Evening Star Newspaper, July 23, 1931, Page 36

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WOMAN'’S PAGE. Aprons for Home Laundressgs BY MARY MARSHALL. The great French dressmakers do not, of course, spend their inventive genius devising smart fashions for home laun- dresses. What the ambitious young housewife wears when she hangs out the clothes on Monday morning does not so much concern the fashion re- porter as what the same young woman ‘wears at the country club dance on Saturday night. And yet a very defl- nite satisfaction is to be gained from looking smart and appropriately clad when you do the housewifely tasks. Any simple short sleeved or sleeveless one-plece wash dress is suitable for Bummer housework and those designed for tennis and other Summer sports are really as appropriate as those specially designed for work. ‘Today's sketch shows a little apron with pockets for clothespins that you may make from pleces of firm cotton material left from your Summer sew- ing, or from short remnants of material that may be bought at this time of the year for a trifiing price. The apron itself is made from one sort of material and the pocket plece from material of contrasting cojr. The apron is not more than 17 inches deep nor more than 18 inches wide so that you might easily make two aprons from a half yerd of material, with another half yard for the pocket sections and belt. Sometimes these aprons are made from waterproof chintz or from ofl- cloth bound with cotton seam binding. If you have leisure hours now, why not make a number of them for useful Christmas presents or for your contribu- tion to the charity bazar next Autumn. (Copyright, 1931.) o Roast Chicken. Dress, clean, stuff and truss = chicken. Place on its back on a rack in a roasting pan, rub the entire sur- face with salt and pepper and spread breast and legs with butter.. Place in a hot oven, and when it is a light brown reduce the heat and baste. Con- tinue to baste every 10 minutes until the chicken is cooked. For basting, use a quarter of a cupful of butter melted in two-thirds cupful of boiling water, end after that is gone use the fat in the bottom of the pan. Turn the chicken frequently during ccok- ing, so that it may brown evenly. If a cover is put on the roaster after the ‘hicken is brown it will not need fre- uent basting. A four-pound chicken will require about three hours to roast. Make a gravy by adding enough water to the liquid in the pan, and thicken with a little flour mixed with enough cold water to make a thin batter. giblets are desired in the gravy, them in enough water to cover and a little salt to season. Chop the giblets fine and add to the gravy. Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN, Should Rich Widow Marry? Recently we read scmewhere that a rich widow could “have lots of fun with her money,” if she did not remarry. | We have cbserved several rich widows with ample means who did not seem to have “lots of fun” and we wonder how many of them do enjoy their wealth. One simple way to come to a con- clusion is to list all of the things money will buy, and all of the things money will not buy, and then see which list includes the more significant items. Rich widows are hesitant about r marrying for fear they are being “mar- ried for their money.” Like many other bug-a-boos this one can be easily dispelled or verified. When considering a proposal, it is perfectly sensible to ask a man what difference one’s money will make, and what demands if any will be made on one’s purse. Any woman who marries a man much under her in years is, of course, THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Today's darling little dress is fash- foned of yellow and white dimity print. Plain yeliow dimity gives prominence to the cunning yoke that terminates in flared sleeves. Very effective trim is soft cocoa shade bias organdie binding that finishes the neck and edges of the sleeves. And it is such an easy affair to fash- fon! And so individual—cool—practical, Style No. 3186 is designed for girls 8188 of 8 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 8 re- quires 17, yards of 35-inch material with 1 yard of 35-inch contrasting. Pa’e blu» linen with whi polka-dots is v art used for the entire dresc n white bindj < d 11 fn yacht blue vele with plala tizte, printed lawn, cr e de cnd organdic make up & .c- 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 29th street, New York. Our Large Summer Fashion Book of- fers a wide choice for your Summer ‘wardrobe in darling styles for the chil- dren as well as the adults. Price of book, 10 cents. DAILY DIET RECIPE TOMATOES STUFFED WITH SPINACH. ‘Tematoes, four, medium; salt, one-quarter teaspoonful; cooked spinach, three-quarters cupful; whols-wheat breedcrumbs, two tablespoonfuls; butter, two table- spoontuls. SERVES 4 PORTIONS. Wash tomatoes and cut off stem end without peeling. Re- move pulp from centers and chop coarsely. Mix this with the cooked and seasoned spinach. Sprinkle tomato shells with salt and fill them with the chopped tomato centers and spinach. Cover with breadcrumbs, dot with butter and bake in moderate oven 20 minutes. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes fiber, a little rroteln. starch and fat. Rich in ime, iron, vitamins A, B and C. Can be eaten by children 6 years and over and by normal adults of rage, over or under weight. courting trouble, whether she has money or not. A woman of means who marries a man of shiftless indigent habits should know what to expect, too. A widow who cherishes her mon:zy | over much soon becomes a slave to it, and she serves it rather than the con- trary. . Some rich widows can enjoy a single life, it is true, but they are usually women who have businesses, profes- slons, or trades to occupy their mind and time. Even they, however, miss the companionship and affection of the connubial state. One cynical woman has said that a rich widow need not marry, that she can “buy” campanionship. True she can, but it is of a kind few would care to have. We enjoy our bounty most when we share it with loved ones. The widow is no exception to this rule Her means are only of use to her if living conditions are happy and make for contentment. When considering matrimony for the seccnd time, a widow should consider things other than her money. These things are chiefly the character of the | man, their true feelings for one an- |other, and whether they are wcll | mated. | Too many folk, men as well as wom- en, go through life unhappily or empti- 1y because they have set their money up as a barrier. When one can have love or affection and money, she need's only health to haye the trinity of life’s essentials. OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRI. Vacation Lessons. “Willle is backward in' history and grammar. His teacher thinks h> ought to study during vacation. He doesn't | want to. Whaat shall wa co ebout it?” | That depends uzon what Willie is | doing this vacation. All educaticn does | not com= cut of books. A vest field lies beyond the school house door. I am not so sure that a cultivation of a part of this field might not bring results good enough to lay beside a passing mark in history or grammar. Usually when we search for the rea- son of a child’s failure we find a lack does not _care about history or grammar and 80 he fails. Then we ask, Why doesn't he like them? Maybe it is be- cause he is not ready for those sub- jects yet. Children never make an even growth advancing all along the s&id front of knowleage. Growta is ragged. One subject is high, another madium, another low, another gone for the term. Wh,? It would hiztory was as intercsting as 2t a child will do well in ¢ ozraj nd fail in histery. For scm: other he is not rzady to open to history. H»>w can we hej open his ming? By nz him out i> gather fresh experien in the hopz that they will open the way to new in- terests. You cannot be interested in things you know nothing about. ‘This_boy, Willie, is backward in his- tory. Instead of making him sit down each day with the same old text book, ” we might by taking him on a tour of the city, pointing out historical Pplaces, es, tablets, and the like. ‘Take him on a trip and trace the foot- steps of a group of famous people, pil- grims, pioneers, explorers, warriors, who have left their marks on our history. | Do the museums thoroughly. Say never | a word about the history. Collect maps and picture cards and books. Find a | simple casy book that will make some | topic interesting—Tonty of the Iron d has interested many a bav in the | ealy history of our country, Build | ~ckorour’ and stimulat> n the child will | better grac~. Grammar 3 ceme, en intelleciual pastime. Urtil the child has a good background of language experiences he will not get far with grammar. Enrich the back: ground and the overflow can be used in learning the game of grammar. Shall a backward child study in va- cation time? It depends. If-it means that he sit in the house for an hour holding his old texts and and mumbling over them, “No.” means that somebody is to take the trouble to help the d gather experiences that will enrich his - ground and so stimulate his interest in the formal work for the next term in school, “Yes.” Education is not clesed with the cov- ers of the books. A lot of it is on the strest, in people’s heads, in' their ac- ticns, in work and in play. When a chi'd has failed to get a nassing mark in the classroom try another environ- | ment for a time and se2 what happens. . Summer Soup. Add eight asparagus tips, one cupful of green peas and one-rourth cupful of string beans to five cupfuls of white stock and cook until the vegetables are tender. Season with salt and pepper and serve. Gernish by sprinkling the surface of the soup with chopped water- cress or parsley. Paprika Wafers. (zr“u’:n“t.he da::ed ;maunt '21 butter unt smooth and easy read, then add enough paprika to eol?r the e, et =, (5 sprinkle A L3 oven until a nhrin brown, 1 of interest in the subject. The child by THE ————— BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. S. Patent Office. camp meetings attracted ians to Wilson Park, in Congress Helghts, every Summer? NANCY PAGE Lois is Careful of Ann's Milk in Hot Weather BY FLORENCE LA GANKE, Baby Ann was getting along nicely. even though the days were hot and sticky. Lois was particularly careful of her milk. She purchase® a certified quality but she knew that she had to give it care at home if it were going to be worth the money it cost. She never allowed it to stand around In the sun or the delivery box for more than five minutes after it was delivered. The bottle was washed off and was put right into the refrigerator. She used her iceless reffigerator but her nelghbor had the ice box of the more usual variety. She had learned to keep her box well filled with ice. A large service glven two or three times a week is much better, and she knew it, than & small service each day. She never allowed the door to stand open and she never wrapped the ice in paper cr eny patent ice blanket to savi Cold temperzt ice melts. If it is ing the temperature inside the box is going to be high. Foods k*pt in such a teraperature will mold and sour in no time. Another thing which Lois found helped her baby was the giving of fre- day. Baby Andy's clothes were of the fewest so that she could kick out alone without too much chafing clothes. All in all she seemed to be thriving on the hot weather. And then, too, Lois re- membered to give her frequent drinks of cool, boiled water. “Nancy has a leaflet on "Child Care.” wri care of this b for her leaflet, (Copyright, 1931.) LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Cararies. = Most canaries ere yellow And most cf them ar> called Peet, ! And all they haff to do is just look dum | And some lady will say “Ilow swest!” 2 . They each have a thing full of water To occasionally take a drink of, O other berds may lay lots of eggs, But, th:‘ts one thing canaries dont think 3 A canary is the most intristing ‘When he brakes his silents to sing, But nobody thinks he’s wonderful ‘When they find berdm‘ d on everything. ‘To look at a canary Sitting there looking so neet, You would never think his ambision ‘Was to have a nwswerm to eat. | Their actions may be diffro nt, . But their expressions a:2 all th2 sams, So tryirg to goss what theyre thinking of | 1 acver b2 a popular geme, Grecn Aorle Pie. fresh green apples. Cut into { small pleces and cook in a double boiler until soft and well mashed. Used no water. When soft, add sugar to season. and chill again. spread with CHOICEST ORAHGE EEKOE & PEKOE l EVENING STAR, quent baths or spongings during the' 7, inclostny ‘it adaresseq “enveloe. With WASHINGTO MiSS DIX—Why are baby recently recelved a every one who comes it was a girl?” Why Answer—TI think most mothers out of sheer sympathy and because on women than it is on men. bables and why evurybod{l secretly commiserates wit times when brute the sons that the parents looked for ‘was the sons who a family. We still have that feel bables to girl bables holds water in make as much money as he ‘work it is W] brother t is daughters that than are supporting their own. than boys do, they at least show it women, no daughter all of her life.” oftener than a boy the reflected glory of a son-in-law. A queer thing blood, when it comes to 5 ting BACK in 1919 Herbert Hoover, whose fame at that time was that he had saved millions from starving, set out on a rellef expedition into Russia. He needed a man who had knowledge of the Russian language. A call for volunteers brought to him a tall, black-headed, sol- dierly person named Kosta Borls. Hoover was im- pressed with him from the start and included him in his party as his per- sonal servant. Boris accompanied Hoo- ver into Russial | and, when the mis- sion had been con- cluded, returned with him to the United States. He remained in Hoo- ver's employ as his | valet. | Years passed and Herbert Hoover be- | came President of the United States. With him to the White House went Boris to serve in the Executive Man- sion as valet to the President. Boris, still soldierly in appearance (he served in the World War), his coal- black hair graying a bit about the temples, his clothing immaculate and in perfect taste, looks little like the conventional valet. He accompanies the President on trips out of Washington, and a place usually | is found for him in the party. He rides ‘MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Bananac Hominy With Cream. Omelet, Oatmeal Muffins. Ccffee. LUNCHEON. Creamed Crabmeat. ‘Toasted Crackers. Pineapple and Cheese Salad. Ginger Wafers, Iced Tea. DINNER. Tomato Soup, Fried Haddock. Potatoes. Summer Squash, m'mu. French Dressing. Blueberry Pudding. Coffee. OATMEAL MUFFINS. Pour one cup scalding milk over two-thirds cup raw rolled oats, let stand five minutes, add §°it, two tablespoons sugar, one T too-thirds cups flour, two teaspocns baking powder, one tablespzon mcltd shortening (butter or lard) and one table- spoon milk. Makes 12 rauffins, Bak: from 12 to 15 minutes. SALAD. One cup crushed pineapple, juice of one-half lemon, one tablespoon gelatin, one-quarter minutes. Soak gela- #in in cold water and dissolve in the hot mixture. When this begins to set, add cheese and fold in cream. Put into wet in- dividual molds. Serve with may- onnaise, which has in it chop- ped celery, pimento and crushed pineapple, thinned, if necessary, with pinezpple julce. BERRY PUDDING. One-third cup butter, one-helf P one-Lalf cup vater, whites of two eges cnd one cup of beries. Cream, butter and sugar, then beat yolks of eggs, water and flour sifted with baking powder and salt. Then stir in one cuj berries, which have been floured. Beat well and fold in ‘whites and pour in buttered cans or molds and steam one and one- half hours. (Copyrisht, 1931.) The incomparable warm weather refreshment — Lipton’s Tea, iced—in- vigorating, cooling, deli- cious—is the summer beverage of millions. less daughters who could not even support carried on the name and as good men as their brdthers, and sometimes better. goes to work now at the same age that Rmnu depend uj in their 3 always to one of the daughters that Iatherm mother x‘:)mto-l'ls/e ‘Wwhen their home is broken up. More men are supporting their wives' BY HERBERT PLU! ,' D, €. THURSDAY, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX girls at & discount? Why is the girl baby always received in & family with more or less regret? - We have dear, sweet little baby girl and we are not sorry, yet to see us exclaims: should we be? t‘:y real the they have just been !hmh'l:p:h“ d e agony ey \ve n rogh, iey could weep over the 1 knowing that they, too, will have (t,‘.“o thre g But, of course, the real reason whypboy bables sre preferred to girl congratulates the proud parents of a son and them on the birth of a girl goes back to the strength was the most desirable quality a human bein, could have. Then a boy who could hunt and bring in food or who comfi fight and defend the flocks and herds was an asset to a family, while a girl was only another mouth to feed. Kieren't you dissppotnted ‘that MRS. R. E. D. ‘when their bables are girls how much harder life is moment, remembering ough the same suffering, Later on sons were desired because they were the ones_who b fame and fortune to a family and gave it a place in the suli. < It was to support in their old age, not to help- themselves. And, of course, it J‘A‘" a sort of immortality to , and that is why boy babies get a more cordial welcome than girl bables do. But, as a matter of fact, none of these reasons for preferring boy these days when most girls are just ‘The average girl a boy does, and if she does not does she takes far more of it home and is a greater help to her parents. In the average family where all the children e girls who fix up the house and buy new furniture and dress up mother ang father, and spend their earnings for spending his on having a good time. the common good, It is parents Furthermore, if girls do not have more affection for their parents more. There are thousands of busy business men who never write home to their father and mother, or go to see them, or send them any little remembrance, but there are mighty few matter how busy and hard worked they are, who do not find time tp write home every week, and who do not continually give their parents some evidence of their affection. There is no truer saying than that “my son is my son until he gets him a wife, but my daughter is my As for bringing distinction on a family a daughter does it, perhaps, because she not only has a chance at achleving fame and fortune herself, but of marrying some rich or famous man. family lives in luxury because Mary married a millionaire, or basks in Many a about this matter is that while probably most parents, if given a cholce, would ask for a boy if he was their yow'n m‘:. and adopt a child the great majority of foster ick out girl babies. All orphan asylums find that there is a greater demand for girl babies than they can supply, while boy bables are & drug on the market, 5o to speak. Funny, isn't it? Copyright, 1931, A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK DOROTHY DIX. IMER. |either in the cars containing secret | service men or newspaper men, among | whom he is a genera] favorite. | Boris misses nothing. A great base ball fan. Jf Hoover attends a game in the Capital he somehow manages to be included in the party. If a state func- tion 1s in progress at the White House, Boris may be observed standing a column discreetly watching what is taking place. He lives at the White House in a room on the top floor. He drives his own smell car to one of the Washing- :xl.f parks frequently for a round of | golf. ‘When the President’s grandchildren— Peggy Ann and Herbert, 3d—were stay- ing at the Executive Mansion, Boris acted as their guardian. With the two children he was a great favorite. It was a familiar sight to see | them in his care eround the White | House and to hear them address Boris | as “Uncle Charle.” | Modest, at all times discreet, no word | can be drawn from him about his dutles | as valet to the President. To Boris those are things not to be discussed. To the incessant kidding to which he is subjected by newspaper men who cover the White House and accompany the President everywhere, Boris pays lil;‘le M;’x'z ,som‘etimes he gets a bit serious, s quick to sense whe: | 1s being joked. e | Everyday Psychology . BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Unsated Wishes. The individual who i5 constitutionally lazy stends & chenze of lving longer | than the one who is teeming with am- bition. Every ambition implies a wish, Every wish implies a possible and usually an actual conflict. Many wishes meet the fate of being transformed into disap- pointments. That's what Shakespeare meant when he discoursed on “vault- ing ambition, which o'erleaps itself, and falls on t'other.” Unsatisfied wishes are treacherous things. Pushed aside, they seem to bear a grudge. They accumulate more energy and set the stage for a battle of supremacy. There is one way to win the battle of unsatisfied wishes. Wear them down by working hard to realize a substitute ambition. This method is known by the name cf sublim:tion. | It has been said that the game of golf is a good way to get rid cf un- | fied wishes. Any deyotee of tha will tell you th~t golf s so: betier than mere physical e: cise. Perhaps you have wondered why some people will play harder at golf than they will at their business. The secret is psychological. In golf they find an outlet for the hidden energies of unsatisfied wishes. (Copyrigh DAIR'Y FOODS ' have so many | appetizing uses THINK, of the wide variety of tises'ta which milk, bute ter, eggs, and cheese can be‘ " put!gGood in ' themselves, they 7are lly ’ good ' in combinat with - other foods. And what cook could do without them? The more nutritious and delicious the dish, the more lilpy, fa fis recipe to call for one or more of the dairy produets —particularly eggs or milk. Tplophone Wess 0183 CHEvY CHASE _ DAIRY‘& A _DIVISION OF NATIONAL DAIRY - 1931) 99 20, JULY 1931, SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. s There’s baby, suckin’ her thumb an’ pullin’ her ear and sieepin’ peaceful; whtile me, I'se prayin’ fer rain! (Copyright, 1931), FOOD PROBLEMS BY SALLY MONROE. Summer Breakfasts. Thos who are away at beach or mountain resorts don't need to have their appetites tempted. Nature does that for them, But those who must stick to desks and kitchens in the hot cities often need some sort of pique to interest their appetites. At breakfast, to start the day, this can usually be done by means of fruit. A dish of frult that looks and tastes cool and fresh is about twice as ap- petizing as a dish of fruit that looks a little wilted. A }mu of ice in the cantaloupe half is often just the stimu- lus needed & jaded appetite. Beads of cold on the outside of the glass of orange juice help the appetite. A daintily set table, no matter how simple it may be, is another stimulus to breakfast appetites much needed in hot weather. The table may be with- out a cloth, and the napxins may be of paper, but still the set-up may be wmgtmg. A few fresh flowers help, too. The sense of smell oft:n influences the appetite. The smell of broiling bacon often makes us hurry down to breakfast. But the smell of burned bacon has the opposite effoct—espe- | clally when the weather is unccm- fortably warm. The smell of crisp, hot toast is as appealing as tne smell of bacon—and burned tcast is just as un- attractive as burned bacon. Oven toast is often a wise choice in hot weather. It may be served dry and buttered at table, or it may be buttered before it is browned—and then buttered again at the table. To make it dry, cut white bread in very thin slices and it in a just warm oven until it is golden yellow. To make it ihe other way, butter tne slices of thin white bread and brown them slowly and carefully in the oven. Both kinds must | be browned slowly, so that they will be browned evenly. Stuffed Onions. ‘ Mix thoroughly one cupful of ground | beef, half a teaspoonful of salt, a little | pepper, one a well beaten egg, and half | cupful ‘of bread crumbs. Stuff into the cavities made in large white onions | with a potato ball cutter. Place in a greased baking dish and bake in a hot oven until tender, the time of baking | depending upon the size of the onions‘ and the number that are packed inio the dish. Allow about 40 minutes. Place .nfl)me of stuffed olive on top of eachi| onion. FEATU BEDTIME STORIE Twins Learn Fast. yOu remember what you' Foll' i e Sy tolgh Sttt -Mrs. Fleetfoot. There is & world of truth in that saying of Mrs. Fleetfoot’s. The trouble with most of us is that we forget what we learn, and forgotten knowledge is of no use whatever. It is those who learn quickly and remember what they learn who most easily avoid trouble. No one knows this better than Mrs. Fleetfoot the Antelope, so she took great pains to teach the twins, Kid Antelope and his sister, the things that they should know, and she made them understand r' Now, baby Antelopes are not like lit- tle human babies, helpless for a long time. It is only for the first week or two that they spend most of the time securely hidden. By the time they are 3 weeks old they can follow Mother ing speed for such little people. Of course, they cannot run fast for long distances. That requires some strength. But by the time they can follow Mother they have learned well the lessons of instant ohedience and hiding by lying perfect still. So it isn’t necessary for them to run long distances to escape enemies. They just simply hide at Mother's signal. Mrs. Fleetfoot knew that with Speed foot the Coyote and Mrs. Speedfoot and | King Eagle and Mrs. Eagle knowing of those twins it wouldn't be safe to leave them long in any one place lest they be fcund by accident, so each morning before daylight she led them a short distance and then carefully hid them. All through tie day she fed and kept watch a short distance from them, go- ing to them only to feed them, and then when she was sure that no keen eyes were watching her. “My dears,” she would say, “always keep watch of the white patch around my tail. When you see that suddenly grow twice as big as it usually is, drop instantly where you are and lie per- fectly still. You will know that I have seen possible danger.” “Yes'm,” replied Kid Antelope very promptly. “Yes'm,” replied his twin sister. “And never forget it,” warned Mrs. Fleetfoot. replied the two, and they o never did. Many times a day Mother would sud- denly flash that signal, and down would drop the twins and never so much as lift a head until she called to them. Sometimes she would steal back to see how well they were obeying. Even then, 2lthough they knew she was there, they would not move until she told them to. RES. By Thornton W. Burgess. later as you grow older,” she told them. “Sometimes you will see white flashes 80 far away thll'rem cannot see the ones who make 'm, but you will know that they are made by other An- telopes who have discovered you and are you to join them. As you you will each have just such patch and will learn how to 3 hould be found after dark and have to run, you will be able to see my signal patch and follow me. At such a time you must never take “WE'LL REMEMBER TH. PROMISED KID ANTELOPE. your eyes from that white of you. Never forget that.’ “We won't” replied the twins to- | gether. And they never did. “Your eyes are most important, but your noses are even more so. tinued Mrs. Fleetfoot. “The flash of the |signal patch doesn't always mean dan- ger, but when with it there comes to your nose an odor of musk it does mean danger.” “We'll remember that, too,” promised Kid Antelope. So the twins, even though they were very young., began to learn the im- portant things of Antelope life and they learned fast. (Copyright, 1931). Pineapple Pie. Spread one cupful of whipped cream lightly in the bottom of & ed pastry shell and arrange on it eight slices of diced pineapple. Garnish with whipped cream. spot ahead Banana Whip. Beat one egg white until stiff, add | half a cupful of sugar gradually while | beating, then add half a cupful of “There are other signals made with |sifted ripe banana pulp and half a teae that white patch which you will learn | spoonful of lemon juice. Beat well. CAKE-ICING Make cake-i smooth, luscious cing with Franklin Confectioners Sugar, with- cut cooking. When you taste its cool creaminess you’ll make it no other way. ‘A Franklin Cane Sugar for every use” Franklin Sugar Refining Company The mayonnaise that you’ve known and liked as Gelfand, is now made by Kraft. Exquisite and delicate in flavor—because it’s kitchen-fresh! Kraft Mayonnaise is made of ‘the finest ingredients, carefully proportioned for piquancy. Thoroughly beaten, for velvety smoothness. Packed and delivered to gro- cers every few days, for freshness! At least once a week, your grocer receives new jars of this golden Kraft Mayonnaise:' If you've preferred to make your own mayonnaise in order to be sure of its freshe ness, try Kraft Mayonnaise. You'll find it as fresh as that mixed up in your own kitchen! It comes in convenient 3-ounce, half pint, pint and quart sizes, at your grocer’s. Mayonnaise former!y GELFAND + Distributed by the Carpel Corporation, 2155 Queens Chapel Road N.E. Phone Atlantic 0300

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