Evening Star Newspaper, August 10, 1931, Page 25

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Silhouettes on Parchment Shade BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. THREE DESIGNS FOR DECORATING LAMP SHADES$ AND SHIELDS. Decorations for lamp shades and | shields are easily made in silhouette by tracing the design onto parchment and inking or painting them directly onto the und. Or the motifs can be carefully cut out and themselves be pasted onto the background. It is wise | to color these motifs first, cut them out | afterward, and then paste them onto the background. Should the brush slip over the outline anywhere, this mistake ‘would not appear, as it would be clipped off when cutting out the motif. Greater care has to be exerted when painting directly on the article after the outline has been transferred to it by tracing. Every deviation from the precise out- line will show. However, all that is needed is » steady hand and the work ‘will be precise. Do not attempt to make the shades or shields. They can be bought, plain, at small cost, except when extra sizes are needed, and are ready to be decorated. It is a nice tldlk I:o x:-:emm shades l{ & person can do it. But the parchment d the frame will bring the cost up to | id probably above that of the ready- ' THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE | mended for an: made shade. So the labor is wasted Three patterns are offered tod Two, the hunter and hound, and the basket and butterfly come on one sheet. With these patterns directions come for making and using the motifs in several mediums and ways, and color schemes are suggested. The third pattern is of & catboat with the sail against the rising moon and the shadow of the eraft in rippling outline. The pattern.comes in three sizes on the one sheet, and with- out directions. To transfer a design to a flngh:hade X~ Position of parchment put the shade ture and turn on the light. the design over the shade, hl'lfl:utllr- bon paper between shade and gn. ‘Trace 'E outline. Remove the papers and the design will appear on the shade. The light is necessary to show the tern clearly for accurate tracing. For lamp shades in men’s and boys’ rooms the hunter and hound and the ship designs are just the thing. The latter is excellent for seaside cottages, and since there is now a pronounced vogue for ships the design is recom- y ToOmS. ‘The basket and butterfly design is well suited to use on shades for bou- nd other rooms W) 4. The design pie- Marie Antoinette nis for the hunter and basket and butterfiy. one sheet. Send 5 cents . A dime and a nickel sheets with all pat- ., Inclose pzlm mii and stam envelope directed to Lydia Le r, care of this paper. (Copyright. 1931 SUMMERTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. Simple, cool, one-) smart for It's ‘The 1 detighituny ly tots for real warm days. IL French, sleeves give the imj sion of capelet trimmed with gandy pleating that is around either side of the front the buck. again as smart hem. or- ly fin- # It also can be with straight ne. ‘This cute dress takes but 11; yards of 27-inch materia), with. 2% yards of ruffiing that may be bought :l;lhdtac@yltmhth“-w Style No. 3208 is designed for little | #irls of 2, 4 and 6 vears. It lends itself to any of the new cot- | tons or tub silks, as pique. shantung, linen, handkerchief lawn, printed mus- lin and gingham checks For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or eoin directly to The Washington Star's Kew York Fashion of account the very diffi- of ferns, like the club- iworts, and considering only that look like ferns, they are easiest and the smallest prov- plant kingdom for an T b i g0od showing for this climate , since ferns like it either very hot, and prefer limestone), that number ouly about 42 would 1 to the amateur. FPerns, indeed, ve suffered badly from amateurs, not 1 25g professionals alike have out of the Latin tics of fern study. wide of all these tec . of & Summer twi- in a glen near my fg a few l:nands of the cut, or hoping to add new v-u-tev.yi lt: Iy modest speaking wi id and vanish- tribe of fern. ferns are certainly on the de- | cline. They get rarer every million | years, and in the neighborhood of any city they get rarer, I suppose, with .~ They shrink at even the distant approach of civilization, having |mo tolerance for the deadly fumes of | coal smoke, while the laying of drains | rapidly dries the sofl wherever houses Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, New York Our large Summer fashion book offers a wide choice for your Summer ward- in darling styles for the ehildren, Il a5 the adults. Price of book, 10 FOOD PROBLEM BY SALLY MONROE. start to rise, so that these plants, for {the most part moidture-loving, are | among the first to suffer. Dr. Maxon, Washington fern special | 1st, told of the thrill he felt when a boy, | upon being shown, in its emerald set- | tng of deep cool woods in New York | State, the great. smooth leaves of the | hart's-tongue fern, one of the rarest | and most prized of American spectes. 1 felt something of the same emotions the first time I ever saw what is al- most our rarest District species, the climbing fern, which alone of native sorts has the vinelike habit, and is fur- ther peculiar for its strange four-lobed THE EVENING Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Sugar for Energy Value. There seems to be a prevalent idea | that sugar is put with a milk formula for babies chiefly because of its agree- able flavor. This accounts for the fre- quency with which a mother says, “and sugar to sweeten,” or “a tiny pinch of sugar,” when describing the formula she feeds her baby: This is an erroneous conception. Sugar is added to diluted milk formu- las because of its energy value, and because by so doing we make cow’s milk more nearly resemble mother's milk in its_essential elements s Sugar should appear in definite | quantities in the baby's diet, approxi- mately one ounce for every 10 pounds of baby's weight. It is inadvisable to offer more than one and one-half to iwo ounces of sugar per day in the formula, and some babies mayv need slightly less. Sugar in correct amounts 50 balances the milk formula that con- stipation is corrected. If too little sugar is used the gain may be inade- quate, and constipation is & very com- monplace result. Mrs. H. M's problem exemplifies this condition. Sne wij.es: “My 3';-month- old baby weighs 15 pounds. She is very constipated and has a movement only when I give her a physic. She used to take orange juice but now refuses it I give her milk of magnesia every day. “I feed her certified milk, four and one-half ounces at a feeding. with one- half ounce of water and a little bit of sugar. How old must she be before I start regular feeding. like cereal? When can she have whole milk and omi. sugar? I give her sugar in her drinking water, otherwise she refuses it. She cries badly at times. Do you think it is her constipation?” If her formula is correct for her age and weight, and has the proper pro- portion of sugar, then the constipation will take care of i'self. Giving laxa- tives, even mild ones, are certain to result in some intestinal cramps, which might cause crying, and inevitably re- sult in more persistent constipation You have to let nature do some of its own work if you expect it to function normally. I suggest that you boil all milk for baby in Summer. For the formula measure 24 ounces of boiled milk, add one and one-half ounces of sugar (corn sirup, cane sugar or maltose) and boiled water to make six 6-ounce feedings. Offer these at 6, 10, 2, 6 and 10 and 2 | at night. Incresse amount of milk to 30 ounces gradually. . Give orange juice daily. Baby won't object to it if the oranges are swee: and the juice is well diluted with boiled water. If she does, add one teaspoon | of juice to each of the six bottles. | Bweetened water is undesirable. Baby gets & lot of fluid by formula, and if she wants a drink to quench her thirst WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY, |DorothyDix AR-I you a smothering mother? Are you a woman who, as George Bernard Shaw says in one of his plays, is such a good mother that she is hardly human? Are you & mother who never thinks of her children as being anything but & rubber stamp of herself? STAR, Are you one of the women who boast that they are all mother and that they never have s thought or an interest except their children and that they have never been parted from their Mamies and Johnnies a single day ‘since they were born? Do you brag about being chums with your children and that you always go on hikes with them and play games with them and are their only companion? Do you account it unto your- self for righteousness that you never take your eyes off your children for a single minute and that you never send them off to achool or away to Summer camps? F YOU are, you are a smothering mother and in your love and over- care of your children you do them a far greater injury than ycu would by neglecting them, for you choke the very breath of life out of them. You kill their individuality and slay their initiative and make of them weaklings who cannot stand on their own fest because they have never been permitted to use them. ‘These smothering mothers try to force a perpetual babyhood upon their children. They would keep them infants in arms if they could, but in spite of their efforts the children will grow up and then one or the other of two things happens. "THE strong youngsters, fighting for breath and freedom and the right to live their own lives, break away from home and mother at the earliest possible moment and the children without much force or strength of char- acter just succumb and sink into being falures in life. It is appalling to think how many failures these smothering mothers make of their children because they never permit them to exercise such intelligence as God has given them, or to make the slightest decision of their own. I know one of these women who has a son past 30 years of | age who never lets him even answer a question, much less express an | opinion. i JHOW many drab, dumb girls there are who ate the victims of smother- | ing mothers who so eclipse their daughters that they virtually ex- tinguish them. It is always mother who rusties into any place of enter- | tainment with meek little Sally following in her wake. It is mother who monopolizes the conversation and mother who comes and sits in the parlor when Sally has s date and entertains him unill the youth gets up in | despair and leaves. | I have seen many a girl whom I thought a positive nonentity bloom | into sudden brilliance and animation when she got away from mother | and out on her own IT IS the smothering mothers who keep their children from marrying { if they can, because they can't bear to give them up, and who,, if their | children do marry, become mothers-in-law who break up homes. Por the | smothering mother thinks she hac a right to run her children's homes as well as her own and she generally runs them into the divorce court. ‘We hear a lot about the neglectful mother. but she isn't the curse upon her children that the smothering mother is DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1931.) OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL | tering few that are here now, but clouds | of them. When I tried to work in the | garden they rested on my arms like a gray cloud and I wiped them off my arms just as I might wipe away ecb- | I had to work. I had to go on, mosquitoes or no mosquitoes. Soon I Those Mosquitoes. “Goodness, Aunt Ellen, these things are awful. How do you stand them?” Aunt Ellen rocked placidly in her chair and replied as placidly, “I don't | Webs. she does not want sweet water. Offer cool water by spoon or cup in small amounts frequently this hot weather. ‘The leaflet on “Feeding from Two to Twelve Months" covers the whole sub- Ject thoroughly. Won't you send me a self-addressed, siamped envelope and let me send it to you? Whole milk is usually given to a child at 1 vear, or as soon as she weighs 20 pounds. ;mind them at all. They never bother me.” drive you crazy. slap, slap since I came out.” rocking, still placid. “Don’t they bite you, Aunt Ellen?" “Well, really, I can't say. Come to !think of it, they may now and then. I just don't mind them.” “Ouch. M-M-m-m. They do bite I'll be all over bites tomorrow. They make awful marks on me. Do they leave scars, Aunt Ellen?” “Leave scars? ing abcut? To hear you talk one would | think that you were being cut to pleces or something. A mosquito won't hurt you if you forget about it.” “I'd like to know how anvbody could forget about it with these things sing- ing In your ears and taking a bite out of you every few minutes. All I do is slap and scratch.” “And complain,” put in Aune Ellen, | as placid as ever. “You see, you keep your thought on the mosquito. Every time you hear one sing you rally to fight it. You are already bitten. You feel the bump and the burning and you are already scratching when the mosquito alights. I'm sitting on the same m:h but the mosquitoes are not_bothering me.” “There’s one now on fi:;‘r hm;;uu'rmm you got DAILY DIET RECIPE GRAPEFRUIT-CUCUMBER. Grapefruit juice, 1! cups. Grated cucumber, 34 cup. Gelatin, 1'; tablespoons. Cold water, 1, cup. Salt, I3 teaspoon. SERVES 6 OR 8 PORTIONS. Soak gelatin in cold water five minutes. Then dissolve by set- ting cup which contains the soaked gelatin in boiling water. Add dissolved gelatin to the combined fruit juice and finely shreddsd or grated cucumber Season with salt. Pour into a wet mold and set in icebox to harden. Serve on lettuce with French dressing. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes much lime, iron, vitamins A, B and C. Can be eaten by normal adults of average, over or under weight. | e —— Tongue in Rolls. Split some long rolls in halves. re- arm. He's helps a great deal. 1 imagine if there were a great many of them——" “Many. There’s a million or two.” ‘When I first lived here, my dear, d cooksd tongue | there were moequitoes. Not the scat- | s2asoned pickle and | ehopped Plece a sprig of pars- | {ley in each roll and carefully replace the tops. JOLLY POLLY - Tosons in/Mglich. BY JOSEPH J, FRISCH. THE FLAPPER 15 DISAPPEARING, ACCORODING TO A WRITER, *BU’ What are you talk- | I them if I see them or feel | Ome-fourth teaspoonful of sait. them in time. But I don't think about | one beaten egg. Stir in half a cupful them unless I have to, and I forget |of sweet milk gradually. Add one table- about them as soon as I can. That | s | slices, after being chilled decided that mosquitoes could not bite “I should think they )d about |/me. I told them so. I told myself so. You "Fve ;3.-.:"::1:1::: but | I kept telling myself that thase things | could not trouble me. And before I So 1 noticed,” sald Aunt Ellen, still | knew it they weren't bothering me at all. You can do that with almost any- thing that pesters you if you try. John drained the meadows and cut down | the weeds and the pests vanished. But I shut them out of my mind first | and you don't know how happy I am | that 1 did. I learned to close out & g00d many pestering things that way.” “How did you do it? Just by saying over and over ‘You can't bite me. You can’t bite me.’ " “Not_quite, but something like that. I meant they should nct bite me. I meant to shut troublesome petty things out of my life. Whenever they come 1 think of something pleasant, something I hope to do. That soon set- tles the pests. I will never get to be perfect at it, but I do manage to help | myself a good deal. They haven't | bothered you much these past few | minutes. have they? I thought not. | Just direct your attention somewhere | else and never scratch them.” (Copyright. 1931.) s Tomato Fritters. 8ift one cupful of flour with two | teaspoonfuls of baking powder, and | Add | nful of melted lard at last and beat | the mixture vigorously. Cut five me- dium sized tomatoes in rather thick Dip in the batter. Fry in deep fat hot enough to brown a bit of bread in 20 seconds. Her Fa | SHE USUALLY SHOWS UP ABOUT 5 A.M." SAID A MAN N OUR SUBURSB. G. M. M.—Avoid one or the other ‘About 5 am." c { about § am” st | him at 3 o'clock not “at about 3 o'clock Suburb is pronounced 500-burb. at about.” Use | We properly say | “At 5 am., not At She loved him and lost him— vet didn’t know why. Too late she learned summer heat had made her more guilty than ever of an unforgivable fault DuN'n‘, exquisite, fresh as a flower. So she seemed—a# firss! Then one stifling AUGUST 10, 1931. NANCY PAGE Such a Favorite as Peter Became! BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. ‘While Nancy and Lois were exclaim- commodious play | ing over the large and ven that cou'd be built into one’s own back yard they saw two other Summer | cont:aptions that looked so simple and consible they wondered why some one had not thought of them before. Lois sald she could remember the | time when, as a great treat, she was allowed to put on 2 bathing suit and run out under the spray from the garden nose. But since each child wanted to be under the spray and no one wanted to hold the hose the sport usually ended in a quarrel. No longer is that necessary, for this Summer it is possible to purchase a portable spray shower arrangement which is set up on the lawn or any- ! where out of doors. It is readW to be attached to a garden hose. The height of the spray part is adjustable. The base is firm and heavy. Nancy bought one at once. Eomething else which she purchased was a canvas wading pool. These pools ate collapsible. They have canvas sides bottom. The hose is brought to the pool and it is filled with water. The canvas holds the water. At the greatest der(h it can be anly one foot, s0 it Is safe. The pool is four feet square—a size which allows two children to get inside, to sail boats and to immerse their celluloid and rubber inflated toys. At the corne triangular seats of canvas which let the young matiners rest while they dabble their feet in the water, Peter adored this wading pool. Was he popular with his young friends? Indeed yes. Eggs in Nest. Beat the whites of five eggs stiff, with a pinch of salt. five molds or cups. Make a hollow in the middle of the egg white and drop in an unbroken egg yolk. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Spread the white back over the yolk and place the mold in a pan of boiling water and cover. Steam for 3 minutes, Remove from the mold and place & small plece of butter on top. SRR - Cottage Cheese Pie. Beat three eggs light, add three cup- fuls of cottage cheese, a pinch of salt and cinnamon, half a cupful of blanched chopped almonds, and one cupful of raisins. Make & rich pie dough and put this in a ple tin. Add the cheese mixture and sprinkle a little ecinnamon and pulverized sugar over ‘the top and bake in a moderate oven. e e Broiled Salmon. Marinate two pounds of fresh salmon steaks in two tablespoonfuls of salad oil, and sprinkle with one tablespoonful of lemon juice, and one teaspoonful of salt. Broil five inches from the flame for 15 minutes on each side. Blind to the fault that was driving him e tautly stretched | until Brown's Boy Goes Camping. With strength anew his being thrills Who looks to the etermal hilis. -——Old Mother Nature. Farmer Brown's Boy was where he kad long dreamed of being. but without hope that his dreams would ever come true—in an abandoned miner's cabin in the mountains of the Far West. At | the ranch where he had been staying | some one had suggested that he ought | to spend a few days where he could get | acquainted with some of the mountain folk; now here he was with an old | hunter and tor called Stumpy, who had offered to take him on a short trip. The cabin was at the head of a gulch | through which flowed & stream in | which Farmer Brown's Boy felt sure he | would find trout, and in this he was not disappointed. The cabin was much in need of repairs, but it afforded shelter and & place to sleep, which was all that needed. Al about them towered peaks of the Green Mountains, | and it was with a feeling of awe and at the same time with exaltation that he | gazed up at them. The horses were | picketed in a small meadow nearby and Stumpy was busy patching the roof in case of a heavy shower. | “No sense in getting wet when we don't have to. Goin' 40 be times when we can’t help ourselves, but I aim to at least sleep dry,” he drawled. ‘Rckon this is all new to you. Sort of a tender- foot, sin’t ye?” “Not sort of a one. but about as much of a one as I could be,” laughed Farmer Brown's Boy. | “Ain't afeared of varmits. be ye?"| asked Stumpy with a twinkle in his eves. “I can tell you better when I know Jjust what varmits are,” replied Farmer Brown's Boy. | “Oh, just critters like the big Ca and Bears and Wolves and such like,” replied Stumpy. “You couldn’t add some Tigers and | Lions nd'J)erh-pa an Elephant, could | you?” asked Farmer Brown's Boy, try- | ing to make his voice sound snxious. Stumpy chuckled. I guess you'll do, | Sonny,” said he. “Can't scare up none | of those critters no way, but there is | varmits and I ain't goin’ to be no way | surprised if we run onto some aforé we | g0 back. At that very instant as if to give | point to his words a long howl, inde- | scribable to one who has never heard | it, sounded from far down the gulch, | which was really more of a canyon than | a guich. It was answered by another. | umpy glanced at Farmer Brown's Boy. ‘Makes a funny feelin’ right along your | backbone, don't it?" said he. “Have it myself. Heard them critters all my life, | yet have that funny feelin' every time | I hear one, even when I know there's nothin' to be afeared of. | Farmer Brown't Boy nodded and | giinned. “Gives me little chills chasing | up and down my spine,” he confessed. “They are Howler the Wolf and his | mate, aren't they? 1 never heard a | Wolf howl before, but I know that that | we'll have a chance to see one? | said this so earnestly that Stumpy | grinned. The boy was so honest in ad- l his feelings, yet so lacking in | must be what it is. Dem-unpt;:) Parmer and, to eateh t he himself Just to make sure that he was awake and not dreaming. FAR OFF TOWARD ONE OF THE CLIFFS HE SAW KING EAGLE SAILING But off toward one of the great cliffs he saw King le sailing, and once again a Wolf howled. He laughed aloud as he felt those little chills again.. “Anyway, Stumpy says he has them tco,” he muttered as he hooked his first trout. (Copyright. 1991 Chicken Fritter. Cook four tablespoonfuls of flour in one tablespoonful of butter and add one cupful of hot chicken stock rldulll[ Season with celery salt and pepper. Pour half this sauce into a shallow pan. Chop one cupful of cold cooked chicken quite fine. season and spread over the sauce after it has thickened. Add the rest of the sauce and place on ice. When very cold and hard cut in small squares. Dip in fritter batter and fry in deep fat. To make the batter mix half a pint of milk with two cupfuls of flour, two eggs and a little salt. My Neighbor Says: ‘To remove oil stains from wall- paper make a stiff paste of cold water and pipe clay. Spread on the stain and let stand overnight. In the morning brush off with & clean, stiff brush. ‘When pickling be sure to use the best pure cider vinegar. It is the safest and best. . Do not mix, under any circumstances, two kinds of vinegar. Coffes will taste “just right” all the time if you thoroughly clean the pot once a week. To prevent discoloration all large fruit should, after peeled, be put at once into water until needed. (Copyright. 1931.) Take Care at such times Beware the doubtful hygieneof nameless substitutes for Kotex ANITARY protection is closely related to your health. You need absolute assurance of cleanli- ness, through and through. This assurance you have with Kotex. But how about the dozens of nameless substitutes> How are they made? Where? By whom? How do you know they're fit for this intimate personal use? Take no chances! Refuse ques- tionable substitutes, of whose mak- ers you know nothing. You know Kotexis safe. It's the world's stand- ard in sanitary protection. Pure, immaculate, safe. Ten million pads were bought by hospitals last year. Insist on Kotex. It is soft and comfortable. It is treated to de- odorize. Shaped to fit. Disposable. Wear Kotex on either side with equal protection. KOTE X Sanitary Napkins NOXZEMA—used exclusively at America’s Biggest Beaches for SUNBURN away. Never once aware she was letting ““B.0.” offend. And no one would tell her! Cinned Salmon. |leaves. I saw it in Riverdale swamp, Whatever fish may be in season, the | DUt it Sppears elsewhere in & few places canned fishes are slways with us a5 & | Goroughiy Gopical ns o Ayes Are standby, 1o be used whenever we want | nature lover counts it a red-letier day | them. Here are some good things that | In his rambles when first he sees our | can be made of salmon: Sho small, but lovely, Lygodium twining | Salmon _ Cutlets —Separate canned | S00Ut the trunks of trees. salmon Into convenient leces and | = spread each with olive ofl hot day he noticed —faint but unmistak- able—a hint of ““B.O.”" (body odor). And romance fled. Not until long afterwards did she realize why she lost him. Ends pain instantly ... doesn’t stain clothes Coney Island, Asbury different — a pleasant, hygienic scent that vanishes as you rinse and tells you, *'No “B. 0.” weather—beware fear of ‘B.O." mow!" What folly it is to take chances with ““B.O."" —especially these broiling summer days when heat and humidity make us perspire more freely! How easy it is to be guilty now and not know it because we have become used to an ever-present odor. Yet orhers notice instantly—and they won't overlook it. “B.0." can be a fatal barrier to popularity . . . success . . . love. End complexion worries TLANTIC CITY. vars, Beach—vi the First Aid Stations at any of them and you'll find Noxzema Cream used for sunburn year in and year out. They select it, because it does bring relief snsrantly. Chief Newberry of the Asbury Park Life- guards says, “‘After giving many different sunburn remedies a fair trial, we have found that Noxzema beats them all. We have been using it for the past five years. “‘Naturally we treat many cases of sun- burnevery day. We apply Noxzema imme- diately and recommend its continued use until the bura is completely healed.™ Don't_ suffer needlessly from sunburn. Spread Noxzema on—note how coolingand soothing it is— how it ends pain. Geta jar mew at any drug or department store. OXZEMA CREAM F E E L~y H E A Loueem Bothered because your complexion is dull, cloudy, coarse-textured? Try Lifebuoy *‘facials'’. Massage the pure, bland, pore- purifying lather well into the face cach night. Then rinse. Pores are gently freed of clogged impurities, toned down to normal fineness. Healthy, glowing radiance coaxed back to dull, sallow skins. Adopt Lifebuoy today. A product of Levex Buormuns Co., Cambridge, Mass. Lifebuo HEALTH SOAP PEP stops body odor MATCHLESS FLAVOR by the bowlful! That's what Kellogg's PEP Bran Flakes give you. These crisp, crunchy flakes tempt you-—tease you to taste their goodness. And the more of them you eat — the more you’'ll agree that Kellogg’'s PEP Bran Flakes are better bran flakes. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. > . L) Remove to & hot dish and spread with m;lzed‘mlmormemm. A simple safeguard this new powder ou. . .Tub in ., vertised in Noxzema Cream is and sisiniess. ¥ou fam o e Doty sod o e S otlice e i Play safe. Adopt the pleasant safe- guard millions of particular men and women use. Wash and bathe with Lifebuoy—the cooling, refreshing toilet soap that gives extra protection. More lather—creamy, scarching, purifying. Lather that pene- trates and deedoriges —ends all danger of offending. Lifebuoy's very smell is Write for frge Cloaning Guide. Or sond Joe for Trial Box. Addrens Dept. 22Annetie’s, 9 Chauney St., Boston.

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