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Rearranging the BY LYDIA LE B, Summertime makes a break in various routines and connections, Autumn is a time for gathering up interrupted interests and sueng:ening connections most desired. It also affords an oppor- Personal Routine ARON WALKER. | lish one’s self. It is the time when | fresh starts are made in work, in inter- ests and friendships. During the Sum- mer it may be that you were away for the season, or that your acquaintances went, while duties or a short purse kept you at home. In either instance a break came. | When interims come in_friendships | we learn to revalue them. We discover [ || { SOME RETURNING FRIENDS WE WELCOME WITH PARTICULAR |a PLEASURE. | tunity to slacken up on those things | that fail to lend zest to life, and to let | acquaintances dwindle that may hl\’e‘ been too absorbing before the vacation period caused an intermission of friend- } ships. I’la'xG short, Fall is the time to re-estab- | BEAUTY CHATS Scalp Treatments. There are as many scalp treatments as there are people to give them, and it is impossible, without personal diag- nosis, to do more than give some gen- eral rules. But every dandruffy scalp benefits by the liberal use of oil and of an antiseptic, and both egg yolk and egg white, nremy used, are mar- | peop! velous. Also, apything oily with sul- Faur in it is wonderful for skin and scalp infections, but not so easy to use if the hair is very thick. Any ointment made with oil of cade is pretty likely to be valuable. It smells heavily and very much like tar, but it can be put on at night and the mext morning the hair can be sham- pooed. It is best to have this done| professionally, warning the person who | does you first that it is going to take | an extra lot of soap and hot water to| get the scalp really free of the stuff.| Sulphur ointment is nothing but flower of sulphur and a grease, or you can purchase a ready-made kind in| any drug store cheaply. On the whole, I advise diluting it with olive oil be fore putting it on the scalp, and then rubbing this in hard, for it is difficult to wash off, and the ‘oll makes it of :lxhur consistency and helps the wash- | ng. | Egg yolk contains sulphur. This 15‘, very good, though not’like an ointment. | But you can rub on the yolk of one or| two eggs, and you must let it stay on | until it has dried. No use using and quickly washing it off! Hairdressing shops do this, merely because egg on | the hair gives it a gloss attributed to their good washing! But for real use, it must stay on and dry on before be- ing washed off. Egg white is good, not | s a tonic for the scalp, but to take up | dirt, impurities, dandruff, oil, anything | which clogs the scalp. It makes a sham- Poo easier and leaves the scalp clean, Mrs. B. F—If crackers are made from white flour, they will be as llt" tening as white bread. All cereals are | fattening except bran, as they contain | the starchy portions of the grain. Cu-' cumbers are not fattening and water: melon only in proportion to the sweet. ness, but that is so slight as to be con- | sidered negligible. Apples are a_trifle more fattening than the melons. If the cream is made from fine vegetable nfl!,‘ it should not increase the tendency to! grow hair on the face | Mrs. A. M—You cannot hasten the graying process of your hair, but since all of your hair is gray already near to the roots it cannot be a long time be- for you have clipped off all the length | surface of the day-dream. the fine characters of absent ones, and also learn to distinguish between the | real and the unreal. We see how one person will go out of her way to do a kindly act, while another is too en- grossed in her own occupations to bother about such things. We glimpse that further friendships with some will bring us happy hours, while closer friendship with others will either to our present joys or our future good. Similar interests and tastes are the strongest bonds in friendships, while mutual enjoyment of games and sports tends to increase acquaintanceship. When vital concerns and lighter pleas- ures are sources of common interest, there is a sure foundation for friend- ships. The people who bring something intangible to use that makes life more worthwhile—things that enrich our per- sonality and character and that make our thoughts comfortable and our hearts happy—these we come to cherish, to delight in having in our homes and in welcoming again when Autumn reas- sembles our little community. (Copyright, 1930.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Why We Day-Dream. | It seems that day-dreams are their | own reasons for being. It matters not | to the dreamer if they be mere bubbles bursting in the midst of a fullness of nothing. While they last they put, color into an otherwise monotonous ex- istence. That's the first reason for day- drgx?pbu you go beneath the colored b What do you find? A betrayal of dissatisfactions. { There never was a day-dream that didn’t in some small way represent & sort of self-deception. Day-dreams are | really our own magnified pictures of what we would like to be; a denial of what we are. So much for the second reason. Coloration plus a denial of dissatis- factions is sufficient for the arousal of certain emotional satisfactions which nod otherwise be enjoyed. Take the capacity to day-dream and the feeling of living would be reduced o a mere sensation of existing. The fact is that most novels are directed day-dreams, most music is a companion to our moods, good poetry is a substitute for our own unworded philosophies. We day-dream for the same reason that these arts exist. (Copyright, 1930.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES Diet Problems. ‘The woman on & diet to reduce finds many problems that she does not ex- pect to bother her, and I'd like today to consider some of these. The usual| reducing diet, which is mostly fruit and vegetables, does not agree with some le, because it is too acid. There’s no use getting more slender if it means acid mouth, with bad teeth to follow, and spots all over the face and chest. ‘There's no use living on a diet that is too laxative, as many are. There's no use—but why go on? You will find quite a physical change of one sort or another, if you go on too strict a diet. That's why I advise experimenting. A few rules are absolute—eat less and you lose weight—you must. Just as the camel going without food over a desert consumes his lump of flesh, so do you use up the extra, unwanted flesh all over your body. That fact alone will keep a diet largely made up of vegetables and fruit from giving you acidity, though the same diet will bring on acidity in a person already slender, and with less fat to use up. Eat as far as possible in the normal way. Of course in less quantity, for if you are too fat now, you have been and are now eating too much. To eat | the same sorts and the same combina- | tions of food as usual in a small enough amount to reduce you is very &zcult. But there is a way around Eat most of the foods you are used to. But take those which have bulk rather than concentrated nourishment. Some things we can all do without, and are better as a result. We need not eat pork or ham, we need not eat fried ! foods, we need not eat potatoes except | in very small amounts, we need not eat | cake, nor ice cream, nor rich puddings, | nor nuts, nor candy. These items are | so0 concentrated in food value they are bound to make you fat. Mrs. L. M.—There is no reason for de- riving yourself of salt on any of the | oods glven in the 18-day diet lists. If| you dislike any of the food suggested, | do not hold yourself to taking it, but substitute for it something else that you know will not count up against you in the dieting. Even if you diet half as long again as suggested, it will be more sensible than forcing yourself to take feod that you cannot enjoy. }d Mrs. A. J. G—As you are going to | not need to use a camphor lotion on | portions of your body to help along a | reduction. not add | | eracy or to recruit his depleted forces iet seriously for reduction, you will| The lotion is made by dis- | TNE Today in 4 Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. September 17, 1862.—One of the sharpest battles thus far fought in the Civil War, and also the only major | engagement north of the Potomac River up to date, took place today along Antietam Creek, Md., near the village of Sharpsburg, between the army under Gen. Lee and the army under Gen. McClellan. While neither the Union inor the Confederates won a completely | successful victory, the result of the | fighting was in large measure a Union | victory, aceording to the reports that I reached military headquarters here to- night, because Gen. Lee has been com- pelled to withdraw his army back south- | ward into Virginia. |~ Gen. Lee fought with the Potoma | River at his back at a point where it runs through high country, and where it is spanned by only one narrow bridge that could easlly be destroyed by one well placed cannon shot if any of the Union batteries had got within range. Tonight President Lincoln s ex- tremely hopeful that McClellan, who is understood to have the largest atmy on the field, was able to cut off the Con- federate capture the Confed- erates as they were passing over the river, and thus practically put an end to the War Between the States. Every scrap of information from McClellan's headquarters, which are understood to be nearby on a southern spur of South Mountain, or from any other source, is being read with intense interest. It was Gen. Lee’s purpose apparently in invading the border State of Mary- land to endeaver to induce it to secede from the Union and join the Confed- or replenish his supplies_from the rich farms in this section of Western Mary- land. Apparently he has failed in all of these purposes. The Union Army marched on & parallel line on this side of the Blue Ridge Mountains, with both the moun- tains and the river between the two forces until near the end of the march. There was & smaller engagement the day before on South Mountain, but the Con- federates seemingly had no intention of making a stand against McClellan there, It was only when Lee reached the much cut-up country within easy reach of the Potomac, which would enable him, if all did not go well, to make a hasty retreat into the Confederate State of Virginia, that he turned and showed) fight gEarliPr reports this afternoon and tonight say it was one of the bloodiest, if not the bloodiest, day in American history. President Lincoln is sitting up tonight awaiting the latest word from the bat- tlefield: Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. Wrought firon, when worked into clever designs, makes a very fascina ing decorative touch, and there is a certain richness about it that gives it dignity. In the upper portion of the illustra- tion is a wall bracket which would be very pleasing in a hall, especially if one had a pair of brackets such as this. One could be placed each side of an archway, doorway or perhaps on each side of a decorative mirror beneath :'hbllch might be a richly carved console able. In the lower portion of the illustri tion is a candlestick which would be practical as well as beautiful. A pair of these, with seven candles in each, would light a dinner table with a pleas. ing glow—and who doesn't love to eat by candlelight! It adds to the formal occasion and makes a gala event of the informal dinner. This candlestick may be used singly or in pairs. Singly it would make a good decorative plece for a hall table or a living room table placed between two windows; and, of course, for a mantelshelf could anything be more pleasing? BY MIML Minerva's Mirror. The disillusioned are not romantic. They, therefore, imagine they are pra tical and call themselves ‘“realists.” They forget only this: That romance on this earth, properly apprehended, is the fourth dimension of reality. Many successful business men are successful in everything except the busi- ness of living. One-idea men, and represented as being “sharp as a fox trap,” I have noticed that their minds that is mixed in color. A self-addressed, | solving a cake of gum camphor about|actually, in all matters not pertaining stamped envelope should be sent for a | 1l; inches square and half inch thick | to their business, often are as dull as mailed reply. Straight Talks to W "in a pint of bathing alcohol or bay rum. omen About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. When Money Is Safe. “When a woman's money can be safely invested in guaranteed mortgage nds,” writes a reader, “why should the be foolish enough to gamble on 1ds,” continues the reader, safe investment, and no forget it." Money invested in_ high-grade bonds 15 safe enough, but it yields a low re- turn, eonsistently, in times of high end low living costs Stocks depreciate in value when liv- ing costs decline and rise in value when living costs mount. It is needless here to go into the causes. It may be sufficient to say that stock prices are DAILY DIET RECIPE CARROT SALADS. Carrots, grated, 115 ecups. Olive ofl, 4 tablespoons Lemon juice, 6 tablespoons. Salt, % teaspoon. Sugar, Y, teaspoon. Young lettuce leaves, 18. SERVES SIX PORTIONS. Allow about one small tender young rrot to each portion. Scrape and wash carrots. Dry them well. Grate. Mix with the seasonings. Arrange crisp young lettuce leaves on individual salad plates, mound the carrot mix- ture in the center and serve very cold. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes fiber. Lime, iron and vitamins A, B and C present. Can be given to children 8 years and over. Can be eaten by normal adults of average or under weight and by those wish- ing to reduce it oil were omitted. largely influenced by the prices of raw | commodities or materials. They rise |and fall with them The woman who is getting 4% to |5 per cent on her money may live comfortably in slow times. But prosperous times living costs mount, while her income remains stationary. Only stocks can keep up the buyir power of her dollars, If stock prices fall, her principal or capital is re- duced, but if the stocks are well selected, that “fall” may reasonably be regarded as a short-term fluctuation. In a good many instances women recognize the need of stocks in their investment portfolios, when the in- comes from high-grade bond issues be- come insufficient to meet living costs. | ., In other words, it costs more in such times to maintain the same standard | of Hying. "It is then that women are won over to stocks as investments. This is unfortunate, because stock commit- ments are made when stock prices are at their peak or close to it. | Invest with safety by all means, but | safety is more than protection of capi- | tal, it is also protection of income. | & i Corn, Duchess Style. | Serving six. Four tablespoonfuls but- ter, 4 tablespoonfuls flour, two cups miik, one teaspoonful salt, ‘one-quarter | teaspoonful pepper, one-half teaspoonful sugar, two cupfuls corn (canned or cut from cob), one-half cupful cooked | diced celery, two tablespoonfuls chopped | green pepper, two egg yolks, and two | egg whites, beaten. Melt butter, add flour. When blended add milk and cook until thick, creamy sauce forms. Stir frequently. Add seasonings, corn, celery and egg yolks. Beat two minutes. Fold in keaten egg whites and pour into | shallow buttered baking dish. Bake 30 | minutes in slow oven. Serve in dish in which baked. used razor blades. Politeness is something that is taught children; genuine graclousness is the greater sign and manner of a philo- sophic grown-up. Divorce is to an unsuccessful mar- riage what a used spare tire is to an automobile. It simply means that there has been a blowout. Clothes do not make the man, but clothes sometimes ‘“un-make” the woman. Oynics are disillusioned about every- thing except the delusion that they are cynical. Cast your bread upon the water and |1t comes back—all wet. | (Copyright, 1930.) | ABE MARTIN SAYS Umbreller Mender Cork Akey rosumed farmin’ till th’ drought subside<, (Cowwrisht, xso.) EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, 'MODES OF THE MOMENT PARIS “Heavy sibk jersey of c{an{ 5r0w{‘bdwim crange veliet: scarf collar ard cuff tabs. Chortoseshell buckle PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Brain Function. Even physicians are avoiding the con- cept “nerve exhaustion” nowadays, at least in their public or published ut- terance. I suppose, though, quite a number of incurious people still cherish the notion that their to and explained by study,” “nervous strain” and the like. For years I have been asserting arbi- trarily and impolitically that what folks | ordinarily call brain work is not work at all. Most brain workers who have taken notice of this have complacently dismissed the unflattering idea from their minds as just one of my notions. One reason for this queer idea that the use of the brain is not work is the observation that after a period of concentrated thinking, such as tak- ing some fool question and answer ex- amination or trying to make one’s in- | come tax report cover the situation or devising some new scheme to catch customers, the quickest and surest way to be refreshed is by going out and deing some actual work or play such as mowing the lawn or playing ball or rubbing down the flivver. not the case when one has done an honest day's work; then the best re- freshment is a good night's sleep or a stretch on the lounge or a snooze some- where nice and quiet. People who live by honest work al- ways require more sleep for recupera- '.u‘m ‘than do people who live by their wits. expenditure of energy this would not be 50. The individual who gets along somehow without working can and usually does find from six to eight hours sleep sufficient for his or her well being; whereas the honest worker must get from nine to ten hours sleep every night in order to keep fit. ‘Well, his wife, Mrs. Cornelia G. Benedict, have recently made a reinvestigation of the brain work question with the help of a calorimetry chamber and quite accurate instruments for measur- ing the breathing, heart action and other functions, as well as the chemical metabolism. They find that the use of the brain in concentrated thinking involves only an insignificant increase in metabolism over that which is con- stant when the mind is as nearly a blank as it ean be without uncon- sciousness. Mental effort increases metabolism only 4 per cent, while walk- ing about the room increases it 100 per cent. So we can say with sclentific accuracy to any one who comes com- plaining of the strain of his mental work: “Aw, go take a walk around the block. ‘That'’s what such a patient needs. Dr. and Mrs. Benedict find that one-half of a salted peanut sup- plies all the energy necessary for some two hours of mental effort. That sense of weariness, ennui or whatever it is, that comes when you hav ur mind on a particular Capital Girl’s Lucky Day HREE candles! represents a And each one ] ear of joyous liv- ing. Little Jean Etta Davidson, of 815 Eye S. E., Washington, is a typical Fig Syrup baby. Here is what her mother says: S. “My sister praised California_Fig Syrup very highly, so when Jean began having colds I got some for her. It opened her bowels quickly, made her rest easily at night. “I have used Fig Syrup with Jean for three years for every upset. It has kept her strong and vigorous.” For fifty years, wise mothers have been secure’in the knowledge that a child’s headachy, bilious, feverish or fretful spells can be quickly and safe- ly overcome by California Fig Sy hysicians recommend its soothing aid to keep the bowels clear in cold: or children’s ailments; or whenever bad breath, coated tongue, or list- lessness warn of constipation, California Fig Syrup helps tone and strengthen wenK bowels—assists in building-up and ener children. nuine always bears the name California. All drugstores. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP LAXATIVE-TONIC for CHILDREN Now that is | If brain function involved the | | of. Francis G. Benedict and | BRADY, M. D, subject for several hours is not fatigue. All it requires is a change of subject. | The mind will go right on functionin, | then. Your brain does no more “work" | than your skin does—and skin fag or | skin exhaustion has not yet been in- | vented. (Copyright, 1930.) JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in Etiquette. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. THE BIBULOUS MR.TOPER WAS, SOBER WHEN HE SAW AUNT JENNY'S TWO LITTLE TWINS. FORGETTING THAT HE WAS SOBER, HE GALLANTLY WHAT A A. C. E—"Aunt Jenny's little twins” ‘15 the required form. It is not neces- | sary to use “two” with “twins,” because “twins” expresses “two.” Bibulous (pronounced BIB-you-lus) means given to drink; fond of drinking. Jolly Polly will gladly answer your | questions on recelpt of a return en- | velope. ————— | While an excursion train was return- | ing home from Crewe to Glasgow, Scot- | land, recently Mrs. M. Aitken, & pas- senger, gave birth to a baby girl. | WOMEN NOW KNOW HOW TO CHOOSE FACE POWDER “Select it according to !yr of skin” say beauty exper You can enhance the beauty of any skin by using the right face owder., But you can s the auty of the most lovely skin by using the wrong one. Make sure that you are using the right face powder! Ask your- self this important beauty ques- tion: Does my face powder con= form exactly to my own individual type of skin. Your face powder will suit your skin in every way if you will choose the right Plough Face Powder for your type. And you can—easily! " For Plough has created three face powders to meet the particular needs of the three types of skin—oily, dry, normal. Today—dip your puff into the Plough” Face Powder made just for you, and smooth it on your skin. Note how marvelously soft it is, how fragrantly it is perfum- ed, how caressingly it clings, how }}leasing and soothing it feels. hen look into your mirror. Gone are all imperfections and every trace of sallowness. In their place is perfect complexion-beauty: skin as smooth as satin, as fine-textur- ed as silk, as fresh and youthful as dawn. FOR OILY SKIN—Choos ture, Plou, ‘Incense of Powder, in the oval box—1 FOR DRY SKIN—Choose light texture, Plough's “Favorite Bouguet” Face Pow- der, in the square box—30c. FOR NORMAL SKIN—Choose medium texture, Plough's “Exa Face Pow- der, in the round box—50ec. Each_powder comes in White, Flesh, Pink, Brunette and Sun- Tan tints. Sensibly priced wher- ever beauty creations are sold, each affords a saving the modern woman appreciates. Extravaganee is out of date! Nowadays “it's smart to be thrifty.”” As more an more women realizing this, they are choosing Plough's 3 Face Powders. Not :nllyflbcunu these moder: powd ringing greater beauty to their but because of the economy affo: fine quality at a sensible price. heavy tex- " Face sking [) 3 FAGE POWDERS CREATED PLOUGH NEW YORK ME! SAN WEDNESDAY, BEPTEMBER Y7, 19%0. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop and ma are still changing their minds about what kind of a automo- beel to buy, a Sparrow or a Wimple, and last nite after supper pop sed, Well, they say experience is the best teecher, but I know a trick wertn 2 of that. Why not profit by other les experience and be the little wis&" :ays who reep the benefit of others trials and tribulations? In other werds, tawk to peeple who own a Sparrow or a Wimple and see what they say. And being & man of action as well as of acute intelligents, I have alreddy begun. I talked to young Farley at the office, he has a Sparrow, pop sed. ‘What did he say? ma sed. | Farley .ed the Sparrow is the best car in this or any other werld, pop sed. Farley sed if he had his choice between | a 3parrow and a thousand other cars, | he'd choose a Sparrow without even bothering to look at the others. He | sed its impossible to beet a Sparrow so | whats the use of trying? Thats what | Farley sed, and Farley is an owner and | an eye witness, 5o what he says awt | to go. Sparrow is indicated, pop sed. ‘Well I think you better wait till you hear the last final reterns of the elec- tion, ma sed. I had the same idennical ideer, d Fred have a Wimple. , amung other things, . Sara sed that not ony is the ‘Wimple far and away by long odds the best car on the market, but she sed ferthermore that there is simply no comparison. She sed she would rather have a little old broken down 2nd hand ‘Wimple than 10 other cars of any kind whatsoever, absilutely regardless of price, ma sed. That puts us back just where we started, pop sed, and ma sed, Well at least it duzzent put us any ferther back. And she started to do some old cross werd puszles over again to see if she still remembered them. Stuffed Eggs. Six hard-cooked eggs, three table- spoonfuls chopped celery, four table- spoonfuls chopped leftover cooked meat, two tablespoonfuls finely chopped green peppers, one teaspoonful chopped onion, one-eighth teaspoonful salt, one-quarter teaspoonful paprika and one tablespoon- ful salad dressing. Cut eggs in halves, crossways. Remove and mash egg yolks. Add celery, meat, seasoning and dress- ing and mix with fork. Refill the egg cases, press the halves together, leav- ing band of filling so that it can be seen. Chill, serve on lettuce and sur- round with salad dressing. Chopped pork or beef makes very tasty FEATURES MILADY BEAUTIFU BY LOIS So many of my readers complain of | excessive underarm perspiration that I | am glad to give some suggestions for coping With this annoying beauty prob- | lem. This affiction not only causes mi- lady much embarrassment, but it also ruins her gowns, so it is quite essential that something be done to check it. There are many local treatments which are very successful, but in addition one should try to discover the cause of the condition. Nervousness and & run- down physical condition are perhaps the most frequent causes, and in such | cases it is important that milady take very definite steps to build herself up, | |even while she may be using local treatments as a temporary relief. | It is almost impossible to keep the | armpits dainty unless they are free from | hair. This may be removed with a re- | | liable cream depilatory, or one may | |soften the hairs with a soap or shav- | |ing cream and then remove them with | a small safety razor. After removing them wash off every particle of soap | and then apply a good, soothing toilet | | water. 1t is a good plan to remove the | hairs just before retiring at bedtime, when done during the day it often causes one to perspire more freely than ever. { After the warm, cleansing bath at ' night the armpits should be bathed |with & salt water solution, as the salt |will help tone up sweat glands which khlve become overactive. Another good | | solution for the nightly cleansing hJ made by adding one tablespoonful of bicarbonate of soda to two ounces of | witch hazel. The witch hazel has an | | astringent effect which is beneficial m| | overactive sweat glands. In average | | cases the application of such a lotion at | night and a toilet water after the | |morning bath is quite sufficient, but many feel the need of something | stronger. For these the following lo- | tion may be applied two or three times | & week: One-half ounce formaldehyde | LEEDS. and one pint of water. Sogr. night, bathing the armpits with salt water and arym; thoroughly before the applica: on. In the morning wash the armpits again with salt water or the soda and witch hazel solution and after drying thoroughly apply a little of the fol- lowing lotion: One boric acid, two ounces witch hazel,'two ounces rose water, two ounces elder flower water. After this has dried dust on a little taleum povider or use a special deo- dorant powder which js mrde for this purpose. In many cases it is & plan to dust on a little of the deodorant powder in the middle of the day also. (Copyright, 1930.) IDEAS OF FUN My neighbor Jinx seems rather queer, his mate I never saw; month after | month, year after year, he's tangled up in It looks to me as though .l“ TE o 1 I law. He's bringing sult or being sued, which fills him with delight; and he will mope around and brood if there’s no suit in sight. The least excuse will stir him up to heights of legal woe; he'll sue the man who kicks his pup, who steps upon his toe. He seems a blithe and joyous wight, he's happy as a bird; though such a plan to reach delight to me seems most absurd. I fear I would be throwing fits in sorrow and dismay, if bailiffs came around with writs and warrants every day. But what is poison to one man is meat to t'other boy; and each must strive as best he can to find things to enjoy. Another neighbor likes to tell of countless things he’s shot: he's hunt- ed where the coid is fell, he's hunted here it's hot. He's slain the moose nd jabberwock, the wombat and the gnu, the warthog and the fearful croc, and lions three or two. He has a lot of stuffed gazelles and other beasts of prey, and stirring anecdotes he tells all through the Summer day. But I can't understand at all what fun a man can find in shooting things that run or crawl, the lizard or the hind. To go around and scatter death small faction gives; I would not like to stop the breath of anything that lives. In anger I may 8 the fly that seems ave no sense; but I would make no critter die that gives me no offense. No doubt my neighbors look at me, and say, “That poor old simp' He keeps on sitting in a tree until he's sick and limp.” Each has his way of ha fun, some ways are sad to see; yet, when all is said and done, the blessed country’s free. ‘WALT MASON. (Copyri 1030 TFq iI’IESQ cle Breqerpo“ Dinf Coml)innfions No. 1—Vanilla, Fresh Strawberry and Chocolate. No. 4—Vanilla, Fresh Strawberry and Orange Ice. No. 5—Frozen Cherry and Bisque. No. 6—Fresh Peach and Vanil No. 7—French Vanilla and Chocolate. Look for this Breyer-Leaf Sign LR S 23 Iicious freezing the la. Sounds absurd — of course! But % true with Breyers! Every spoonful of this delicious, extra-fine ice cream represents 64 years’ experience in blending and finest ingredients. And it takes only one taste of Breyers to show you what an amazing diffes - ence this experience — plus e/ cream, real sugar and real flavorings—makes * in the flavor and matural smoothness of an ice cream. all-ways Al Breyer Dealers display Breyer “Pledge of Purity”