Evening Star Newspaper, March 18, 1931, Page 26

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' B—10 *=* WOMAN'’S PAGE. Lack of Attention Detrimental BY (LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. | Sure signs of latent unpopularity in, Then you are blamed and ecriticized young person are desultory listening | just the same. So beware of forming and a roving eve when supposedly be-!such a reprehensible habit. i ing engaged in conversation. Have you| If you are with a person who is not never talked with a pe:son who seemed | paying due attention to what you are to be making a great effort to give you | saying, be quick to release her gra- her attentiol., whese gaze kept wan-|ciously. There may be a reason which dering to other persons, and who acted | you have nothing t> do with. It may be as if she felt constrained to hear what | that something is bothering her, or she | may have promised to meet a friend for | whom she must be looking.” Of course, |if the latter is the case, she should mention the fact. While there should be this reciprocity in conversation, the | responsibility of paying heed to what another is saying rests with the listener if she would be popular. OUR CHILDREN BY ANG! Problem Children. There is much about children that| | % do no. understand. - Because we do | not understand we blunder along in the dark, oc asionally coming upon the | right thing, often the wrong thing. Children are an expression of the vast mystery we call life, and until we can |get a better vision of what life is and what it means we will be forced to strugg'e blindly with the problem chil- dren, | It is not enough to say that a child |is & problem, to label him as slow, | gifted, degenerate, genius, bad or good We must know whereof we speak and | understand the cause and the remedy | before we get anywhere with the diffi- culty | I'am certain of one thing; perhaps | two, as they may be separate though closely related. No child wants to be | a failure. No parent wants his child | to fail. The failing child is pained and | bewildered. ~ o are his parents. We | must siudy to find the cause of the | child's difficulty. remove it if possible, | explain - the situation to the parents; J and go on from there with courage and | faith in the service of the child. | When the teacher says “Son is la: | “Daughter is inattentive.” “Your child | is suffering from a complex,” has any- | thing of importance been done? I do not think so. I want to know why the | boy seems Jazy, why the child is inat- | tentive, what is meant by a complex. | Words do not help unless they indicate |2 way out. Now, what is the way out | for the lazy child, the inattentive child, | the child whose mind is preoccupled with some interest other than the neces- sary one? First, study the child in his home, in the playground, in the class room, and | in doing so study every other person who touches his Iffe in any way. You may find the answer in the people who surround the child, in his companions, in his actions. Actions are the clearest of all langues. A child does what his thought sets. What he thinks, tha§ he does in spite of all the protestations to the contrary. How shall we get him to think right? I wish I knew. All thinking is based upon experiences and the kind and quality of thc interpretation of experi- ences depends upon something that is| a mystery to me. One child will in- terpret an experience to his good while another will misinterpret it woefully. We have to keep exposing the child to experfences, the more varied the better, until we find a_line that his mind will- ingly follows. We catch that and work from that toward the others he believes | LO PATRL DO NOT LOOK AWAY FROM THE PERSON TALKING TO YOU. | u had to say, but it was only because | t would be discourteous to leave you! that she refrained from going off | abruptly? Such absent-minded listening can be- come a habit. Mothers should tell their young folk that to be a good | listener is one of the secrets of popu- larity. If they find conversation with any particular Person is actually bore- some, they should manage to free them- selves graciously after a very short talk. During the time of the conversa- tion the attention must not waver vis. ibly. It not only appears discourteous | but it is actually rude. education. and it is not to be caught in the twinkling of an eye. THE EVENIN( T STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY. MARCH 18. 1931. FIEATURES. THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE This _attractive crepe silk print is especially adaptable to figures a little above normal. All th: best points have been brought out to give a slimming silhouette. For instance, the surplice closing adds a softly rippling rever that cuts the breadths. ~ Still more helpful perhaps is the shaped yoke brought up to the waistline at the leit side “front, that narrows the hipline. The surplice vestee also does its bit toward slend(‘x-‘ ness, and is very becoming. The circular skirt is beautifully molded to the figure with attractive, gracious fullness at the hem. Style No. 2858 may be had in sizes 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 ifiches bust Siz 38.requires 47 yards of 39-inch material, with 14 yard of 27-inch con- trasting. Navy bl. e crepe silk with white crepe vest is youthful and extremely wear- able. For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or coln directly to The Washington Star's Néw York Fashion Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, New York. | You will see one attractive style after another our new Spring Fashion Bcok. s you turn over the pages of Style: Holds Brains Better Than Beauty What Should A man \DorothyDix,| HERE is no question that I am asked oftener by young men than whether they should pick out a wife for her beauty or for her brains. question, since nine men out of ten use their eyes instead of their judgment in “choosing the women they marry. and are so intrigued by the outside of a girl's head that they never even give a thought as to what may be inside of it. Any maiden with a peaches-and-cream complexion and a willowy figure and naturally wavy hair, even if she has only one lobe to her brain, can marry 10 times to the hrmely college girl's once or none at all. Seek in A Wife? Why men who are otherwise sane and practical and prone to looking into the worth of any investment that they go into should put so much stress on the outward appearance of wemen, and give so litlle attention to their inward worth and value, is one of the strange mysteries of sex psychology that nobody can ex- plain, would look into its real merits; what kind of material went into its composition, and whether it was durable and dependable and generally the sort of machine | he needed. s | A man will marry a woman just beause she is good-looking and a snappy | dresser, without ever faking the trouble to find out whether she has any sense | 6r ‘education or thrift or industrv or what sort of temper and disposition she has or whether she has any single Guality that he will want in his wife. Of course, no one will deny that beauty is a great charm in a woman ust ?r!lm': would like to have a wife who is a decorative piece of furniture in his house. Also it Is true that sometimes beauty and brains and a sweet temper are all to be | found in the same woman. Heaven knows ugliness is no guarantee of virtue. A woman with a pug nose | | | may be just as stupid and hard to get along with as one with a classic profile, ! and certainly the beautiful but dumb are easier to endure than the homely nit- wits. | Beauty in itself, without intelligence, is a poor thing for a man to marry, | because he 15 bound to lose out in a few years. Time, the great leveler of women, | turns the slim flapper into a feather bed or a living skeleton. It streaks golden | and sable hair with white. It fades the roses in the fairest face, and when the | beauty's beauty is gone, if she has no wit to supplement it, she is lost. And the | man who martied her because she was a living picture finds that he has only a J chromo on his hands. | Of course, if a man picks out a girl just because she is pretty, and without | finding out what sort of conversational line she carries, it is his own fault if she | gets on his nerves by the time she is 40. But that doesn't help the situation, It merely swells the divorce statistics. | e Another reason for picking out a wife for her brains instead of her beauty is that the more intelligent a woman ‘is, the more adaptable she is, and the easier she is to get along with. Many men have the idea that if a girl hasn't much sense she is soft and mushy and pliable and they can mold her to their wills. Never was a greater mistake made. There is no other human being on carth so mulish, so stubborn, so impossible to change in any way as a stupid woman. | | With an intelligent woman you can reason. She can look on both sides of a subject. She can broaden. She is sympathetic, understanding. She can learn | to control her temper. If she marries a fine, strong, inteiligent man, he can | develop her into anything he wills. chapter. So if a man wants to be happy, though married, let him pick out a girl with | good, hatd, horse sense. A pretty face can catch him, but it will take brains to | keep him satisfied and happy after marriage DOROTHY DIX. | (Copyright, 1931.) Debunking Beauty Diet |given to them in the form of desseit after meals. In planning a diet that will development of a sound skin good teeth, a liberal amount of cach of the vitamins must be included. Ar vitamins is vitamin A, which is cailed the growth vitamin. This is found most abundantly in cod liver oil, butter, in fresh egg yolk and in liv Spinach, watercress, lettuce, leaves, turnip tops, beet tops and r tops are leafy vegetables which are especially rich in vitamin A. yellow-pigmented _roots, h ‘as car rots and sweet potatoes, contain vit- |amin A in_ greater amounts than do potatces, Wwhite turnips, parsnips, red beets and radishes. | When there is an insufficient amount | of vitamin A in the diet, a character- | BY MORRIS FISHBEIN, M. D. “HE average man or woman eats to much, takes too little exercise and drinks too little water. The person with skin disturbances of one type or an- other is usually benefited by some at- tention to these three points. Properly selected foods, thoroughly chewed; well ventilated living quarters; plenty of pure drinking ~water; avoidance of of highly spiced condiments, of alcohol, of too much tea, coffec or tobacco— all these have a part in the control cf many disturbances of the skin. | “The most pernicious misdemeanor of persons after middle life is overeating. The person who works out of doors is of course, able to dispose of more and aid the and of It is a futile | No man would buy an automobile just because it was gay and shiny. He | We | ike to look at one who is balm to the eyes. and it is natural that any | She can grow to his stature. But you can do | nothing with a fool. There is nothing to work on. She is a fool to the end of the | NANCY PAGE Scheme to Get a Child to Bed Early. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. | “How on earth does one get children |to bed at night?” Nancy thought she | bad the answer to it, but Joan was At fi . That was when she was 2. she was 4 she was allowed to up until 7. Now she was 6, Her bed-time should have been 7:30, | tie: | o'cloc | When st | found that 8 o'clock was what it really | became. Neither her niece nor her own son | had been allowed to stay up when | company was at the house, nor were they given more freedom on Friday | night than_on any other night. | broken habit was not the explanation. { But there was something in the very air of the times, Nancy decided, that | made it difficult to get Joan to bed without many arguments. Nancy tried manding, scolding, re- st she worked out this con At praising, | minding | scheme. Joan‘s bed-time hour was set for 8 oclock. Any night when she | went to bed beforc 8 she had a }(‘H‘(ht of time which was put, so to | speak, in her bank. Nancy 2nd she kept | track of the minutes. If there came a | night when she wanted to stay up | she could stay long enough to use | up her accumulated time in the bank Frequently she went to bed early just | to get some time to her credit. Then | she” would boast of the long evening | ste could have later, Nancy found that when the later time came the little girl was 5o sleepy she could not keep awake and was quite willing to go to bed | Nancy liked the sense of freewill which this scheme gave Joan. It taught her something about time allowance just |'as Nancy hoped to teach her the “use of money allowance. And best of all the | early hour so many times in succession kept her in the habit of getting sleepy at a normal time. Frequently she went to bed when Peter did, at 6:30. | continually teaching her new - difficul- | rst Joan went to bed at 6| {but try as hard as she would Nancy | So | When all seems safest have a care. "Tis then of danger to beware. —Redshoulder the Hawk. praees | The greatest danger often comes when least expected. So, when danger | is not even thought of it may be very | near indeed. The wise never forget to| be watchful. It doesn't pay. Red- shoulder the Hawk found this out. It cost him a few feathers and a severe fright. It happened this way: Redshoulder had gone to look for his | breakfast, leaving Mrs. Redshoulder sit- ting on their precious eggs. Now the day before Redshoulder had made a | discovery. He had been sailing over a farm beyond Farmer Brown’s farm. As he passed high over the henyard he had seen a Rat run out from under the henhouse, kill a fluffy little chicken, and take it back under the henhouse. 1t had all happened so quickly that it was_over before Redshoulder fully rea- lized what was happening. Just then a | man came out of the farmhouse and | ting my chickens,” he muttered. * Redshoulder kept on his way. “If there is one Rat living under that henhouse_there are more Rats there,” thought Redshoulder. “A Rat is more filling than a Mouse. There should be good ~ hunting “there. Yes, sir, there should be good hunting there. I'll keep an eye on that place.” So this morning Redshoulder had | flown straight over to that farm. There henyard. It was just the place from | which to watch. He flew straight to it | and settled himself comfortably. Watch- ful patience would, he felt sure, give | him the chance he wanted. | The hens had seen him alight on that | pole and had made a frightened rus for the henhouse. “Silly things, thought Redshoulder. “What are they | afraid of me for? I'm after a Rat, not 2 hen or a chicken.” He sat motionless so that he looked like a part of the pole. It wasn't long before the hens had forgotten their fright and were out in the yard again. | One old hen had a brood of downy | chicks and a very fussy old hen she It amused Redshoulder to watch . “Thank goodness Mrs. Redshoulder | doesn't make such a fuss over our babies as that old hen does over hers,” thought he. “I wonder if that Rat will { try for another of those babies this | morning. I hope he does. I hope he | l comes out soon. Ha! There he is now poxing his nose out of that hole.” Redshoulder became so intent watch- ing that Rat that he paid no attention to anything else. All was quiet and peaceful. There was no hint of possi- ble danger. Yet all the time danger was slowly but surely drawing near. | The farmer had heard the frightened | cackling of those hens when Red- shoulder had_arrived. Looking out the indow he had seen the big Hawk alight on the telephone pole. ~Seizing | | his gun he had slipped out the front | door where he could not be seen by | | Redshoulder and had hurriedly made his way to a point where he could | creep around back of the barn unseen Dr. Royal S. Coy RADIO DIET TALK 0'Clock Thurséay WRC | ful. as e Thornton BEDTIME STORIES 7 o to a point within shooting distance of Redshoulder. “That's the Hawk who has been -5 if I have luck he has caught his last chicken.” So Redshoulder watched the gray old Rat peeping out of his hole under the henhouse, the farmer with his terrible gun crept along back of the barn, the fussy old hen fussed more than ever over her chickens, the other hens ran about aimlessly as hens do, and the was a telephone pole just outside the | IT WAS JUST THE PLACE FROM WHICH TO WATCH. beautiful Spring morning was as peace- if notning dreadful ever had happened or ever could happen. Then all in the wink of an eye every- thing changed. The gray old Rat darted out as a fluffy little chick came near. He didn't catch it, for big claws seized him. The hens made a_great racket as they rushed for the henhouse, The farmer rushed around the corner of the barn just as Redshoulder flew over the henhouse, threw up his gun and fired both barrels. Bang! Bang! went the terrible gun. Redshoulder felt some sharp stings and some of his feathers floated away. He wasn't hurt much but he was terribly frightened. He had had a narrow escape and he ne: ‘ Make spring A HEALTHY TIME OF YEAR NoOT only is milk good for you, but lends itself well to a variety of is an ingredient that dishes. Cream sauces for fish or vegetables . . . cream soups + « « macaroni and cheese! These are healthful foods, he needs. In that lies the science of Skilled physicians in the children’s for children or the miss, the matron, clinic can help a great deal. Thor- And then she gloated over the hour and the stout, and a series of dressmaking a half she had to her credit in kLer time You signify that what is said is not '\:"fl':f fcod than does the brain e byt fortunately rare inflammation | and especially fine for the try= | worker. worth listening to, and also that you would much prefer being in the com- pany of some one else. When inatten- | tiveness become a habit, as it so easily | can, these insinuations may not be true. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed apricots, wheat cereal with cream, poached eggs, raisin bran muffins, coffee. oughly trained teachers are of the ut- most _importance because of the tre- mendous influence they have upon the thinking of their pupils. Interested intelligent parents are of first impor- tance in the live, of the children. Chil- dren are the shadows of their ancesters and parents are the closest, the most influential. Give the problem child his chance. Reserve dccision. Hope for him and search the world for an interpretation for him. Tkere is a way if only we can find it. That is the challenge life offers th- searcher, the teacher. JOLLY POLLY LUNCHEON. Spanish omelet, baking powder biscuits, stewed rhubarb, cream ple, tea, DINNER. Bean soup, baked pork chops, apple rings, French fried pota- toes, buttered cabbage, hearts of lettuce, roquefort dressing, tapi- oca cream pudding, coffee, A Lesson in Etiquette. articles. It is a book that will save you money. Price of book, 10 cents. DAILY DIET RECIPE CHEESE CREAM PUFFS Shortening, one-half cupful. Boiling water, one cupful. Pastry flour, ‘one-half cupful, Salt, ‘one-half teaspoonful. venne, one-sixteenth tea- spoonful, Grated American cheese, one- half cupful. Eggs, two. MAKES 12 OR 14 TINY PUFFS Heat the shortening in the boiling water to just the boiling point. All at once turn in all the flour which has been sifted with The indoor worker who walks about but little and who tries to eat three times a day will find himself in much better condition if he eats meat only once each day. For him, more- | over, the quantity of food is just as | important as its nature. More and more people are adapting |themselves to refined, sophisticated, | thoroughly cooked and artificial foods. | One of the difficulties of such food sub- stances is that the vitamins have been | destroyed. ‘The other difficulty is that | fiber has been too thoroughly broken up and thepe is nothing in the food to_stimulate’ the digestion. Nevertheless, it is not advisable to | change suddenly to foods that are coarse and indigestible. These will ir- | ritate the delicate lining of the in- testines and permit the more easy meat | of the eye develops. Tapioca Meringue. Soak half a cupful of pearl tapioca overnight. In the morning add two tablespoonfuls 0. sugar and two cup fuls of scalded milk and cook in a double boiler until transparent. Add two slightly beaten egg yolks and cook for one minute longer. Add the grated | rind of one lemon and one teaspoonful of lemon juice and place in a cass role. Beat,two egg whites until frothy. | Add half a teaspoonful of baking pow- | der and four tablespoonfuls of sugar and beat until stiff, then spread over the pudding. Sprinkle with one-fourth cupful of chopped nuts and bake for about 20 minutes in a medium oven. bank. Stuffed Lettuce Salad. new and unusual salad. | Select a large, hard head of lettuce and trim ayay th iter leaves. Cui a fibm the bottom so that it will stand evenly, then with a sharp knife ut a slice as deep as ble all {around the top. Remove as much of the inner part of the lettuce as you can and _red it very fine, then mix it with an equal part of diced beets, a few tiny shreds of onion and half a | green pepper shredded very fine. Sea- son well and mix with French dressing or mavon.aise and fill the lettuc. head , h.aping it up in the center. Wken serving it cut in ple shape and | pass mayonnaise or French dressing | with the se’ad. If desired to serve ‘This is a When England’s Henry I found in g3, of money y P pictures, 12 color . complete instructions and a set of , stam Japmnesé water colors, 48 paes. resota {coi 1l send the C: enough of Ceresota Unble e two cakes of two loav the Ceresota Cook Book of 150 13) the Ceresota Fairy Stor, ldren—12 colored | | ere is my 25¢. Please send all of above to m CLIP COUPON AND MAIL TO: Name Northwestern order) we wi Al for cl charts . Address. ing spring season when all the family needs to be strong and well. A generous glass of pure, rich milk will do you a world of good too! TELEPHONE WEST 0183 Wise Brothers CHEVY CHASE entrance of bacteria into the body. Too much starch, protein or fats will | be harmful because they will not be leaves the sides of the pan. This | |digested fully. Incomplete digestion will take only a minute or two. encourages the growth of harmful | bacteria in the intestines. Remove from the fire, beat in | the cheese. Cool till the dough | | As you become older, your tolerance for sugars grow less. If you eat too feels just lukewarm. Drop in the eggs one at a time, beating each | |much of sweets or of starchy food, an | excess burden s put on the system. time until mixture is smooth and g velvety looking. Drop by tea- The dentist emphasizes also the spoonful far apart on a greased necessity of careful control of the diet baking sheet and bake in mod- | |for the production of sound teeth. In erate oven (350 degrees F.) about the diet of the child foods sufficiently | 35 minutes. Good for an ap- | |hard should be provided to cause exer- Detizer when filled with sultable | | cise of the jaws and muscles and there- by to encourage their development. filling, or can be used as an ac- compattiment 1o soup—or saled. For years it has been a comon im- DIET NOTE | pression that too much sugar was bad Recipe furnishes protein, for the teeth. If sweets are taken in starch, fat. Lime, iron, vitamins | |t00 large amounts, they interfere with A‘and B present. Can be eaten | |digestion and produce an abnormal de- in moderation by normal adults | |sire for highly seasoned food. Mcst of average or under weight. | experts advise that children avold | candy between meals and ihat it b the salt and cayenne and stir vigorously _until the mixture clings together in a mass and 1125, that 94 “moneyers,” had been allowed to coin money had clipped the coins, as punishment he ordered their bodies to be likewise mutilated. POACHED EGGS. Not Bleached Put shallow pan over fire, half filled with water, add one tea- spoontul salt and two tablespoon- :Es vinegar; let get scalding t; drop eggs into water, let stand _five minutes without bol- ing. Butter toast and ‘with a skimmer take up eggs and slide on toast; dot with bits of but- ter and salt and pepper. SPANISH OMELET. Four eggs, four tablespoon- fuls cold water, pepper, sait, two tablespoonfuls butter. Melt the butter in a frying pan. yolks of eggs, add the water, Beat whites and fold into yolks. Fry on one side until brown, set in hot oven to brown top, Serve with tomato sauce on a hot platter. TAPIOCA PUDDING. One and one-half tablespoon- fuls quick cooking tapioca, two cupfuls scalded milk, two eggs, one-third cupful sugar , one- fourth tablespoonful salf, one tablespoonful vanilla. Pick over tapioca and soak one hour in cold water to cover. Drain, add to milk and cook in double boiler until taploca is transparent. Mix with the sugar and salt. Combine by, pouring hot mixture slowly into egg mixture. Return to boller and cook until thickened. while stirring constantly. Fold in whites of eggs, beaten until stiff. Remove from range, chill and serve with whipped cream. (Copyright, 1931 | individually, use very small, hard heads of lettuce and treat in the same way. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. IT 1S ESTIMATED THAT THE COST OF LIVING 1S BEING REDUCED ONE PER CENT A MONTH. AT THAT RATE, LIVING COSTS WILL BE ZERO IN ONE HUNDRED MONTHS GRAPEFRUIT TREE-RIPENED WHOLESOME DELICIOUS ‘Wholesale Distributors W. Chas. Heitmuller Co. 923 B 8t. N.W.. Washington. D. C Kotex really fits <ogfand it offers you lasting - sanitary protection E. W.—A me. is not conducted on a factory production basis. Therefore, | food should not be cut into pieces ali| at once, but rather piece by piece, as eaten. It may be cut all at once for children t0o young to handle a knife. EUGEN PERMANENT Authorized male and female opera- tors. personally supervised by Mr. Angiin Clifton Terrace Beauty Shop SPECIAL HI-TEST JERSEY MILK CThe brarty ajla fWZ eueeNe nwure DOOR FOR IN HOSPITALS . 1 The Kotex absorbent is the identical material used by surgeons in 85% of the country’s leading hospitals, 2 Kotex is soft . ... Not merely an apparent softe ness, that soon packs intg chafing hardness. But g delicate, lasting softness. 3 Can be worn on cither side with equal comfort, No embarrassment, Disposable, instantly, completely. Regular Kotex—d: xo:x"s‘;per-suo—!(es:fl’fl Kotex absorbs laterally, which makes it soft, not only at first, but during hours of use. bent wadding, of which Kotex is made, serve to carry moisture swiftly away from one area, leav- ing the protective surface delicate and comfortable for hours. Its layer construction permits perfect adjustment. Kotex may be worn on either side with equal protection. There is no chance of getting it wrongly adjusted, no possibility of embar- rassment. Because of the delicate fibers which make up its filler, and because of the scientific way in which it absorbs, Kotex is soft, not only at first, but all through use. It is treated to déodorize. light; will mot curl; perfect-fittinge And it is disposable, you know, (U.S. Patent No. 1770741), quickly, easily. Specify T - 15¢ ouarr get the utmost from sani- tary protection, it should offer you mental comfort as well as physical. Kotex does. It provides real peace of mind. It is shaped to fit inconspicuously, so that you may wear the filmiest of gowns without a thought of self-con- sciousness. Not only that, but Kotex absorbs scientifically. Lateral absorption As you probably know, Kotex ab- sorbs by test five times more than the finest of surgical cotton, and the way it absorbs is important— “lateral absorption”—a process which makes the pad effective, not in just one area, but over the entire surface. The long, delicate fibers of Cellucotton (not cotton) absor- T'S the patented Eugene Stear: Sachet — the secret of the lovely, natural permanent waves of today. No wave is a genuine Eugene wave unless these safeguards are used on your hi Write for a demonstration Fugene Sachet—study it—note the Eugene trade-mark on it—and then see that your ha'-dresser uses 2 to 3 dozen genuine Eugene Sachets for your permanent wave. Eugene, 1ud, 521 Fifth Avenue, New York City Paris « Loadon % Beslin « Sydney < Barcelona € U 6 e N e ¢Wflammtz-u/.a/t/-a_ FAIRFAX FARMS DAIRY 1620 1st St. N.W. WASHINGTON’S FASTEST GROWING INDEPENDENT DAIRY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY CALL POTOMAC 2301 i ' Brings new ideals of sanitary comse fort! Woven to fil’by an_entirely This dairy is not owned by nor connected in any new patented process. Firm yek way with any combination of dairies, either in or ' ‘out of Washington. It is owned and operated exclusively by Washington people. 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