prevents torturous blistering.” At Coney Island, Asbury Park and other famous beaches, Noxzema is used for first aid for sunburn. Don't take chances with sunburn—use the remedy that for years has proven most effective. Geta jar of Noxzema today at any drug or department store. NOXZEMA Be sure e you Tintex and as perfectly resultful? to try this wonder-bluing next ti wash your white things. e Ordinary bluing does not” work on silk_and wool, but Whitex does! whenever and as ficely as necessary without fearof staining clothes. It is absolute! less—won't stain even the daintiest frock. CREAM HE A L At all drug, dept. stores and notion counters ... 15¢ hitex The new Bluing for all Materials = silk, wool, cotton, rayon, linen, etc. made by the mokers of Tintex | TINTS Anv DYLS | s El B ELL WRY. | twhy shouldn't there be” a Black

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