Evening Star Newspaper, April 15, 1931, Page 41

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

w OMAN'’S PAGE. Putting Articles to New Uses BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Disposing of articles is sometimes a good way to make the most of them. Putting vhem to new uses is another. During the house-cleaning season it is well for the home maker to think of these ways. There alwi are articles that it is difficult to know just what to do with. They are not used. They are in good condition, or perhaps not too NAPKINS. good, but they are usable with little or no repairs. They don't duite fit in with present mteds. In the modern dwell- ings without attics it is hard to know just where to put them so that they will not occupy wanted space. And in apartments the problem is even worse. 1f sentiment attaches to the article, then some place will have to be found for it; but if not, it may be just the thing some one eise wants. You may Invoice of BY MISSIS PHYLLIS. O you really know what good things to eat your husband likes best? New things have come into vogue since you started cooking, new things are on the market, there are new ways of cooking. And that isn’t all. Some- times you have got so far away from those first nebulous days of married life that you really scarcely remember what your husband likes best. Per- haps there is a child or two or three— and you have been so busy cooking things that the youngster may eat that you have fed the father up on comn- starch pudding when he'd like to get | his teeth into an honest-to-goodness | apple ple. Now, there are several ways to find out just what pleases him most. Some day, at least two hours after a meal (no man wants to talk about future me‘hmwhen) hekh;:mju“m‘éo:i‘u";flji at present one), as! ank jus what sort of thing B likes best and doesn’t always get. One woman who asked her husband g:t this list: Raisin ple, hot ginger- , spice cake without icing, stewed tomatoes with okra, baked beans, sauer- kraut with wieners and dumplings. Another woman got & wider range of things and perhaps more exotic: Boiled fresh salmon, French fried onions, pineapple fritters, jelly tarts, caviar ! IENT FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Chilled Orange Juice. Whole-Wheat Cooked Cereal. Eggs and Bacon. st Coffee. LUNCHEON. Oyster_Patties Green Peas. Parker House Rolls. Peanut. Cookies. Tea DINNER. Consomme. Chicken Loaf, Mushroom Sauce. Cranberry Jelly. Stuffed Celery. Baked Stuffed Potatoes. Apple Dumplings, Lemon Sauce. Lettuce Hearts, Russian Dressing. Strawberry Shortcake. Coffee. PEANUT COOKIES. Cream two tables] fuls but- ter with ope cupful sugar, then add three peaten eggs, two table- spoonfuls milk, half tablespoon- full salt and ome pint finely chopped peanuts, and beat thor- oughly. Add enough sifted flour to make a soft dough, roll very thin, place a thin slice of citron in the center of each, sprinkle with granulated sugar, and bake in & moderate oven. DUMPLINGS. Mix half pint flour, half tea- spoonful baking powder and half teaspoonful salt. Rub in two tablespoonfuls of butter and one tabl ful lard, and moisten with one-quarter cupful cold water. Roll as for pastry, cut into five equal parts and roll one plece at a time until large enough to cover apple. Place a pare and cored apple in the center and ill the hole with sugar. Grate a little nutmeg over it. Draw the paste over the fruit, pressing the ther, and in be able to help some pet charity by sending it to a thrift shop or a salvage shop carried on for the benefit of such a charity. There are many of these that have sprung, up comparatively re- cently, ose who have unwanted things donate them instead of money. Persons who seek antiques patronize these shops, as frequently in the accu- mulation they find just what they are looking for. Persons of small means many times find in these shops just the needed articles and at sums within the range of their purses. The charity prospers by the sales, It is enabled to “carry on” better by getting the gift of your unused and unwanted articles. Another way to make the most of your unwanted things is to put them to new uses. Rugs can be made from rags. ‘Underwear can be made from silk frocks too worn to be used “as is.” I know of | one group of women who met once in ‘ two weeks and salvaged something each | time. One woman made an attractive luncheon set from an old linen frock that was good but out of style. A length was transformed into a refec- tory cloth and the smaller pieces into napkins and doiles. A mahogany cabinet for records was transformed into a magazine cabinet. in a home where many magazines were | taken. It could have served well as an adjunct to a linen closet, for the napery | would be easily accessible on the shelves | with dustproof doors. Salad. | Serving six. Six hard-cooked e two tablespoonfuls chopped pick three tablespoonfuls chopped celery, or tablespocnful chopped onfon, two table spoonfuls chopped pimento stuffed ol- ives, one-eighth teaspoonful salt, one- cighth teaspoonful paprika, one-half cupful salad dressing and six_pieces lettuce. Cut the eggs in halves length- | wise. ~Remove and mash the yolks. | Add’ the pickles, celery, onion, olives, salt, paprika and three tablespoonfuls of dressing. Roughly refill the cases. Chill. Arrange on the lettuce and top with the remaining dressing. Some one cast it aside. gs, Trim Ankles. My numerous letters from readers | who are worried because of bulky | ankles indicates that an article on that subject will be of interest. It is quite true that nothing detracts more from the beauty of the legs than awkward ankles, where large deposits of flesh have been allowed to accumulate. The excess fat not only makes the ankle beauty of the entire figure. Fortunately it is perfectly possible to remove this excess fat by faithful ex- ercise and daily massage ana kneading. But the exercise must be consistent and regular, and it is essential that | milady does not become discouraged, for while results are certain to come, | it sometimes takes two months befors there is any noticeable change. unattractive, but it detracts from the | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY SPRINGTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. At just this jocund time of year, some 12 years ago, I cut my botany class, as the boys and girls call it, and armed with my new and crackly manual (now & dog-eared ruin) I went out in the fields to meet a little botany first_hand, away from the smells of the laboratory and the left-over of the dissecting microscope. And one of the first flowers I met was the /grape- hyacinth, Muscari racemosum, 1t took me an hour of painstaking work to track down this really very simple little flower to its neat compart- ment, boxed-in by Latin, but my joy was great when at last I had arrived there, and no mistake about it. The description in the book of clus- ters of small jug-shaped blue-purple blossoms with & heavy odor was unmis- takable. But why did those dis- tinguished g:ntlemen, the editors, call { it musk-scented? Years later, in a | book written by a woman, I saw the | odor of the grape-hyacinth described as “like the smell of & baby's mouth.” |Only a woman, I own, would make this comparison, and since becoming a parent I grant that it is brilliant. { The little grape-hyacinth is abun- dant now northwest of Washington, and though it is not an American native, it is none the less lovable for that. It has, in the phrase of the botany books, “escaped from old gardens,” and I am very glad it ran away for & Gypsy's lfe, For it is not often grown in | gardens of today, and, though we have much finer gardens ihan our grandmothers knew in their child- hood — the blossoms bigger and brighter and more prolific—we prob- ably get no more joy out of thcm than did ladies in crinolines and gentlemen with ruffied sleeves out of their prim flower beds, where, with squill and hyacinth and asphodel and star-of- B:thiehem, the little grape-hyacinth Tew. 5 The flora of the District boasts also one other species of grape-hyacinth, but it has been found only on Plum- mer's Island in the Potomac, which is, I am glad to relate, the private prop- erty and wild-life sanctuary of a group of Washington naturalists, who keep careful guard over their acre of delight. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. this first with right foot and then with left. Fourth, place & brick or large book on the floor. Stand with balls of feet on brick or book, letting heels hang over. Lower heels to floor, exhaling. Rise on toes. Repeat 10 to 15 times at first, increasing the number when mus- cles become accustomed to the exercise. The following exercises are very ef- | fective toward building the shapely, trim ankle which does so much toward | making the entire figure attractive. Pirst, stand on tiptoes and stretch | upward until every muscle in foot and ’nnkla responds. Continue this exer- | ~.=tO8%% DT 2O% 0 SHETC cise while counting up to 100. Every| yn addition to these exercises, do day, both night and morning, practice | gance steps around the room, keeping walking around the room on the tipS on tiptoes while doing them. If one of your toes as long as you can bal-|jhas music for these they are far less Rotate the toe in circles ance. Then sit down and give the leg a vigorous shaking from the knee. Second, stand erect, hands on hips, heels together. Rise on toes, inhaling slowly. Bend knees, sinking thus to & half-squatting position and exhaling Slowly straighten knees and legs, in- haling as you rise, until you are stand- ing on tiptoee. Hold position far 10 counts and then lower heels. Repeat 20_times. ‘Third, sit erect on chair, knees crossed, and extend one foot, toe point- ed. Describe a circle with the toe thus bringing all foot muscles into play. Do Pet Dishes sandwiches and fruit salad with cheese | blscuits and without mayonnaise. Another man asked that no creamed vegetables be brought to him, while an- other asked for mashed potatoes with more butter and richer milk whipped into them. (There’s many a good cook who falls short in making fluffy mashed potatoes—potatoes that must be beaten with a wire whip or & fork to make them right and with a goodly lump of butter and hot milk.) | that a certain man would like every | Winter meal to begin with soup and every Summer one with fresh fruit. Another man admitted that desserts | didn’t interest him—he was fond of meat and vegetables and preferred to [fill up on them, but dessert when it was already prepared. Another husband said that he want- ed dessert.or a sweet of some kind even | 1f 1t was ho more than a dish of raisins | was simply unfinished if there wasn't dessert, You would be surprised if you knew | that a great many women simply don't | know what their husbands like best— | especially if the husbands happen to be patient or reluctant to find fault There is is at a restaurant with you for dinner. 1l we have a recipe of some | man’s favorite fritter, pie or cake? | Pineapple fritters may be served hot sprinkled with powdered sugar as des- sqft or Lot, unsugared, as a meat ac- | companiment. They require one and | one-fourth cupstul fiour, two teaspoons- | ful baking powder, one-fourth tea- 1 spoonful salt one beaten egg and two- thirds cupful milk. Sift dry ingredients together. Add milk and beaten egg. Beat till smooth. Drain the liquid from canncd pineapple slices and dip |into the fritter batter. Fry in deep fat until a golden brown, drain on brown paper and serve very hot. They may be kept hot for a while by put- ting them in a covered dish and set. ting in the oven. You will find that they look rather like doughnuts and so are a delightful surprise served with |1amb or beef. Because it is so helpful in keeping babies and children healthy and | happy, every mother should learn all about Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. This harmless, almost tasteless preparation is most effective in re- lieving those symptoms of babies and children generally caused by souring food in the little digestive tract, such as sour belching, frequent vomiting, feverishness, colic. As a mild laxative, it acts gently, but certainly, to open the little Lowell in constipation, colds, children’s dis- | Another inquiry disclosed the fact | hated to refuse | or figs or dates, but to him the meal | another way to find out. | | Always notice what he orders when he | | tedious. ~ After the exercises massage | the ankle rather vigorously, lubricating | the massage with rubbing alcohol. | Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. The left-handed person is just ss adept, just as skillful in the use of his left hand as most of us are with our right hand. His “handicap” becomes such solely in the eyes of a society that is largely right handed and therefore, manufactures its eating utensils, its play apparatus, its tools for writing and cutting and working for right- handed people. If the child is really left handed, we should be broadminded enough to see that it is something he cannot help. His motor equipment is the opposite of the right-handed person, erefore, forcing him to use the right hand han- dicaps him as much az forcing the right-handed person to cc. i .j use the left hand. He can use his right hand, as we know, sut only with an effort. Each’motion must be thought about. Learning does not so readily become automatic A reader asks, “Is it due to training or to natural traits that a child is left | handed, and is it wise to try to correct this tendency?” ‘The position of the motor centers in the brain causes left handedness With | the right-handed child the centers are on the left side, and with the left- handed child they are on the fliht side, There would certainly be no left-hand- ed children or adults if training had anything to do with it, for the right- | handed parent just naturally offers things to the child’s right hand and corrects any early tendency to use the left hand. "Up to a certain sge all ba- bies are ambidextrous. They tend to use both hands, seeming equally happy with a toy in either hand. At & later age, however, the child develops right handedness. He changes the toy from the left to the right hand. Not 5o with the definitely left-handed child; no matter how often a toy is placed in his right hand, over to the left it goes. Because this is a natural trait, it is obviously an injustice to the child to compel his use of the right hand. What does it matter? One determined father wrote me of the long line of punish- ments re had bestowed upon his luck- less left-handed offspring, hoping, I suppose, that I would pat him on the back for his diligence and ingenuity. Instead, I thought him a petty tyrant, entirely lacking either good sense or judgment. Why shouldn't a child be allowed to use the left hand if that is the most convenient of the two? It is | Just our silly conventionality which in- | sists that every one must do exactly as every one else does, even to spooning up our food MOTHERS now learn value of MAGNESIA A teaspoonful of Phillips’ Milk of { Magnesia_does the work of hali a pint of lime water in neutralizing | cow’s milk for infant feeding, and | preventing hard curds. Its many | uses for mother and child are fully explained in the interesting book “Useful Information.” It will be sent you, FREE. Write The Phillips Co,, 170 Varick St., New York, N. Y. In buying, be sure to get only genuine Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. ‘Doctors have prescribed it for over 'MODES OF THE MOMENT PARIS &Uuflf ensenble of shell pink. georgette with tunie rock and. three-quarter cont bordered. insilier DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX DEAR DOROTHY DIX—AIl signs fall in dry weather and matrimony, and I just simply have to write and tell you that sometimes the marriages that seem scheduled to go on the rocks sail into a haven of bliss. Consider mine. I am a normal school graduate. My husband is so uneducated that he can scarce- ly write & letter that is readable. We married in our teens and were both as poor as Job's turkey. Our five children were born in the early years, and sick- ness and accident kept us just one jump behind the doctors’ bills. We have been through unemployment and lack of sufficient clothing and food. Today ‘we own our own home and are well off and happy and we feél that we are nearer to each other than we would be if we had not married when we did. Those years of struggle have welded the links of the bond between us. So my advice to any one wishing to get married is: Do it if you care enough, but make sure that you do. I AM HAPPY. Answer—This is a heartening letter in a time of matrimonial depression, but before any adolescent young couple takes this fortunate woman's advice I hope the pair will not only try to find out if they love enough, but if they are made of the stuff that can stand the trials and tribulat woman have been through. 3 o s v It takes grit to do that. It takes stamina to enable & boy and 1 to go through struggle and hard work and poverty and hunger 8o’ shaobieats | crying bables and to do without all the comforts and luxuries and ease of l?fg and still love on and think it all worth while just so they can be together. Most_youngsters are too soft for that, and when they find that means sacrifice and hard work and being tled down with childsen -nam:n':‘i:g; about bills, love flies out of the window and they turn on each other with flerce recriminations, each blaming the other for their plight. Also it is just sheer luck Wwhen a boy and girl develop along together and one doesn't outgrow the other, That is why T am opposed to early marriages and think that you chould wait to marry unkll they are grown up and able to provide Jor ?t‘-’:fik Sometimes the early marriage works out all right, but generally 1t ende i Army: R S DOROTHY DIX. D!l:&p;\gtss DIX—TI married & man who wouldn't work and whom I had to back to him and says if T will he on’t love him. 1Is it my duty to go? Answer—Certainly not. ‘The chances are he just wa ticket. ‘Tell him if he really wants you to come h.jck to,hnlm"wy o:u ';arwolrkn:;l‘; prove that he is a man and can ‘support you. Make yourself a prize for him to wotrkvlnr. If he will not work to get you, he will certainly not work after he has got you. S DOROTHY DIX. DEAR MISS DIX—I hn§ 8 boy friend who says that & man s a fool to marry until he is over 40. He says that a man has to give up so much when he marries and that & man is still young at 40, while & woman is old, and that the man has to sacrifice more than the woman does in order to have & family. What do you think? f F.H H Answer—Your boy friend’s Views are all wet. If & man wailts until he is 40 to marry, he has missed the best 10 years of his life, supposing, of course, that he marries happlly. He has missed young love and the companionship of a ;‘%T:x;otmcf:lep;e;a tv;ry jet;'| Tnd gg;‘um every forrow, and he has missed rs of youth in wi 2 man and womy - selves to each other until they literally become one. bl s By the time a man is 40 he has hardened into bachelorhood. his ways and he cannot change them. The bloom s rubbed off ruina:l:e’;ofll‘mn and he cannot love with the fervor of 30. And at 40 a man'schildren are apt turbs hi; d ments as e could if they had come to him when He s rengl0 thelr amuse- As for your friend's contention that & man at 40 is ‘Woma! I know that is a common illusion among men, but if youyslllrl. m‘n:ound I'l‘l\g:ldll your acquaintances you will perceive that most wives at middle age are just as young and attractive looking as their husbands are. The old theory that women age more quickly than men is being discounted in these days when men live un- ;g‘rl ";:ch a strain in business and when women make a cult of preserving their It is ridiculous to assert that the man makes a woman in rearing a family. Who goes down into y death to bring children into the world? Who p\l:‘}‘;xv:rzgyp‘:lngguflmn'm‘g :;Inuhu over the bables day in and day out, night in and night out? Who washes em and sews for them and feeds them? Every mother is 10 times as much of DO Y D] greater sacrifice than the & mother as a father is of a father, ROTH' (Copyright. 1931) o NEWAWNING STYLES WORTHY OF YOUR HOME A new style note has arrived in awnings. Recent improvements in manufacturing methods have made this year's awnings different from any that you have ever seen— distin- guished, modern and colorful. Words cannot adequately deseribe the charm of these new awning creations. Neither can black and white pictures, so Washington’s most progressive awning house, the Capital Awning Company has had prepared a colorful book showing new styles and values in_Capi Vi Before selecting new awnings you should see this book. Write or‘phzne for your copy today, Mail the Coupen e o e e g i | Capital Awning C 11563 North Capitol, © " | Washington, D. C.: Without obligation send me ) Illustrated Booklet, ) Samples. CAPITAL AWNING CO. WM. E. RUSSELL ( 1503 N. Cap. St., ( T got tired of doing that and divorced him. Now he wants me to | will get a job. I am sorry for him, but I WORRIED. H APRIL 15, 1931, LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Ma took me for & ride in the Spar- row this afternoon after skool, and all of a sudden there was a sispicious noise loun‘c‘l:nfi like one of the tires puncktur- elf. ing just what it was, and ma drove up to the cerb and stopped, saying, O deer I have no more ideer how to change a wheel than the man in the moon. 1 wouldent know how to start, and Im sure Id never finish. Well, according to the theoretical rules of the road, if a woman has a flat tire all she has to do is stand there and look in deep distress and some man will infallibly immeeditly change it for her, she sed. And she got out of the car and stood alongside of the flat tire poking one finger into it with a sad expression, and about 5 men wawked pass and looked at her as if they thawt it was a intristing site and kepp on going, and I sed, May- be you dontdook in distress enough, ma. I think II1 get the munkey rentch, ma sed. A woman holding a munkey rentch :dnmer a distressing thing to see, she And she reeched in the tool case and fot the munkey rentch and stood there ooking at it doubtfull, and some more men dident lwgosotn( pass, me saying, G wizz, ma, nobody’s stopping. Are you trying to tell me some news by any chance? ma sed. Meening she knew it herself, and she started to hit the outside of the wheel with the mun- key rentch to make sounds, and som man stopped and looked at her awhile, saying, Having trubble, madam? Well a little, I bleeve, ma sed. T seem to have a decidedly flat tire and I feer that changing a wheel is not quite one of my accomplishments, she sed, and the man sed, I see, well there's a garage about 2 blocks ferther up the street. And he kepp on going as if he had did all the duty he was going to do. Being a short man with a long mus- tash and I ran to the garage and the man came and changed the wheel and ma payed him for it. & Proving theres always & way to get something done even if its not the most popular way. Hash Cakes. ‘Two cupfuls chopped cooked meat one cupful mashed potatoes; two hhu‘: spoonfuls chopped green peppers, two tablespoonfuls chopped onions, one- fourth teaspoonful salt, one-fourth tea- spoonful paprika, one egg or two yolks, four tablespoonfuls flour and four ta- blespoonfuls fat. Mix the meat, pota- toes, seasonings and egg. Shape into six cakes and sprinkle with the flour. Heat fat in frying pan, add and brown the cakes. Any left-over gravy can be heated and poured over the cakes after they have been placed o) serving platter. 5 By " WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. ITCERTAINLY ¥/ Ges Yoo AN Appsnve“:nzrrm WING FROM oppos| Q‘?’owu & e ouT HERE ‘When we drove out to Karl Heurich's place, the Willows, on Wisconsin ave. nue extended, and enjoyed the eve- | ning: Sanitary EN you're choosing sanitary protection is no time to take chances. This matter is too definitely related to your health. Don’t gamble with question- able substitutes to save a few ex- tra pennies—substitutes of whose makers you know nothing. Kotex provides an assurance of ufetx that simpl! can’t be mea- sured in terms of money. The choice of hospitals Kotex is scientifically made, of Cellucotton (not cotton) absor- bent wadding in sursoundings of North 2958 Name ...ovuvarsooncancsesseoncen Address ....ovrciieciniissnnnens 1 bospital-like cleanliness. Human bands do not touch Kotex in the entire ess of manufacture. Koatex B immaculate, pure. More FEATURES. By the Associated Press. IN©_sppointment made recently by mnl’rflnl'dmlt Hcoverl huhmet z'{:m’ ral approval 'rhaj an that of Willlam 5. Castibs Ir. as D dereecretary of For many per- sons thought that “Bill"—as he i known in Washing- ton—was slated for this at the be- ginning of the Hoover administra- tion. It turned out, however, that the late Joseph P. Cotton was given the job, and Castle continued as sistant Secretary of State. So when the President an- Willam R. Castle. nounced his ap- intment, there was general rejoic- ;‘—-peelnlly at the State Department. 'w men in Washington officialdom enjoy the widespread popularity and esteem that Castle does. He works quietly, steadily and ear- nestly. The to his office is seldom = Often those having business at State Department wholly without | Castle’s jurisdiction stop in his office | and talk it over with him. He keeps two folders on the top of his broad desk. One is marked “rou- | tine.” The other is labeled “not rou tine” It apparently is the only sys- | tem he employs in the discharge of his_official duties. | His recreation is confined almost en- | tirely to swimming. He endeavors to | take & plunge in the pool at the Rac- | quet Club on Sixteenth street, next door | to the abandoned Russian embassy, once a day in both Winter and Sum- mer. He is also fond of walking. He and Mrs. Castle move in a select social group in the Capital. In the days before Herbert Hoover became President, the Hoovers, the Reeds (Sen- ator and Mrs. David Reed of Pennsyl- vania) and the Castles comprised one of the outstanding neighborhood groups in Washington. ‘The three families had homes near Northwest . Washington. - This "negh: n. neigh- borly spirit has grown - | e U 6 " »'v'fii‘&, given with geiuine see that your hairdresse Paris « Loadon « Beslin protection definitely affects health—don’t risk care- less methods of manufacture for Kotex N than 10 million pads were used by hospitals last year. ‘When you are tempted to ac- t a substitute, ask yourself: ow is it made? Where? By whom? How do I know it is fic. for this intimate purpose?” No sanitary protection that can- not answer these questions fear- lessly and honestly, should be considered. You dare not trust appearance alone. Demand the wvery highest standard of hygiene —the standard set by Kotex— possible It is soft, and sidygsoft; to fit; amazin, - A WASLINGTON BY HERBERT PLUMMER. DAYBOOK that Reed and Castle have built homes recently near each other on beautiful Kalorama Hill, just a few doors above the Hoover home, where the President lived when he was Secretary of merce. A Nearing 53 years of age, Castle was an instructor and assistant dean of the college at Harvard before he came to Washington. For two years in the Capital he directed the Bureau of Com- munications for the American Red Cross. In 1919 he went to the Depart- ment of State, where he was acting and later chief of the Division of Western European Affairs. In 1927 he was made Assistant Secretary of State. He was born in Honolulu in 1878, his father having been the last Minister of 'élzsml?epubllc of Hawaii to the United ates. “My diamond ring to his wife if my husband shall marry after my death, as I hope he Will.” read part of the will of the wife of Rev. Francis J. Lys of Oxford, England, filed recently follow- ing her death. Burning Stomach Pain Almost Killed Her. All Gone Now! “I was in a terrible state with “acld indigestion.” w Nellie Crouse of “After eating for vears, te ansas Citv, Mo. I had such terrible paing In my stomach. I thought Id die. I would get nervous and numb and my heart’ would nearly stop beating ing helped until 1 tried ACIDINE. I can eat, sleep, and enjoy life again Just another of thousands who astonished at the tion ACIDIN] . The reason otfier ‘medicines. | flerent from tal s dif IDINE contal ze: urning acl oothes irritated stomach and intesti) inings, heips end acidosts: oo drink all you want. ch, gas, Dain, heartburn, bsd | v feeling, short breath, dizsi- it vousness, colds. gt eeplessness troul esults gusran- When sout ul If ot delighited, maker ref rom your drug Advertisement. | teey moni | toda: e N e MM/M Weav-exs R the protection of your hair in permanent waving, for correct style, and for lasting beauty, upon the gemuine Eugene Permanent Eugene SteamSachétd. ? 5 % Write for a demonstration Eugene Sachet—study it—note the Eugene trade-mark on it—and then r uses 2 to 3 dozen of these genuine Eugene Sachets for your wave. Eugens, Ind, 521 Fifth Avenue, New York City < Sydaey « Barcelona Avoid Substitutes —they may endanger health o 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 soft- ness, that soon packs into chafing hardness. But s delicate, lasting softness. 3 Can be worn on elther side with equal comfore, No embarrassment. 4 Disposable, instantly, completely. Regular Kotex—45c for 12 Kotex Super-Size—65¢ for 12 CThke new Kotex Bell; 508 Brings mew ideals of sanitary come fort! Woven to fit by an entirely new patented process. Firm yot light; will wot curl; perfect-fitting. TE itary Napkise -

Other pages from this issue: