Evening Star Newspaper, January 26, 1931, Page 25

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WOMAN’S PAGE. Blouse Trimmed With Drawnwork BY MARY MARSHALL. Drawnwork is always a favorite form of trimming with the French lingerie and blouse makers. It is much used at present on the new crepe de chine IR Blouses that are worn in various soft | pastel tones with dark suits or separate skirts, 1f you are planning to do a lit- all the little people of the Green For- | that the dressmaking in your leisure hou why not buy crepe de chine of & to the same time becoming and suit- able for your two:piece suit and make | & blouse trimmed with drawnwork? Choose a pattern of the pullover sort, 50 that you will not have to bother | with a closing, and then arrange | drawnwork for the front of the blouse. You can get a good idea of the many different ways the drawnwork may be| arranged by looking at the new blouses | displayed in any of the smart shops THE STAR'S || DAILY PATTERN || SERVICE i Chic for Schoolgirl. It has lots of snap and practicality, and is an excellent choice for immediate and all Spring wear. The unusual handling of the plaits of the skirt, gives it smart distinction ‘The buttons frcm neck to hem create & tallored air. Just like the eider mode, wide suede belt marks the natural waistline. Pique finishes the neck and the sleeves. Style No 178 may be had 6, 8 10 and 12 years It's easily made. The substantial saving is well worth the short time consumed in the making of this jaunty sports model Supple tweed mixtures, wool ecrepe, Tayon novelties, the heavier weight coitons and linen make up attractively. Size 8 requires 2% yards 35-inch or 214 vards 39-inch, with 1§ 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 | We suggest that when you send for our pattern, you oider a copy of our arge Winter Pash¥'n Magazine. It should be in every nome, for. of course every woman wants to look her bes without great expense, and this book | points the way. Price of book, 10 cents. in sizes | Hot Pot. Cut one pound of mutton into pieces of serving size. loin chops may be used and whele or cut into three | pleces eac! ice two medium potatoes, | and cut another in halves to put on top. | Add to the pot two kidneys, one pint | of oysters, two medium onions sliced, | one-fourth teaspoonful of pepper, two | teaspoontuls of and haif a cupful | of water. 1y in a moderate oven for three hours, leaving covered except the last 30 minutes, or cook | covered on top of the stove. DAILY DIET RECIPE CARROT SAUTE. Carrots, 2 cupfuls. Sliced onion, '» cupful. Butter, 1 tablespoonful, Watcr, % cupful. Minced parsley, 1 tablespoonful. SERVES FOUR PORTIONS. Lightly scrape tender carrots and slice in thin round slices. Melt butter in saucepan, add onion and simmer gently ahout 5 minutes. Then add carrots and water. Cover and cook until tender—about 15 minutes. The water should be completely ab- sorbed. If not, remove cover and cook & few minutes longer until water has evaporated. Add minced parsley at time of serving. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes fiber, much lime, iron, vitamins A and B. Can be given to children 6 years and over. Can be eaten by normal e | have—the eternal watchfulness for ene- | move. adults of average, over or under- ‘weight. Whatever design you follow, the basis | of the work will consist of fine hem- stitching. First the threads will have | to be drawn carefully, and for this work you should use & small pair of | sharp-pointed scissors and a long needle | with a fine point. After you have drawn the threads, thread a fine needle with fine silk to match the crepe de| chine. Then work with a _simple hem- | stitch along the material where the | threads have been drawn, taking up | three or four threads of the material | as shown in the first diagram. Then draw up the silk and pass the needie under the same group of fabric threads and through the material as shown in the second sketch. Continue until the line has been finished on one side of the space from which threads have | been drawn and then work on the op- posite side of each space, taking up the same group of threads of the material | each time to give a ladderlike arrange- ment. | Usually the drawnwork consists of nothing more than this sort of work done in a row of straight or crossing' lines. ‘The threads of the crepe de| chine do not pull out quite so easily as do those of linen. but with patience you will have no difficulty in doing the work neatly and accurately. i BEDTIME STORIES IThH’e has been a Rabbit along here— |one of Peter Rabbit's relatives, I sup- | pose. Rabbits are harder to catch than 0ld Acquaintance. For_gossip there is some excuse If you gain knowledge that's of use. | Billy Mink. As you already know, Billy Mink | sometimes is possessed of what is known as the wanderfoot. This means that he | | delights in making long journeys, just | wate wandering about from place to place, | seeing new sights and visiting places he | has never visited before, sleeping where | he chances to find a good place at the | time he feels sleepy and with not a | care on his mind save the one care that est and the Green Meadows always mies. | Billy was exploring the country around the foot of the Great Mountain. | It seemed to him a very great distance from his home along the Laughing Brook on Farmer Brown's farm, for Billy Mink is a small person, and the smaller you are the greater distances seem. It really was quite a distance, for Billy travels fast when he is on the | He had explored what was to him a new brook. He didn't like that | brook. There were no trout in it, but | also there were dreadful steel traps, and | Billy didn't what to be where he might accidentally step in one of these, so he | had left the brook to explore the coun- try along the edge of the woods at the foot of the Great Mountain, “It is good country for mice” said Bill,” talking to himself. “There ought to be good hunting about here. Ha! MENU FOR A DAY BREAKFAST. Grapefruit Cereal with Cream Corn Meal Griddle Cakes, Maple Sirup Coffee LUNCHEON. Bacon Broiled Tomatoes Delmonico Potatoes Tea DINNER. American Chop Suey Mashed Potatoes Sliced Tomatoes, French Dressing Celery ery Prune and Nut Cream Coffee GRIDDLE CAKES. Mix two cupfuls cornmeal, one teaspoonful sugar and one-fourth teaspoonful sait. Wet it with boil- ing milk, using enough to merely scald and swell the meal, then stir in one level tablespoonful butter. Let the mixture cool and then add the yolks of two eggs, well beaten, and cold milk sul ficient to make a very thin bat- ter. Add the stiffy beaten whites last and bake on a hot, well greased griddle. These are made light by the eggs and are so thin that there is nct much beside the crust, which, when made of the white meal,’ is very sweet and delicate. Be careful not to add the eggs until the mixture is cool, otherwise they will be cooked before they have a chance to raise the batter. PRUNE-NUT CREAM. For two use one-half cupful cream, whipped stiff; add about & dozen prunes chopped fine (which have been soaked). Add one-half cupful walnut meats chopped fine. Add vanilla and sugar to taste. Put on ice for one hour before serving. Pile in sherbet glasses and top with cherry. (Copyright, 1931) | where the nearest hiding place 3 THE EVENIN( SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. I wist muvver would come in here so I could”ast her is I goin' to bed or gettin’ up. (Copyright, 1931.) By Thornton W. Burgess. mice, but one rabbit is worth a dozen mice. Hello! This is not so good, not 50 good. A fox passed this way not so long ago, and he probably has spoiled hunting.” Just then Billy's sharp and ever- ful eyes caught a glimpse of some- thing red moving back of some bushes. If the ground had opened and s lowed him, Billy could hardly have dis- appeared more quickly than he did. One instant he was there and the next in- stant he had disappeared. Had you been there watching, you probably wouldn't have scen where he went. Billy is like Sudden and seemingly mysterious disappearances are his specialty. How does he do it? By always knowing just is and | ED BILLY UNDER HIS BREATH. | dodging into it with such quick move- ments that it is hard for an ordinary pair of eyes, such as yours and mine, to follow him. When he is running | about this way and that, apparently in- | tent on business of his own, those sharp |eyes of his miss nothing of his sur- roundings. He may not appear to be looking, but he is. Every stump, root, | clump of grass, log, stick, stone or other thing in, under or behind which he might hide his slim form is made note of, 50 that in case of sudden need he ing place is. This time Billy had slipped into a |small hole between the roots of an old |stump. Prom it he peered, his bright | had seen so unexpectedly. | _“It is Reddy Fox himself,” muttered | Billy under his breath, after watching for a few minutes. “Yes, sir, it is Reddy himself. Now what has brought him way over here? He is a long way from | home.” | True enough, it was Reddy Fox. He |and Billy Mink were old acquaintances. They had known each other as long as either could remember. - “Hello, you red | robber,” said Billy as Reddy was pass- | ing, | Reddy whirled and instantly he saw | Billy peering from between the roots of that old stump and knew that Billy was | quite safe there. He grinned as only |Reddy can. “Hello, you brown thief!" | he exclaimed. “What are you doing so | far from home?” “Seeing a bit of the Great World,” replied Billy promptly. “And what, may I ask, brings you so far from the Green Meadows and the Old’ Pasture?” “Appetite,” replied Reddy, and then grinned again. “Appetite. I thought I might find better hunting over here. There have been times in the past when I have had good hunting around here when it was poor around home.” “So you have been over here beforel” exclaimed By, “Often,” replied Reddy. "By the way, be careful what you eat around here unless you catch it yourself. There's something queer going on around here. Just watch your step.” ! (Copyright, 1931.) OF T . PARIG falin gown Soer gy MODES HE MOMENT Evening 74 of white satin mads Jorthe Reatrica and enerald green salin. ™ A4 R- . . v YED BILLY UNDER HIS BREATH. | Pincushions Conceal Purpose 'AR, WASHINGTON, How to Be Interesting to Men GIRL asks, “What makes a woman the women who have influenced men present day, have all been feminine wr heeled snakeskin pumg«. ‘The women have always been the helpl of taking care of themselves, do it. There is no record of any great All of which goes to show what & desire to interest men. No man is parti like caricature of his little brother. reaction to the topics under discussion. Next to a woman’s femininity the gence. from it. in his face or asking him in a casual theory of relativity. And the average sharp and sarcastic comebacks. looking they are. Gone is the d: the living picture to the wall any to be a spellbinder who can pep him up brains and use them. She has to hav talk about books and plays and what's ours. Who started her career as a_fright Shoes. Once years ago I bought a pair of shoes. They hurt me, but T had to keep on wearing them for six months because I couldn't aford to throw away the money they had cost. How many girls in your office right now have aching feet beceuse their shoes hur? I won- And I won- how many of them have more comfortakle shoes at home. They can't wear them H today because they don't go with to- day's dres Helen Woodward. girl when she's getting ns with a dress. It's & dress. And mot until she gets home does sho realize that she hasn't a | pair of shoes to go with it. Shoes are a frightfully expensive part of any girl's wararobe. And on them and wear uncomfortable ones to save a little money. In buying clothes it would be a bet- ter plan to begin with your shoes. Then buy the dress and coat to go with them. You put on your shoes first thing in the morning and you have to wear them until after you get home at night. They must be comfortable unless you're will- lovely BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. will know just where the nearest hifl-' |eyes fixed on the moving red spot he | There is a fashion today for keeping pins out of sight on a dressing table. They have long since lost that novelty of newness which gave them glamour when pins were so scarce and expensive | that it almost bespoke wealth to have more than one or two. It is difficult for those of this era to appreciate that there was a time when pins, as we know them, did not exist. The evo- lution of the pin from a thorn to the present stout-headed bit of steel is one of those thrilling stories known to few except manufacturers and those interested in antiques and origins. Lacking such import, the common- place pin is relegated to obscurity on most dressing tables, although the need of them makes it imperative that they be handy. There are various ways of hiding pins and yet having them at one's command There are exquisite boxes of gold and silver, enamel and glass that adorn bureaus, and in any one of is in need of the commodity. Then, too, there are all sorts of dainty French frivolities in the way of pii cushions that deftly conceal their pu pose of sheltering pins. One of these fascinating frivolities is a wee doll with full-flounced” and beruffied skirt that spreads voluminously over the pin- cushion base. As it is something any woman who is at all handy with her needle can make, I am going to tell you how to do it. The requisites are a porcelain doll's head and body to the waist and doll's legs with shoes on them. These doll portions are obtainable at art em- broidery departments of stores and at embroidery shops. Or, if you have any YOU'LL LIKE THIS ECONOMY COLD CREAM Plough’s Cold Cream is rich in those essential oils that nourish starved skin tissues and bring glow- | ing new beauty to com- ; plexions. Cleansing Cream is most [ as a deep-pore cleanser and Plough’s Peroxide Vaniching Cream protects the skin against wind and weather and is an ideal powder base. | Each of the P th Creams is e e Bt e A eatul economy 30c sizes. E) 'BEAUTY CREAMS \DorothyDix and foremost and most of all, femininity. have laid the spolls of the world have always worn jeweled sandals or high- less little clinging vines who hadn't backbone enough to stand alone. They have let the ladies in brogans, who were perfectly capable traits. On the contrary. the women before whom men have bowed down have all been celebrated for their feminine graces and beauties. make imitation men of themselves—that is, if they have a natural feminine him want to give her a second look. Nor does he desire to hold converse with a woman whose line is a synthetic masculine viewpoint. talk he can get the real article from men themselves, and when he talks with a woman the thing that interests him is the feminine viewpoint and the feminine This does not mean that she must be & highbrow or a_wisecracker No man wants & woman to be continually flaunting her college degree But, on the other hand, he does not admire fcols, no matter how good v of the beautiful but dumb. Men have turned The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD, the highest paid business women in America. s0 you're likely to skimp | these pins may be discovered if one | 1, € Finds Femininity Requisite interesting to men?” Well, I'd say, first ‘The women men have loved, since the beginning of time up to the omen. ‘The woman at whose feet men men have given their lives to protect charmer of men ever having masculine mistake women make when they try to cularly intrigued by a creature who looks There is nothing about her that makes When he wants men thing that interests men is her intelli- Far conversation what he thinks about the man flees from the woman who makes girl who interests the modern man_ has and keep him amused. She has to have e ideas and opinions and to be able to going on in this diverting old world of DOROTHY DIX. ened typist and who became one of |ing to spend hours of nerve strain in bearing pain or in sloppy walking I vonder why girls in cities Where there is a lot of snow and rain don't| keep a pair of light pumps at the office. ‘They could wear heavy, sensible shoes outdoors and slip Mito comfortable ones | after they arrived. I wonder why girls in buying their clothes don't try to stick more to = color scheme that needs fewer shoes and hats. Black shoes go with half & dozen colo: Brown shoes go with a lot of colors. Why not try to pick out some such color scheme and stick to it for years? T know you can't do it in six months because you have to wear out | what you have 1 won't say much here about the girl who wears tight shoes to make her feet |look small. But she really ought to know that tight shoes look awkward. Nearly always th-y make the ankle look out of proportion to the foot and they make the instev bulge, so that the effect | is clumsy and exactly the opposite of | 1\l‘h.’fl. the girl who wears them thinks | t is. |~ Nowadays oxtords are smart; medium sizod heels are smart, so that the girl who snt comfortable in pumps and high heels 2an be as nicely dressed, as far as her shoes are concerned, as any- body else. Girls having problems in connection with their work may write to Miss Woodward. in care of this paper, for her personal advice. | (Copyright. 1931.) difficulty in finding what you like, buy a very small fancy doll at & toy shop. This will give you legs and arms as | “sell” him or her the idea that the fear the body to the waist. The arms come on the French frivolity doll portions as described above. | Cut a circle of cardboard and cover it with a silk, or rayon textile. Sew & straight piece of the textile around the edge and stuff the container with wool, hair or absorbent cotton. Draw the top of the straight strip together | and you will have a pincushion. Sew | the doll's waistline to this top. Make |& full skirt of the textile and sew | three ruffies of the same material onto | it to form a tiered ruffied skirt. Ribbon ruffies are suggested. Sew the legs to the skirt foundation [s0 that the dainty shoes peep from beneath, close together and so placed | that they are properly positioned in | relation to the doll’s body. Stick plenty of pins of different sizes into | the cushion and dolly is ready to stand, | or appear to sit, on the dressing table. If a regulation doll is used. a waist will have to be made as well as a skirt. No proportions are given, for they must accord with the size of the doll used. She should be s0 small that she is a dainty accessory. A doll requiring a skirt more than four inches long is too large. (Copyright._1931) Grapefruit s Healthfruit Doctors say that ATWOOD GRAPEFRUIT aids digestion and helps eliminate acids from the system Tree-Ripened [ and Delicious | LOOK FOR THE NAME Wholesale Distributor: W. Chas. Heitmuller Co. 923 B St. N.W. Washington, D. C. \ JANUARY WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. S. Patent Office. | o ol ‘When the Washington garbage men heralded their coming by blasts from tin horns? Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. There are a few adults whose ex- periences have led them to fear domes- tic animals, but it is a commonly ac- cepted belief that all children love them. As a matter of fact, most chil- dren will love dogs and cats if they have not been knocked down by a big | dog, or snapped at by a small one, or imbued with fear by overcautious par- ents. Wiren a fear is acquired, though, it isn't always easy to erase. It is well to introduce a small dog or cat into the household of the child | who is terrified by animals. The help- less, artless, young puppy or kitten will win any chifd’s heart. and as it grows in size and its deportment becomes more cat or dog like, the child will | have grown so used to it as to be in- capable of fear of it. In turm, the child | will forget his fear of other dogs’ loud barks or of other cats’ unheralded leaps. Sometimes this doesn't work. Some children cannot be induced to go near | even helpless little animals. Human nature being what it is, a child’s unusual fear of animals becomes a matter of open comment and dis-| cussion. Susan finds that her fear is| unusual, that most little girls like cats | and dogs, but that she doesn't! “She| screams perfectly awful; you could! ar her a mile” says her mother. “She just frightens us all to deatn when she does this.” Screaming so as to be heard a mile may have been an early reaction to a | real terror, but it soon becomes a mark | of individuality. The child knows that every one expects her to become hys- terical at the sight of an animal, and naturally she does. 2 1f we are going to change the child's behavior, we have to change our ex-| pectations of that behavior. Even if she is frightened, she need not exhibit | her fright in such uncontrollel man- | ner, and she would not if we expected her to act otherwise. | The most helpful attitude for the mother to assume is that the child is improving, even if the evidences are not immediately apparent to weak eyes. The first step is to pretend that we no longer recognize it. A dog that is left unmolested is not a source of danger to any child, and the child should be told this constantly. If the subject is discussed at all, it should be with this attitude. “Polly used to be afraid of dogs when she was little, but now she knows they won't hurt her, and she isn't the least afraid!” Polly may still | cling to her mother and look askance ! at any friendly, sniffing dog. but she! is imbued with the idea that she isn't as afraid as she used to be. and shortly she discovers that she isn't. One should not trv to shame fear out {of a child. nor ridicule it out of her. but one can suggest it away, and thus is no longer there. Charged with driving & car while drunk. Herbert Rigg was fined $275 at Carlisie, England, recent EVENING A163‘\)\ | SCHNEIDER | BAKING | CO. FEATUR ES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Fingertips. Short cuts to beauty are much in de- mand these days when most of us are too busy to spend much time prinking, but sometimes, as the old proverb says, the longest way around proves to be the | shortest way to our destination in the end. When we are thinking of how quickly we can finish a given task, we are more than likely to do it slightingly, with the result that it has to be done over again. For instance, there is manicuring—a | branch of beauty culture that every zirl and woman practices to some extent. To do it correctly one must take time, | but how often one is tempted to give | the nails a hasty clip with the scissors and a careles dab with the liquid polish | and let it go at tha¥! The polish gives a high gloss at once, but, unless the previous coating has been’ entirely re- moved, the fresh polish will look lumpy and will peel in spote. Applied hurriedly, it fills up the groove around the nails, which looks untidy Clipping the nails with scissors in- stead of taking time to file them first with a long steel file and then with an emery board tends to make them thick and rough at the free edge. Forcing down the cuticle about the base of the nails when it is dry causes hangnails which might be prevented if the skin was first softened with warm water snd soap. | Perhaps the worst result of careless | manicuring is the danger of infection | from small cuts and tears. The whole fingsr may become sore and there is danger of bloou poisoning. To prevent | such trouble one should in the first place | use scissors very sparingly and never prod or jab the tender cuticle with sharp instruments. Should the skin become broken, apply peroxide or other suitable antiseptic at once. If any swelling or inflammation develops, see a doctor. It is not necessary to have an ex- pensive manicure set. but one’s tools shouid be cleaned often and kept for one’s own private use. A long, flexible steel file is an tmportant part of the manicure equipmént. Then one should have a package of emery boards, an or- angewood stick, little ‘curved scissors, | absorbent cotton, buffer, powder and polish, if desired. Even when mmdl liquid polish i used the nails should be | cleaned wtih powder and buffed with the buffer to stimulate the circulation in the nail bed The liquid polish will | not adhere smoothly unless the nail is clean, dry and free from grease and particles of old polish. i A simple nail bleach may be added to one’s manicure set. Peroxide will do for this purpdse or one may use a mix- | ture of one dram tartaric acld in two | ounces of rose water. { For a nall polishing powder one may | PUFFY j > z | | 1 | | | The Herons take our hero in their yacht to far Cathay (That's a nickname for the country known 2s China, by the way). They set him down at Shanghal with his valet at his side. “I never though,” laughs Puffy. “that “L'd realiy be shanghaied. | Now free from stain, tartar and decay you must guard against a con- dition that is embarrassing to_its victim and offensive to others—Bac- terial-Mouth, It is caused’by germs that sweep into the mouth with every breath. You have it. We all have it. And no ordinary preparation can cope with it. But Kolynos quickly removes Bac- terial-Mouth by killing the germs that cause it. In 15 seconds this antisept: dental creamkills 190 millionbacteria! Use the Kolynos Dry-Brush Tech- nique for 3 days—a half-inch of Koly- nos on a dry brush, morning and night. Then look at your teeth—fully 3 shades whiter! In 15 days the improvement will be so marked you will never again say thatsparkling teetharea giftreceived only by a fortunate few. Dentists have long advocated the Dry-Brush Technique as the one way to use a dental cream fullstrength and keep brush bristles stiff enough to cleanevery tooth surfaceand massage LEEDS. use ordinary talcum powder or & mix- ture of one part of tin oleate and two parts of precipitated silica with a few drops of perfume if desired. Olive oil and coca butter are usefr adjuncts to the manicure set if the naik are inclined to be dry and brittle or if Buffing Aimulates the naikbed there is hard cuticle at the corners. The fingertips may be soaked in the oil for 10 minutes re one goes to bed, then the cocoa butter may be rubbed in lib- erally and the nails wrapped around witin clean absorbent cotton to be left on over night. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Last nite after supper ma brawt some notepaper in the living room, saying to pop, Im going to start a diary this eve- ning, Willyum. Of cours: its not like having a diary from the ferst of the year, but theres 1o use crying into spilt milk. So Il just start from this morn- ing and put cown everything unusual that happened today. And then I will buy a diary this week and copy my note paver entries in it. Now let me see, what did I do this morning? I telefoned the butcher to be sure to send a tender roast, but of corse he dident, so thats nuthing unusuel, she sed. You remembered exactly where your diamond ring was when I asked you about it at brekfist, that was unusual, pop sed. and ma sed, This afternoon I met Milda Hackett downtown and we had tea together and she made me pay the check by pcrtending to fish in her pocketbook till I lost all patience and opened my own, but goodness knows there was nuthing unusual about that. I put in a bid for liver and onions tonite and dident get it, but I cant say thats unusual, pop sed, and I sed, Hay ma, I know something unusual, dident tell us anything wonderful that Gladdises baby did today. O, that just remind: me, ma seu, Gladdis cawt him trying to slide down stairs hed ferst this morning, and later she discovered he had been tearing up a magazine with pictures of Winter sports in it. In other werds he was imitating the toboggan sliders. Izzent that re- markable for a baby of 10 munths? she sed. Thats just a perfeck ferst item for my diary, she said. And she hurry up wrote it down on the sheet of paper. Sweet Potato Whip. Cook six medium-sized sweet potatoes and mash them. Add two well beaten egg yolks and enough cream to make whipping easy. Add three tablespoonfuls of melted butter, three tablespoonfuls of brown sugar, and a pinch of salt. Beat thoroughly until the mixture s llu{f,\'. Kl:fn add hl;: a Eun(ul‘ .ilr whole nut meats, pecans be'ng especially good. Whip the egg whites stiff and fold them into the mixture. Place in a buttered baking dish, sprinkle with chopped nuts and bake for 30 minutes in a moderate oven. Cranberry Relish. ‘Wash one heaping cupful of raw cran- berries, one small orange, half a lemon, remove the seeds and put all through a food chopper. Add one cupful of sugar and mix thoroughly. Serve with the | main course of a meal. | | EAtAAEY realized on Swift & Com) carcass beef in Washington. ding Saturday, January 34, 1931 on shipments sold out, ransed from 11.80 ante (0 20.50 cenits per pound and averaged 15.89 cents per pound —Advertisement. Prices sales of for week: y ' don’t be a rumble- hiten Teeth 3 shades in 3 days Nobody likes to look at a Bacterial-Mouth TO HAVE dazzling white teeth— gums properly.Only Kolynos permits this approved technique, “This highly concentrated, double-stres dental cream is unique in action. A halj is equal in effectivencss to 1¢ inches dinary toothpaste for it multiplies 25 tim hen it entersthe mouth. It becomes a surg- 0g, antiseptic FOAM that eliminates wet- ting the brush. You can feel Kolynos work. It foams into every pit, fissure and crevice, Germs that cause Bacterial-Mouth lead to stain, decay and gum diseases are in- stantly killed. They vanish completely and the entire mouth is purified, ‘This amazing Kolynos FOAM removes food particles that ferment and cause decay —neiitralizes acids—washes away ugly, yel- Jow tartar and the unsightly mucoid coating that clouds teeth. 2 asily and quickly, it cleans and polishes teeth down to the naked white enamel— without v. “And for 3 hours after each brushing this cleansing, purifying pro- cess continues, long asyon use the Kolynos Dr: wiaue teeth Acill vemain gleaming white and sound, and gums will be healthy. Look for Results in 3 Days 1f you want whiter, sounder teeth and firm, pink gums, start using Kolynos—a half-inch on adry brush, morning and ni days teeth will look whiter—full s will look and feel better. il lm‘l(e with a clean, sweet taste. tube of Kolynos. ngth nsh KOLYNOS «.the antiseptic 'DENTAL CREAM > 4 S Y

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