Evening Star Newspaper, January 19, 1931, Page 26

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WOMAN’S PAGE, THE EVENING _ Initials for Linens and Lingerie BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. it R ST e R T IETT M s | liver oil, why the cake batter needsl | baking powder, why polish polishes and | | 1 | | house, Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. ‘The following wise and sensible letter came in answer to a recent plea of mine for ways of budgeting a mother’s time | 5o that she can devote some of it to playing with the children, instead of Just working for them. Mrs. Z. G. D. write: “I have three children—one 4%, the other 215 and a baby of 3 months. Here is the way I manage: We have no definite playtime, for we play most of the time. The two older children play together quite well, but I have to be alert to suggest something when they are bored or disagree. They are keenly interested in everything I do about the whether bathing the baby or cooking the meals, and I usually keep up a running commentary, explaining every operation. Why baby needs cod ad infinitum. ' No quiz at college ever required the trigger replies my son de- | mands of me. He wants to know what | I am reading, what. the roto pictures say, where is Beauvaise, Prance, and if STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, \DorothyDix| HE is the nicest sort of girl and he is the finest sort of young man, and they are desperately in love with each other and want to get married, and the | girl's parents are the nicest sort of people and are ready to say, “Bless you my Children,” at any moment. It would seem to be one of the matches that are made in heaven, with nothing to prevent the young couple from getting mar- ried and living happily ever afterward. But not so. The lovers have come to an impasse that they do not seem able to negotiate and that threatens to wreck their romance. For the girl is rich and the boy is poor. In addition to having a wealthy | father, she has an independent fortune, left her by her grandparents. The boy has only his job, and although he is making good in that, it will be a long time before he has a salary that equals the girl's income. Nevertheless, he insists | that if they get married they live upon what he makes and in style in which he can afford to support a wife. And, naturally enough, the girl thinks this at- titude is noble but foolish. “Of course, if Jack holds out, T have got to give in at the last,” she says. “because I care more for him than I do for ease and comfort, and I would rather live on bread and water with him than feast on cakes and ale without him. Also, if I thought that my money would kill his ambition and turn. him | into one of the lap-dog husbands, who do nothing but fetch and carry for rich | wives, I would chuck it into the sewer rather than let it ruin him. But I have a better opinion of him than that. I don't belleve he works just because he is driven on by the scourage of poverty. I believe he tries to achieve things be- cause he is a real man and wants {o be of some use in the world and that a little Result of Diflerence in Means Unhappy Young Lovers JANUARY 19, 1931, WHO REMEMBERS? DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. FEATURES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. cise. An olly cream should be rubbed Alds for Wesk Askles: on the skin before the massage. Here is Feet and ankles might well be called | the bases of beauty because they sup- port our whole weight. If they are unequal to their task the whole body a simple recipe: Four ounces mutton tallow. ‘Three ounces olive ofl. One ounce rose water. suffers and they themselves become| piye ounces witch hazel. painful or deformed. Shapeliness and | Melt the fats over a slow fire, strain strength of these members USUAlly g0 |through cheesecloth and beat in the together. | other ingredients. Weak ankles are very common mong | The right sort of bandage, properly women, especially young girls, Some- | aqjusted, gives relief to weak, flabby times one ankle—usually the left—is 1ot | ankles and. feet, but if it is nof wound as strong as the other, 50 that there | correctly and is too tight or too loose | it is the clouds in the sky that are money would help him instead o hinder him. is a tendency to stand on the right foot. | it will be useless. When the ankles {Such a habit if long continued makes ‘ are swollen from chronic relaxation they bty g - g oo &nd Talses | regnire a doctor’s attention. |one hip higher than the other. Too| 0 Much weight comes o the right foot| ' Cmch s ankles are sald to be thicker 1also, which may cause flat foot. | The proper footwear is very impor- tant for those whose ankles are weak. | High heels are, of course, taboo. Low | heels that come forward under the | instep and are slightly raised on the | inner sides are often prescribed. If the condition is not given any care the | ankles are likely to become bulky and | white. MAARY e2 VANGELINE o One of the pleasant after-Christmas | <~ #asks that fall to the lot of the woman | ‘who was the recipient of the table linen or other household linens or of fine| lingerie, is the embroidering of initials o mark the pieces. Some women are | sufficiently expert draughtsmen to draw their own leters, but the vast majority | of women get letters already designed. It is for these letter workers that the | two styles of alphabets for initialing are suggested today. ‘The first to be discussed are old Eng- Msh initials. These are designed to be = Cross-stitched or worked in filet crochet _~and inset. Two letters come together - ®xcept Q and V. They are coupled as E follows: & " A—B, C—D, E—F, G—H. M—N, 0P, Q RS, T-U > " The alphabet has been designed espe- S elally for readers of this paper and is % available by sending in 5 cents in stamps = for each coupie in the grouping as given. “% The letters Q and V are coupled. Please = inclose a_self-addressed and stamped | envelope with the 5 cents and your re- | it it A il had - - WAL K —~19 ~A93). marked, being sure to position it just| where you wish the letter to come. Copy | the design In cross-stich working | through the canvas and the textile. | When finished. clip the basting stitches | and withdraw the canvas threads. The | initial will remain embroidered on the | textile. Filet initials should be crocheted with fine cotton or linen thread. With spaces about the letter to form a square as in the patterns. When completed, baste the crocheted square in position | on the article to be initialed. Button- | hole stitch ‘he edges to the texile, hav- | ing stitches close. Cut away the textile | from beneath the filet lace which will | be secured firmly to the article. The alphabet in small size letters It can be had by sending 5 cents in | stamps together with a self-addressed | and stamped envelope with a request. This alphabet has been discussed re- cently under the caption of Medallion Alphabet. Position the initial desired over the article to be marked. Put car- | comes complete on one pattern sheet, | there are none. “I usually start the children on their indoor play, but their concentration is limited, and soon they are back at me. Of course, not continually, for that| would be 'wearisome, but my routine tasks I am able to accompany with chatter. | “Our income permits a maid, but I preferred to let the children see what housework means. We are too prone to despise common phenomena. We spend years in school and prattle about chem- ical reactions and never give a thought { to the complicated chemistry of the kitchen. “I do not offer these suggestions as an open sesame. Having two little tots be- side them at the kitchen table would probably madden some women. But it is important to me that the children respect my work and know that it de- mands a high degree of skill. “I break one rule, for I let daddy play with the children at night, joyously and hard. We sing and march and do| stunts, and all is very noisy and joll; and beautiful. The children are in| bed by 7:30 or earlier, and I could not | deprive my husband of this joy.” This is really not so much playing with children as a method of education. But, at any rate, education is as enjoy- able as any game when administered in this manner. If the children suffer no | disadvantages from an evening playtime, If the playtime unfits the child for restful sleep afterward, I am sure your husband would be the first one to deprive himself of this pleas- ure. Since there are no such results, there is no reason to consider that you are breaking any rules. | back I would gladly marry him and cook and wash and scrub to make him | house and go and live in a hovel? ack thinks that if T loved him enough I would be willing to endure pover- ty with him. So I would if it were necessary. If I hadn't a second dress to my But what's the sense in wearing myself What's the merit in eating ‘Why lock up a beautiful comfortable and walk to save carefare. out at housework when I can afford segvants? coarse food when there is pie on the pantry shelf? behind it. Else it is silliness, “That is my side of the case. Jack's is that he is going be free ahd in- | dependent and succeed on his own and that he isn't going to let anybody say | that he is living on a rich wife, and that if I love him enough I will be willing to chuck all of the luxuries to which I have been accustomed all my life and put on & bungalow apron and come into his kitchen.” I think that the girl in this case—and this is an absolutely true story—is right in not being willing to sacrifice all 6f the luxuries to which she has been accustomed for the sake of saving her fiance's pride and I think that they will have a thousand times better chance of happiness if the man accepts her standard of living instead of forcing her down to his. For it is much easier to adapt ourselves to lolling on a soft cushion than it is to sitting on a hard bench. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1931.) Psychic Adventures of Noted Men and Women The Fortune of George 1V's Foster Brother. BY J. P. GLASS. Martyrdom must have some good reason | When Jack Woodworth was the fast- est thing on wheels around Washing- ton and he was breaking records at the Convention Hall rink? FOOD PROBLEMS BY SALLY MONROE. Apples. Apples are among our most useful ‘Winter fruits. They are reasonable, they are wholesome, they are delicious. We may, however, get tired of them in the more usual ways. So we ought to serve them in variety. Now, for most of us, raw apples are wholesome. There are some persons, doctors say, who cannot eat raw_ap- really find raw apples indigestible, or distressing. These persons, of course, |should avold raw apples. But most persons find them wholesome enough. So, once a week or so raw apples for breakfast are a very good thing. | aakfig apples are good several times a week? i lunch or dinner, only they must be varied. You can pack the core holes ples with any degree of comfort. They | f you like them for breakfast, | shapeless. They often turn in walking, the ligaments thicken gradually, the ankle bone protrudes on one side and a condition of chronic sprain results. Of course, such ankles lose all their beauty as well as much of their eff- ciency. Besides the use of correct shoes, there are simple exercises that strengthen weak ankles. Raise and lower the heels to the floor. Now stand on a book and lower the heels to the floor over the edge of the book. Rise on the toes and repeat. Sit on a chair and hold the feet straight out in front; stretch and bend the feet. Do these exercises for a few minutes daily, but be careful to avoid fatigue. Massage is also helpful for weak ankles, as it gently stimulates the circu- lation and really is a mild form of exer- THAT gray - haired 230 - pounder— George Akerson, secretary and personal assistant to President Hoover, who has just resigned his post—will be missed around the White House. Un- questionably, he was as well known a figure at the executive mansion as the President himself. ‘There are those in the Capital who will tell you Aker- | nowadays than they were when high shoes were the fashion. Our present- day slippers and oxfords give the ankles greater freedom, strengthen and thicken the large tendon at the heel. There is | a great difference, however, between a strong, sturdy ankle and a loose, flabby one. The former is trim and shapely, | though not slender, while the latter is | bulky and formless. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. he had started for his room saying that at last he would have opportunity for some rest, when a reporter for the local paper straggled in and began shooting questions at him. Patiently and carefully, Akerson went over the ground he.had just covered in the conference. He left out nothing, ! and it was almost a half hour before he got away for that promised rest. He has a thorough musical education, and although his piano frequently re- | mains untouched for weeks, he is ever | willing to switch from a discussion of | politics and national problems to talk quest and direct to Lydia Le Baron Wal- | bon paper between it and the textile. ker, care of this paper. This alphabet | Trace the letter and the medallion out- s been many times pronounced the |line. Remove the papers, and embroider with raisins before baking, if you wish Or you may thrust a pitted whole prune |into the core cavity before baking. Or on the comparative merits of Bach, Debussy or MacDowell. He paid his way through Harvard by son is the man who made Herbert A Sermon for Today : J 7z “ [ £ | | Hoover articulate most beautiful of any Old English let- | To initial on linen, baste a square of | erass-stitch canvas on the article to be FLR R LET LRR RO R M2 T8 S ATt On Staying Young 1 I have noticed with some amazement women who work for a living, after they pass 25, look younger than women who don’t work Now at first glance this seems un-| Teasonable, because the girl who works | has to get up when she's still sleepy; she has to make a tiring trip down- towntown; she has to eat lunches; to work hard, often at something she doesn't like to do. Meantime idle girl can have mamages and smart Helen . clothes; can get Weedward. Dlenty of sleep and eat at leisure. What's the answer? | THE STAR’S ‘ DAILY PATTERN || SERVICE tering designed for embroidery. | ki The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD. Who started her career as a frightened typist and who became one of the highest paid business women in America. the letter in satin stitch, in French | nots, or outline stitch. Work the medallion outl‘ne also. (Copyright. 1931.) It is this: People don’'t grow old because of trouble. My own mother had a hard life, full of trouble and work, and she has always looked 20 years younger than her age. People grow old through boredom and self-indulgence, and of the two bore- dom is the worst. I have seen many a ‘woman grow old and fat playing bridge. She might have a good mind and lots of energy, but because of social customs | she thinks she ought to play brk’e instead of work, and so she grows old and stale because she doesn't have to struggle. People grow old when they don't see new faces. The girl who works for a living sees new people all the time. Her life, compared with that of the y- home woman, is exciting, and excitzment keeps you young. Another thing that keeps people young is struggle. A fight keeps the muscles of your face tight better than a thou- sand mud packs and massages. A struggle with life brightens your eyes | better than eye drops. Of course, I do not mean by this be- ing without decent food or a place to BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. Through Adversity. “If thou faint in the day of ad- versity, thy strength is small."—Prov. xxiv.10. David represénts a proud man of the for I shall never be in adversity.” Once David himself, in a day of high pros- perity, boastfully said, “I shall never be moved.” pretty much the attitude of prosperous, proud America. We were boasting of our prosperity ‘and wealth. We thought nothing could move us—that we would never be in adversity again. Usually adversity is a blessing in dis- guise, both for nations and individuals. Adversity is a school in which we need some training. When reduced by adverse fortune, a man forgets the lofty tone and supercilious language of pros- perity. Want kills wantonness. Poverty kills pride. Adversity teaches us to be more humble, more sympathetic, more kindly, more brotherly. It serves to test our honor and manhood. If a man is never tried by misfortune, he hardly knows whether he is honest or not, and he never knows how much of a man he is. He that has never known adversity is but half acquainted with himself. Nor is he more than half acquainted with the world. Success shows us one side of the world; ad- versity brings out the reverse of the picture. A primary lesson is that there is nothing stable in human affairs. And | world as saying, “I shall not be moved, | A little back that was | | ORPHAN BOY.” Gecrge IV of England used frequently to tell a story of a psychic occurrence with which he was well acquainted, be- cause one of the persons concerned was very close to him; was, in fact, his fos- ter brother, the eminent Dr. Blomberg, | royal chaplain and residentiary of St. Paul’s. The adventure, for it was nothing less than that, began when Dr. Blom-, | berg was a child of 2 years in the Island of Martinique in the West In-| dies. The war between England and the American Colonies was then on, and THE OTHER ANSWERED: “THIS NIGHT I WAS KILLED AT -—, AND I HAVE COME HITHER TO BEG YOU TO TAKE CHARGE OF MY LITTLE | you may put peanuts into the core cav- ity. That seems more like a luncheon | dessert, perhaps, than a breakfast be- | ginner, | ““Another way to cook apples for | breakfast is to put a small sausage into the core cavity of an apple ready for baking and then bake until tender. | Apple sauce is always good. If your | apples don’t cook into a nice, smooth | sauce, put it through a vegetable press | to make it smooth and lumpless. Some- times serve it hot, with plenty of | freshly grated nutmeg on top. Some- times season it with cinnamon and serve it very cold Sometimes stew the apples instead of making them into sauce—that is, cut | them into slices, after quartering them, |and stew them gently so that they won't lose their shape. Sweeten suf- ficiently so that there will be plenty of juice, but don’t make a sauce of them. Serve hot or cold. You can flavor stewed apples with a little grated lemon “No, I heard him talking to you, but | peel and Ladd Dl W paey I couldn’t make out what he said.” e . el | Biee et alficar vetatas thie qseines | T I GRESURN REVNE. Wit tion he had just had. Both of them | were much awed and impressed. They | were ridiculed when they told their story | the next morning in the messroom. In the evening, however, came & mes- sage to the commanding officer telling of Maj. Blomberg's death at the identi- cal spot mentioned by the apparition. | He had been shot through the head. | There was an unusual sequel to this occurrence. As soon as possible, the JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. “EVERYONE 1S COMPLAVNING ABOUT THE BUSINESS | this ought to teach us several things. British forces had been landed in Mar- | It ought to teach us to avoid both un- | tinique to go against the French allies | due elation in prosperity and undue |of the Colonies. Maj. Edward Blom- sleep or warm enough clothes. When you get below the line of making an depression_in adversity. It ought to |berg, & widower, and father of the little | teach us the folly of seif-sufficiency and | boy, was stationed with these forces, | Blomberg boy was sent back to England, where, for some reason not recorded, he was_very coldiy received by his grand- mother. It happened, however, that his story reached the ears of Lady Caro- DEPRESSION BUT\” SAID ’¢ THE ASTRONOMER. “MY serving as church organist. And at times he amazes his friends with his knowledge of the history of church | music. for_the masses. Others simply describe him as the adviser, press agent, general con- tact man of Herbert Hoover. But, however, he may be classed, “George,” as he usually was addressed, enjoyed a position in Washington al- mbst without parallel. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. His physique was strangely like the President’s. The powerful torso on long, slender legs has more than once caused him to be mistaken for his chief. They say that during his days as a student he discharged the duties which faced him with such speed that his classmates gave him the nickname of ‘Breeze.” At the White House he dis- | played that same characteristic. His | agility was surprising, and he wgs a | demon for work. Once a successful newspaper man himself, he was popular with members of his profession not only in the Capital, but elsewhere. He treated all alike, whether he was the representative of a big metropolitan daily or a reporter on a smaller publication. One of the most intimate glimpses the writer ever got of Akerson was in | the stuffy room of a small-town hotel during the time of the Mississippi flood in 1927, when he accompanied Herbert Hoover, then Secretary of Commerce, on an inspection of the flooded areas. He had just concluded a press con- ference in which he had detailed the activities of the Hoover party duging a Baby finks it’s smarty to hide in dark particularly arduous day. places when we's playin’ hide an’ seek, but I'll fool her—I won't look for her! BUSINESS S | actual living then you become a wreck. | Becoming Tunic Type. [ A stunning interpretation for after- | moons is this youthful tunic model in | printed crepe. The belt rests at the top of the hips 2~ and fastens with a strass buckle. How- /% ever, it is adjustable and may be placed | @8 best suits the wearer. The curved seaming at the front ! in the first place the worss they look of the bodice that simulates = mz gives length to the figure. > fc and the underskirt extend into a hip The [ | also the folly of placing ourselves at And strange as it sounds, even an un- | the mercy of earthly things. This happy love affair, after it is all over, | should make us realize that our only will make you look younger. | sure confidence is that declared by the It's queer about the human race. It psalmist when he said, “Because I have seems to flourish on trouble. Otherwise | set the Lord before me, I shall not be it would have disappeared long ago. | moved.” But we really do have to go through a | ot of misery to get strength. It's just| like a boxer. If he never uscs the mus- cles of his arms, they look flabby and | Ugly. And the finer those muscles were | AUNT HET | BY ROBERT QUILLEN. from disuse. | The same way with your spiritual | muscles. 1f everything is too easy for [ you, they get soft and flabby and that shows in your face, which gets fat and soft, too. But if you have a lot of trouble and meet it with courage, then | your spiritua! muscles harden and your face shows what is known as a certain nobility and experience of living. And in people over 25 that makes beauty. Girls ‘having problems in connection with thelr work may write to Miss Woodward, in_care of this paper, for her personal advice. (Copyright, 1931.) . Banana Salad. Chop three-fourths of a cupful of | pecan nuts fine, peel four bananas and | cut them in halves cross-wise and cut | ff the d ends. Di | OF the round ends. Dip cach piece 12| yp1yy10s o soparate phane coste more Y ressing and then roll In | jgp hein' on a party line, but I reckon finely chopped nut§ and lay on lettuce | I save the difference by not burnin’ so leaves with a spoonful of dressing placed | many victuals.” at the side of the plate. (Copy! WITH THE Grand Prige s JURE SPECIAL rar dy . Shree-quarters yard of 35-inch lining. r lovely material to fashion it of that is-a bit formal is sheer metal Jame. 1t's adorable for Sunday night and dancing flat crepe and wool crepe are um't” Si ring, it will be darling lor $pring, in printed chiffon * For a pattern of this style send 15 in stamps or coin directly to The y Star's New York Fashion Fifth avenue and Twenty- York. A sbzet, Ne e L3 A flared fullness toward the hem. Style No. 170 comes in sizes 14, 16, | 18 and 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. | Bize 16 requires 4 vards of 39-inch material with 9 yards of binding and | This magnificent, full size Eureka Special is of the that w: Exposition, Philadelphia—only greatly improve | 1 stronger suction. Formerly sold at $53.50. | i ACOMPLETE SET OF “HIGH-VACUUM” ATTACHMENTS DURING this great special offer—every purchaser of a Grand Prize Eureka Special at $39.50 will receive a complete set of famous Eureka “High-Vacuum'’ attachments—absolutely Free. awarded the Grand Prize at the Sesqui-Centennial | having his son with him. The child was heir to a large estate in | Yorkshire, which then was in possession of an older scion of the family, the | Baron Blomberg. | One day Maj Blomberg was sent with dispatches to a destination a consider- able distance from headquarters. A night or so after his departure a strange thing happened. An officer who was an intimate of the major was just dropping off to sleep in a room which he shared with an- other officer, because of the crowded condition of the barracks, when he was aroused by the quiet opening of the door. He perceived—or thought he perceived —Blomberg enter the room and walk up to_his bed. “Why, Blomberg,” astonishment, “what brought you back? The other answered: “This night I| was killed at , and I have come hither to beg you to take charge of my little orphan boy.” He added that he wished the child senf, immediately to his grandmother and aunt, who lived in London; and he gave directions for finding certain pa- pers which would be necessary in estab- lishing title to the Yorkshire estate.| Having done this, the figure departed. Alarmed, and thinking he had been | dreaming, the officer called to the other | occupant of the room: “Did you see any one come in here?” ““Yes,” was the reply, “wasn't it Blom- berg? ‘What did he want?” “Didn't you hear what he said?” he exclaimed in on earth has FREE TRIAL— and Allowance for Your Old Cleaner same model d and 30% line Finch, « lady in the household of the Queen of England. She related it to the Queen, who was very much in- terested. “That poor child shall not lack & home,” she said. She ordered that he be brought to the palace and installed in the royal nursery. She not only saw that his proverty was properly settled, but made arrangements for his educa- tion. When ne grew up he entered the clergy and subsequently was chaplain to George 1V, with whom he had played as a child, The Queen thought so much of her | protege that she had his portrait paint- | G. P.—“Every one is complaining but ed by Gainsborough, and before her | me” is the required form. When but death presented it to Dr. Blomberg.|is used in the sense of except, it is The latter, in addition to being a great | properly followed by me, him, her, us divine, was a fine musician. He was |and them. Examples: “No one but her devoted to the violin, which he played | Would have thought of that.” “All but beautifully. Incidentally, he owned |him were invited.” “Every one went three wonderfuss fiddles, one a genuine | but them.” Notice that in all the above | Stradivarius. sentences but is used in the sense of (Copyright. 1931.) except. ON THE AIR AKER CHARIE BAKI § SCHNE NG €O, Dirty, tired and worn to a frazzle, (Copyright. 1931.) TEETH WHITEN 3 shades in 3 days When you remove Bacterial-Mouth ULL teeth thatare ugly, yellow and d receding gums are into every pit, fissure and crevice. Germs that cause Bacterial-Mouth and lead to stain, decay and gum eases are quickly killed. They vanish and the entire mouth is purified. Koly- nos kills 190 million germs in 15 seconds, 424 million in 60 seconds. This amazing Kolynos FOAM re- moves food particles that ferment and neutralizes a washes away tartar and the unsightly mEoi_d coating that clouds teeth. dition offensive to all of us—and inex- cusable. Germs sweep into the mouth with every breath and attack teeth and gums. They cause the condition known as Bacterial-Mouth. But Koly- nos quickly conquers this foe by killing the germs. The result is_astonishing. Use the Kolynos Dry-Brush Tech- nique for 3 days—a half-inch of Koly- nos on a dry brush, moming and night. Then look at yourteeth—fully 3 shades whiter. In 10 days the improvement will be so marked you will never again say that w teeth are a gift received only by a fortunate few. Dentists have long advocated the Dry-Brush Technique as the one way to use a dental cream full strength and keep brush bristles stiff enough to clean every tooth surface and massage gums properly. Kolynos permits thi approved technique. Phia highly concentrated, double- strength cream is unique in actionw It multip/fé®25 times when it emters the mouth— inch of Kolynos is equi iveness to 12 inches of thegrdinary toathpaste. It becomes a ‘gui antiseptic FOAM that makes the toothbrush unnecessary. You can feel Kolynos work. It white enamel without injury. And for 3 hours after each brushing this cleansing, purifying process continues. So long as you use the Kolynos Dry-Brush Technique teeth will remain gleaming white and sound, gums will be firm and healthy. Look for Results in 3 Days 1f you want whiter, sounder teeth afid ink gums start using Kolynos— ch on a dry-brush, mornin; and night. Within 3 days teeth wlfi look whiter—fully 3 shades. Gums will look and feel better. Your mouth willtingle with a clean, sweet taste. Buy a tube of Kolynos from any druggist. KOLYNOS the antiseptic DENTAL CREAM 5 Y

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