Evening Star Newspaper, September 17, 1930, Page 37

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WOMAN'S PAGE.’ THE - EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1930. FEATUR ES. Many Woolen Dresses and Furs BY MARY Old-fashioned fagmers are predicting | & cold Winter a in early frost, and the Indians in the Northwest are ing up unusually large stores of food, because they, too, have seen signs that convince them that the Winter is to be | cold and long. One might think tha MARSHALL. sorts of fur is used for the purpose. ‘To the home dressmaker fur trimming is @ real boon, since with a little skill it may be npglled to give a truly pro- fessional finish to a dress or coat. Y may buy strips of fur by the yard, or if you have any old fur taken from coats or suits of former seasons you may use the unworn parts of this fur | for trimming your dresses. | with the scissors, Remember in cutting the fur that it should be done with a sharp knife, not The fur is placed fur side down on a firm table, the pat- tern of the desired piece is then laid sver the fur and the cut is made around the edge of the paper. Remember in piecing fur that the hair of the two pieces joined should run the same way. Sew the fur with coarse cotton to match the hide and use & coarse short needle. Do the work with a simple overhand stitch, taking care not to catch the hai When the plecings have been made and the fur pleces are cut into the right size, damp- en the wrong side of the fur with water and lay the fur, skin-side down, on & board and stretch out, fastening the edges with pins. Leave for a day or more to dry. The fur may be applied | directly to the material or the pieces be bound with cotton seam binding | may | of ‘about the same color as the fur. [BANDS OF WHITE ASTRAKHAN | 'TRIM A DRESS OF BLACK VELVET. | smakers shared with the farm- | lers and the Indians the gift of prog- | Inosticating ccld weather—because they lare making so many woolen dresses and trimming so many of their dresses with fur. Fur is used in an endless variety | of ways for trimming dresses and ail The seam binding is simply overhand to the fur and provides a firm founda- tion iIn attaching the fur to the material of the dress. California Cocktail. Serving eight. One cupful honeydew balls, one cupful watermelon balls, one cupful cantaloupe balls, one cupful diced pineapple, one cupful grapefruit (diced), one-half cupful lemon juice, one cupful grape juice and three table- spoonfuls sugar. Mix ingredients. Chill. Serve in glass cups. Garnish with bits of red cherries and mint leaves. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. HE “baby Representative’—Fred A., Hartley, ir., of New Jersey—is out o be returned to the House of Repre- ves for & second term—and, in- | B cidentally, to keep | clean his record of | never having been | defeated for public | - | on:;» pre sentative | Hartley vas elect- | ed to represent the | eighth district of New Jersey in the | House four months before he had reached the age of | 26, and is believed | the youngest man | ever sent to Con- gress. For his second term he is opposed by Paul Moore, & Democrat, and the man from whom Hartley wrested the eighth district seat in 1928. Indications are that the contest will be close. This particular district has | the reputation of sending a Republican | to Congress in presidential years and | & Democrat in by-elections. To the “baby Representative” closely- contested political battles are nothing new. Practically all his victories have been won by narrow margins. He was elected city commissioner of | his home town, Kearny, by only 200 votes. His re-election to this post was by 400. He gained a berth on the Re- publican County Committee with only 13 votes to spare, And his seat in Congress was declared his only after a | recount. Hartley admits that he gets a big kick out of running for Congress. In 1928, despite the fact that he was a stalwart organization Republican, party leaders spurned him because of his youth. But he entered the primary as an independent and won the nomina. tion by 714 votes. “In my first tampaign,” he says, “people told me repeatedly that, while they agreed with my platform, they could not vote to send a ‘kid’ to Con- gress.” ‘To meet such opposition he adopted as his campaign slogan: It took a 26-year-old boy to carry the spirit of America to Paris. We'll have a 26-year-old boy carry the spirit | of the eighth congressional district to Washington.” It worked. He won the nomination. Entering the general election, he based his campaign on national issues. The vote was tabulated and he was 549 shy. He demanded a recount. Some 136,000 baliots were counted again and he had an official majority of 344. He was given his certificate of elec- tion, hired an airplane and flew to Washington to file it. Hartley's interest in Congress thus | far has been concentrated on relief of World War veterans. He would like to be known as one of the best friends they have in Congress. To this end, though, he is regular in his repub- licanism; he voted to override President oover’s veto of the veterans' compen- tion act. He is the father of three children— two boys and a girl. He quit school to marry when he was only 17. OUR ChiLDREN BY ANGELO PATRL Everybody's Friend. “will you tell me what made you do such a thing?” “Hennie asked me to.” “And if Hennle asked zo\a to jump oft This is the child who can do good lwork in school but who falls because MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Without Starch. T wanted to have a birthday party for | Jean, but I didn't want the children to come all rched up” or to bring pres- ents. So I simply called up the mothers of the children and asked if their little girls could come over on a certain day | to play with Jean, not mentioning that | 1 was asking any one else. So we had| at the party, all feel- | ing natural and ready for a good ume.} I engaged a kindergarten teacher to| come in for several hours and ?nm-‘ tain the children, which left me free | to prepare the refreshments. Jean | afterward declared she had more fun at her party than she had had for a long time. (Copyrizht, 1930.) THe three essentials of successful make-up — Face Powder, Rouge, Indelible Lipstick—toned with arfistic genius to give the perfect shades for each type. { Tine. | & good story is the best possib] the other fellows call him a sissy if he works. He is the one who knows that his people do not approve of his smoking until he is full grown, but who smokes, even though he dislikes it, because the gang smokes, She is the girl who wears dresses that are in poor taste, follows the crowd in manners and morals. She is the sort who says to the teacher, “My friend couldn’t hand in her work, so I didn't hand mine in either. I couldn’t go back on my friend. It all sounds so silly, but to these mistaken children it is all very real, very important, indeed. One must not be different even when being different means being wrong for one's own good. ‘This is an adolescent difficulty. Judg- ments are formed with litle Basis. De- cisions are made on the impulse of the moment. Vanity is strong and must be fed and the good will of the crowd feeds 1t well. Isolation is hard to bear, even so0 slight a setting apart as an uncom- mon shoe or cap or necktle. This is a phase of growth rather than & personal characteristic and must be met with firm kindness, It can be met easily if the earlier years have been well spent. If the re- lationship of parents and children, of teachers and children have been such as to establish faith and confidence in the minds of the children leadership is easier. It is not possible to get the chlidren all the way over, but it is possible to get them to stay on the safe side of the Force has no effect save in the contrary direction. Wise leadership is the only way out. Give the children high standards. Give thenr books that | express idealism, that tell of successful people who were different and yet fine. ‘Teach them that the power to be differ- ent is their greatest gift and to part with it for a word of pri from a careless crowd is a tragic mistake, Tell them stories that prove your point, for sermon for an adolescent. ‘Try to get them to see that it is finer to lead than to follow. By following the crowd, by saying yes to everybody they become nobody. A person is one who stands out as an individual. He has tastes, opinions and a will of his own. Otherwise he friend, and nobody regards him. (Copyrisht, 1930.) Automatic telephones will be installed in Vienna, Austria. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. ‘When Washington's first rubberneck wagon made trips daily from 1405 E street northwest and 1411 G street northwest? THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Sheer Tweeds. You'll like this model. It's easy to make, easy to wear and is fascinatingly attractive. The kilted plaits at either side of the front of the skirt give it an ex- tremely youthful aspect. The lingerie collar and cuffs of linen with picot edge are very fashionable details. However, if desired, they may be made of faille crepe silk. Style No, 843 is designed for sizes is everybody's | 16, tll. 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches ust. It is a charming dress for early autumn that may be worn all through the Winter. ‘Tweed printed crepe silk is equally smart. Patterned wool jersey, canton crepe, flat crepe, crepy woolen and rayon nov- elties appropriate. Size 36 requires 3% yards 39-inch, with % yard 35-inch contrasting. For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The ‘Washington Star's New York Fashion Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, New York. The new Fashion Magazine is just off the press, It shows all the at- tractive models for Fall and early Win- ter. ‘The edition is limited, so we suggest that you order your copy today. Write your name and “address clearly, inclose 10 cents in_stamps or coin and mail your order to Fashion Department. Quick Chicken Stew. To two cups of diced cold potatoes add one cupful of diced cooked chicken, half a teaspoonful of salt and a little paprika. Meanwhile dilute two cups of thickened chicken gravy with two cups of boiling water, add one onion minced fine, and simmer until tender. Then add fo the chicken, heat thor- oughly and serve, sprinkling with one tabiespoontul of parsley just before serving. Peas, tiny carrots or a few cooked string beans may be added to the stew, or dumplings may be made and arranged around the edge of the platter if desired Tuar'sthewayRice Krispies sound when you pour on milk or cream. The crispiest cereal ever made! Rice Krispies are toasted rice grains. Golden-brown. Delicious for breakfast, lunch or supper. Add fruits or honey. Oven-fresh in the red-and-green package. At all grocers. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek, 1y Indelible Lipstick . . $1 RICE KRISPIES e The Absolute Truth on Managing Women Advice to Men; Those Altar-Bound Especially \DorothyDicx| What the Successful Family Man Should Say to| the Youthful Benedict Before the Wedding. HE world doesn’t play fair with a man about matrimony. When a girl is about to take the fatal step, her mother and her married sisters and her aunts and her cousins and all of her female friends who have husbands take her aside and have heart-to-heart talks with her about how to manage & husband. Men have no such matrimonial protective unions. There is no understand- ing among benedicts, and if any husband ever finds out how to manage a wife, he meanly keeps the secret of how to turn the trick Jocked within his own bosom. No kindly, benevolent, bald-headed gentleman ever gives the trembling bride- groom a pointer about how to avoid the snags in a wife's disposition. Yet there is so much that he might say that would be helpful. There are so many ways to head off hysterics if the young husband only knew how: so many times when he might run up a lightning rod that would deflect his wife's temper from his poor head if only he had been taught how to do it. Now, the man who has been married 20 or 30 years, from the depths of his own experience, might well say to the bridegroom-elect: “Son, never get married until you have kissed the blarney stone. Flattering & woman before marriage is & matter of inclination. Flattering one after you marry her is a matter of necessity and personal safety. Matrimony is no place for candor. It is a fleld for diplomacy. “Never criticize your wife’s faults, for to tell her of her mistakes means that you will have to dry her tears with greenbacks. To remark that her new gown is a nightmare and her hat a millinery horror means that you will receiv: bills for new ones. To accuse her of being high-tempered is only to precipitat the storm you dread. But if you will enthuse over how girlish Wer old frock makes | her look, she will wear it until it is in tatters, and if you speak of her marvelous self-control and angelic disposition, she will bite her tongue off rather than say the sharp words that rise to her lips. “If you marry an adorable being, who is incurably addicted to marked-down bargain sales, it is folly to argue with her on the matter and point out that things she doesn’t want and has no use for are not cheap at any price. But if | you view her purchases with a contemptuous air and remark that they look common and that you wonder that a woman of her exquisite sensibility wants things that everybody has, you will put a erimp in her extravagance. For the onl?' r‘;n’e for the bargain habit is to inoculate a woman with the idea of being exclusive. 1f, son, you have drawn a human phonograph in the matrimonial lottery, you can’t stop it by trying to talk it down, for men lack swiftness and staying powers and cannot compete with women on the monologue platform. But you can gain peace and quiet at home by telling your wife that when her face is in repose, it has an irresistible Mona Lisa expression and as a result she will be afraid to open her mouth lest she should break up the pose. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. % Gum's_gone! quite a climber! | be a regler steekle | from her. I is goin’ to hab t' jack t' hide things (Copyright, 1930.) NANCY PAGE Fall Hats Need Intelligent Selection. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. | While Nancy was in the big city she ‘Rpent much time shopping. interested, naturally, in hats. | _ She_ noticed that many of the fore- head hats were being worn, oftentimes by women who had no right to wear them. A young girl, with unfurrowed “brow,” with good skin, fresh complexion and | “If you wish to fare sumptuously every day, never knock your wife's house- | keeping or make invidious comparisons between it and your mother’s. But, on the contrary, be forever praising her domesticity and openly congratulate your- | self upon having married the only woman who combines the attractions of Venus and Minerva and Mary Ann. ard of perfection, and she will make a burnt offering of herself on the kitchen stove trying to live up to your ideal of her. “Don’t sink the lover in the husband, son, and you can wrap your wife around your finger. Don't economize on expressions of affection or stint your wife in praise and you may do as you will in_your home without argument. Believe me, son, it is no™ trick to manage a wife. It is just a matter of judiciously | applying the salve.” So any old married man might tell a prospective bridegroom and thereby prevent many a divorce. DOROTHY DIX. Last Days of Great Statesmen Lord Chatham, Friend of American Colonies, Stricken While Speaking in Parliament. BY J. P. GLASS, ‘The last great episode in the life of up my voice against the dismemberment ‘William Pitt, Earl of Chatham, came | of this ancient and noble monlrthy." on April 6, 1778. Shall we tarnish the luster of this In the House of Lords & motion for | nation by an ignominious surrender? the i .mediate recognition of American |Shall this great kingdom now fall independence was proposed by the Duke | prostrate before the House-of Bourbon? of Richmond. Though worn with iliness, | In God's name, let us at least make an Chatham came down to oppose it. | effort. If we must fall, let us fall like From the first he had defended the | men!” cause of the colonies; he had fought| A brief reply by Richmond followed. the sending of troops to Boston and | Chatham rose again, but though his later had pleaded for their withdrawal. mouth moved no word issued forth. “The discontent of 2,000,000 of people | Suddenly he pressed his hand to his deserves consideration and the founda- | heart and swooned to the floor. tion ought to be removed,” he said. And | Breathless silence seized the House as in a last effort he had proposed & plan | tender hands liffed him and bore him which included the legalizing of Con- |away. He was carried unconscious to gress, forbade taxation except by com- (& house in Downing street and from mon consent, and in other ways made | there convefied to his villa at Hayes, On it possible for the colonies to remain | May 11 he breathed his last. true to the mother country. (Copyrighted, 1930.) His enemies in the government now i oposed independence only because 3 w2 France had signed a treaty of alliance Pineapple Ice Box Cake. Even when the steak is leather and the bread a | cinder, don’t complain. Merely remark that the meal isn't up to her usual stand- | | look attractive. But older people, who are more worn, J""d the flattering effect of a brim, or at_least a partial one. Nancy found that felt and grosgrain |r1bbons were to be just as “good” this | year as they had been for years past But the beret, as a standard and ac- uptid shape, was being modified some-~ | wi One hat which Nancy viewed with | favor was brimless, but the forehead | was partially covered by the fitted line | which slanted down over one side of the | forehead. The brim sprung intc ex- istence on each side of the face. This | brim was not symmetrical, but flared on Baby is gettin’ t' be | She was | clear eyes can wear such a hat and | with the colonies; they wished to avoid war with France, and Chatham’s blood bofied at the thought of such a degrada- tion of the country which he had helped to make great. Moreover, with him the Empire rose above everything else. The proposed dismemberment pierced him to the heart. He went into the House to propose a war on France, but also with & fresh plan to win back the affections of the Americans. One cupful sugar, four tablespoonfuls flour, three egg yolks, one cupful pine- apple juice (drained from can), two ta blespoonfuls lemon juice, three egg | whites, beaten; one cupful diced pine- | one side and slanted well down on the | apple, one-half cupful red cherries and | other side of the face. ! 18 iadyfingers. Blend sugar and | Nancy decided that furs were going | flour. Add egg yolks, pineapple juice to be much worn, because nearly all the and ‘lemon juice. k_slowly until | hats were close-fitting in back, thus al- thick. Stir constantly. Cool and beat | lowing the fur to collar the coat and | in egg whites, pineapple and cherres, | NOt 10 interfere with the back of the | | hat. Head of the Home. ruts and boasts and swaggers 'round ut himself, it will be foun —Old Mother Nature. Little Miss Frisky was now little Mrs. | Impy. A very pretty little chipmunk | she was and Impy wes very proud of | her. She was even more proud of Impy, for you know his coat was coal black, and a black-coated chipmunk is seldom | seen. It had pleased Impy that Mrs. | | Impy had been 50 pleased with his home. | To be sure, she had changed the en- | trance. Impy had to admit.that it was better hidden than the entrance he had made. Otherwise, she had been quite satisfied. Now that he had a home and a mate, Impy the black chipmunk felt very im- portant. Yes, indeed, he felt very im- portant. He ‘strutted. Why shouldn't he strut? Was he not the head.of a home? He thought he was anyway Yes, indeed, he thought he was very | much the head of a home. He and Mrs. Impy had been living together happily for several weeks and Impy was not aware that there had | been any changes to amount to any- | thing._ To be sure, he discovered that Mrs. Impy had enlarged one of his storerooms; but he thought nothing of this. In fact, he decided it was an im- provement. He was quit> satisfied to have it so, for now that there were two | of them, more storage space would be | needed. Then his second storeroom was | enlarged. It was done without his| knowledge. He happened to be passing | one day when he peeped in and discov- | ered how much bigger it was than he remembered it. “Did you make this room bigger?” he | inquired of little Mrs. Impy. | | “Yes,” she said. “It really wasn't big It might have done all right | for you alone, but now that there are | two of us, we need plénty of room. By | the way, we'll build a third storeroom | shortly. “will we?” inquired Impy, looking a little surprised. “Yes,” replied little Mrs. Impy. “Come with me and I'll show you where we will start it.” Impy did as he was told to do. He| followed little Mrs. Impy, and when she | showed him the place where the new | storeroom was to bz, he not only agreed | that that was a good place, but actually | went to work digging as Mrs. Impy told him to. Moreover, he kept at it. Lmle“ Who Fools | enough. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Ready-Cooked Cereal With Cream Grapes French Toast Coffee Birup LUNCHEON. Egg Croquettes Graham Bread Spice Cake DINNER. Tomato Bisque Lamb Pie Potato Crust Caulifiower au Gratin Summer Squash _ Sweet Pepper Salad Peach Bavarian Cream Coffee FRENCH TOAST, Two eggs, one-half cup milk, one-half teaspoon salt, six large slices stale raisin bread. Beat eggs slightly, add salt and milk. Dip bread in mixture until covered on both sides. Fry in a little hot | melted butter on a hot greased griddle. Serve plain or with sirup. SPICE CAKE. One-half cup of butter, one cup of brown sugar, one egg, one cup of sweet milk, two cups of flour, one cup of seeded raisins, one tea- spoon of baking powder, one tablespoon of cinnamon, little cloves and nutmeg. Frost with white frostin, BAVARIAN CREAM. Pare and slice peaches enough to measure one pint after they have been put through potato ricer. Cover one-half box of gelatin with cold water and let stand until dissolved. Add one cup sugar, place gelatin and sugar in double boiler and stir until well dissolved. Remove from fire, cool, add peaches, turn mixture into large bowl and stand it in & pan Spinach Pear Sauce Tea BEDTIME, STORIE Supported by his son, William Pitt, on one side, and his son-in-law, Lord Mahon, on the other, he entered on crutches. He was dressed in black that accentuated the pallor of death which lay on his face. The peers made a lane for him and, despite the awkwardness which his sick and crippled condition entailed, he bowed to them with that courtly grace for which he was famous. After Rich- mond had spoken he rose laboriously and began to speak. At first his voice was feeble, but soon it attained its accustomed resonance. “I rejoice that the grave has not closed upon me; that I am alive to lift Pour into glass mold which has been lined with ladyfingers. Chill 12 hours or longer. The Wisconsin State fair has been an annual event for 80 years. New Beauty Cream Removes Wrinkles’ An amazing new cleansing cream has been discovered called Marinello Lettuce Brand Cleansing Cream. It is already the favorite among leading beauties of the stage and society, as well as cosmeticians everywhere. . Doesn’t look nor work like any cream you ever used. Melts the grime instantly right out of your pores, lightens the skin slightly, cannot enlarge the pores, cannot grow hair on your face, overcomes dryness, removes and prevents lines, flaking and wrinkles and wipes away beautifully, leaving the skin as soft and clear in color as a rose petal. Get a jar of Marinello Lettuce Brand Cleansing Cream from the stores named below. Clcanse your face with it twice a day for 10 days using mo soap or water. If you are not over- joyed 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 Shcps: Oathedral Mansions Beauty Shop 3000 Connecticut Avenue Kery Beauty Shop o~ 819 18th Street N.W. ity Beauty Shop vanty, B8 Connecticut Avenue N.W. or Snyder Beauty Shop Eleanor 9096 National Press Building len Powers Beauty Shop i 25 19th Street N.W. Fiorasele Beasts OB "o/ (ey Mrs. Malone's Megnchs, onole Road Ames Beauty BB, Ly strest N.E. 727 13th Street N.W. Oolony Begiy Georaia Avenve N.W. Marinello Avproved Ehop VL The Cosmetique Beauty Shop Jist Mount Pleasant Street See Beauty Shoppe r Homer Buflding [arguerite Beauty She . l‘:‘f :r u: :"lh""" . uty, Sho it g Street N.W. = W 74 el {74 -] 13 W X ’:.‘;o"lmiun.d‘, Baltimore D'rm-r’ ! TS St Ratnter | . Nancy had always had a fondness for black hats and she found that her fondness could be carried out easly this year since black was by all means going to be the smartest color to wear. (Copyright, 1930.) | of cracked ice. Take one pint | cream and whip to a stiff froth, fold into the peaches, stirring well from the sides until it begins to harden. ¢ Why should a school child have a Waterman’s ? Any writing teacher will tell you quickly enough! It’s just this—the better the pen, the better the handwriting. Don’t handicap your child—give him the best. ‘Waterman's pens write better. Ask any bookkeeper, or other steady users of pens. He'll tell you that the way a fountain pen writes depends on two things— the pen point itself, and how the ink flows to the point. Waterman's make their own gold pen points and have done so for 47 years—no wonder they are better. Then, every Waterman’s h; as the patented spoon feed which brings the ink to the pen point just as it is needed —no skimping, no blotting. Every Waterman’s has these features—writes better. Select the one that suits your purse and your child’s hand. It will amply repay both of you for years to come. There is a wide choice of Waterman's pens suited for school use. Those illustrated are $4 and $5. Others both higher and lower in price. All are fine writing instru- ments. Always use Waterman's Inks — for school and general correspondence Waterman’s new Blue Ink is especially good—a clear, b: easy on the eyes. Every Waterman' right blue, easy to read and is guaranteed forever against defects. Service Stations are maintained at the addresses below for the purpose of making good our guarantee and for servicing our pens as required. L. E. Waterman Compsany 191 Broadway, New York 40 School Street, Boston 129 South State Street, Chicage 609 Market Street, San Francisco 263 St. James Street, Montreal, Canada des, \ BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Mrs. Impy helped at times, butemost of the time there was only room for one to work and, of course, Impy was that one. Impy no longer remained after the coming of the Black Shadows, as he had once done. He would have told you that he no longer cared to stay out. That wasn't it at all. No, indeed, that wasn't it. It was all due to little Mrs. Impy. She had told him to come in with the setting of jolly, round, red Mr. Sun, and so he had done as she desired. ‘When they went on little expeditions in search of food, little Mrs. Impy always HE NOT ONLY AGREED THAT THAT WAS A GOOD PLACE, BUT ACTU- ALLY WENT TO WORK DIGGING. decided where they should go, and when they should go. Impy never decided anything. Mrs. Impy decided every- thing. Stiil Impy thought himself head of the home. Little Mrs. Impy watched him strut and swagger and boast and she grinned as she watched. Some- times, right in the midst of his strut- ting, she would tell Impy to do some- thing and right away he would do it. In short, that chipmunk home was managed, and managed very well in- deed, by little Mrs. Impy, who had been lively, pretty little Miss Prisky. And she was quite willing that Impy should continue to think himself the head of the home if it gave him any pleasure. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN, n “I had no business rilin’ Pa, but after hearin’ 40 women say my part; decorations was ‘perfectly ~preclous’ had to hear somebody talk hateful an’ Dr. Royal S. Copeland The Health Authority Weekly Diet Tips Question Box MUSICAL PROGRAM 9 o’clock a.m.—Thursday

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