Evening Star Newspaper, August 11, 1931, Page 26

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‘ol . Have Fine Flavor BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. ides of having food attractively sometimes is stressed so hard the flavor is not given' due atten- . ‘This is noticeable in salads which few use it, to toss fragile lettuce leaves and bits of tomato, sweet r and beet root and not impair the freshness of these vegetables. But unless ths deftness is gained, our salads of this z?e cannot compare with French sal- s. The dressing is poured over the salad just before it is s@ved, and with wooden fork and spoon the leaves, etc., are gently and lightly lifted and tossed im the serving disb. French dressing is #lso used to mari- nate salads. Chicken with its other ingredients such as celery, slivers of | sweet pepper; just a suggestion of fine- | |y minced onion (a soupcon the French | term this scarcely appreciable amount), | and such other ingredients as the cook likes to put in such a salad, should be | prepared and well mixed, Then Prench | dressing well seasoned is poured over | | the salad mixture. This is stirred and |tossed until the dressing gets well through it, and then the mixture i3 covered, put in the refrigerator or some | cool place and allow-d to stand for at | | least half an hour. In this time each | particle of every ingredient should have | absorbed Its proportion of the dressing | | and become already tasty. | Mayonnaise should not be used to| | marinate salads. 1t is too rich, for one | thing. and rot sufficiently liquid to | | percolate through the ingredients and | | be absorbed by them. A spoonful of | | mayonnaise should be put on top of | each salad when individual portions are | served. Or if the «alad is served on a | platter or in & salad bowl, there should | be enough mayonnaise over the salad | for each peron to have sufficient. | ‘There are various fancy trimmings for | these salads, segments of hard cboked | eggs, strips of pimento to lend gay| | color, rings of alives. etc. Sprinkle the )mp of the mayonnaise with paprika. Such & well prepa%ed and decorated | |salad on its bad of green-and-white | | lettuce leaves is both good-looking and | properly seasoned. | All mect, fish apd shell fish apd, table safhds should be mari- | e fish and shell fish should | 1§t¢ more than 30 minutes so dressed. and in a cool place, before se ing. Vegetable salads are as delicio without mayonnaise as with it. Pruit salads are not marinated. Th: pulp of several fruits such as apples and ba- | | nanas_discolors easily in the eir, and | then they are not tempting to look at | Also the juices of the rruits combined | | make an ‘added liquid undesirable be- | fore serving. Fruit salads are dressed | with ~Prench dressing or~ enough | | whipped cream is added to a mayon- | naise when used to make it very deli- cate. Russian dressing is favored on | vegetable 'salads. (Oopyright, 1931.) A ! street and Pennsylvania avenue scuth- BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. B. Patent Office. When Prof. Kremb taught you your | first dance steps at Haines' Hail, Eighth | east? Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED, Appeals to Child's Pride. My files are harboring s me lettors from readers. which I have put aside saying to myself: “Some day Ti print | that.” Today seems to be that dey. | Here's a little boy of two and a half who has sucked his middle fingrs from | birth. “I did nothing about it,” writes his mcther, Mrs. R. W, M.. “and noted that as he grew older he did it less and | less, until finally it was done only n {ew moments prior to going to sieep. | Sometimes when he would be tired he'd start this and I'd say: ‘That's a baby hab't’ It didn't have much effect “Farly last month we visited a friend whose baby is 18 months cid. She puts everything into her mouth. even her dress and was constantly being remind- ed of it. She paid no attentionand my youngster took it upon himself to take ber dress cut, or anything else except food. It was comical to see them, both such babies. “But the point is thal from that day to this he's never sucked his fingers. He would look at‘them and you could POROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Where Can an Earnest Young Man Find His Ideal Girl? EAR MISS DIX—T am looking for a girl to fulfill an ideal and I seem unable to find her. I want this girl to be a good pal. sympathetic, fairly good looking, to likeSbutdoor sports and, above all, to look st things from my standpoint, realize the struggle a young fellow has and encour- age him to stick to it and win, ;:oounge him to do bigger and better things. Show her interest in various —help him to figure means of working up and advancing himself. If I ever find such & girl and can “sell” myself to her, some minister is going to have a job. Girls have a great influence over men and if they would only use it to help young chaps such as I they could have their pick of husbands. * PAUR. Answer: You certainly redeem my faith in the young men of the country, Paul, because from the innumgrable letters I get from girls telling me what their boy friends demand of them I was beginning to wonder if there were no more young men with high ideals and serious ambitions left in the country. ] FELT that there must be many young chaps who are struggling and striving and who have hitched their wagon to a star and who mean to make something of their lives and who are determined to be the big and important men of 25 or 35 vears hence. And I felt that these boys must want girls who would be an upliiting influence in their lives, girls who would be ‘st:mulating ccmpanions, and who would see what they are trying to co end would heip them on to their goal. ¢ The girls have written to me and sssured me, as with one voice, that boys don’t want serious-minded girls or girls who are what we used to call “a good influence.” They say that boys regard that sort of girl as a flat tire and avoid her. These girls seek to know where they can find boys who will respect them and who like a decent girl, just as you are asking where a boy can find an ideal girl. So why don't you ty to get together? "I HE search is up to you, boys, because the kind of girl you desire doesn't Tun after men. You will have to hunt her down, for she will never chase you, and the only tip I can give you is not to hunt {or her in night clubs or public dance halls or speakeasies or parked automobiles. No matter how sophisticated a man becomes or how®independent and self-sufficient he thinks he is, every men's conduct is profoundly affected by the women with whom he is most closely associated. His mother puts her indelible stamp upon him and as long as he lives he looks at things from her point of view. His sisters color his opinion of all women, and in the end some woman either makes him or breaks him. T has been truly said that there is always & woman behind the door of every man’s success, and when a man fails it is nearly always some woman’s hand that pulls him down. Whatever women are, they are that way because they think men want them to be that way, for women have always had to please men in order to win and hold them. So if you boys want the kind of girls who will be sympathetic and encouraging and an uplifting influence in your lives, all you have to do is just to pay the old-fashioned girl some attention and encourage her. # DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1931.) ‘MODES OF THE MOMENT JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in Enkli-h & BY JOS. J. FRISCH. IMA DUDD DON'T KNOW ANY BETTER. SHE THINKS THAT BOLTING DOWN FOOD WilL Ima Dudd doesn't know any beter” is the required form, not “Ima Dudd don’t.” ' “Dont” is a con- traction of “do not.” hence should n: be used with & singular subject (I cepted). “He doesn't like me,” not | dch't like me.” NATURE’S CHILDREN \hl' LILLIAN COX ATHEY, . IMustrations by Mary Foley. LXXX. ORB-WEAVERS. "THE handsome black and yellow spiders of the garden make the | most intricate webs. The web of one of these spinners is a plece of work started | | and never left until it is a completed | task. They are always hung in an open | space along the lige trayeled by winged | insects. Clever huntress she most surely |is, and makes no mistakes. | | The foundation lines are laid Arst. | The thread is fastened to its starting | point and the weaver spins her thread | as she goes toward the distant spot. She | is careful gs she moves along not to | touch anything which would break her | thread. She does this by holding the thread high in the air by her four hind legg, Then she drpps down to her starting*point and ties this thread in | | and then makes other spokes. 1f she wishes a spoke to be placed | where it is difficult for her to crawl. she sends out a line on the air. The breeze catches it. Mrs. Spider can tell by the | feel of it when it bas struck and stops A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER, EV!I!Y year there assembles in the | Capital an unorganized yet closely knit group to pey tribute to a man | each regards as his “Old - “The group'is composed of those men who, since as far back as 1902, have served a year as law clerk and | secretary to Jus- | tice Oliver Wen- | dell Hoimes of the | Supreme Court. | . Usually it is on | the occasion. of the venerable { Justice’s birthday. { They make their | way to a big red | brick home on I |street where Holmes receives them. | 'These men re- ! gard this annual visit as a'sort of pil- | grimage. They come from all sections | }of the country. Some are high in the councils of the Nation, some have st- | { tained distinction as professors of law, | and others are just plain lawyers. | | ton last Mgrch on the occasion On these annual occasions they are all the same—puplls of a great master. For that is pretty much how these | | men regard Justice Holmes. Since he | established the custom of bringing | down from Harvard each year the | honor m°n of the graduating law ' Eating Arou “BY GAYNOR MADDOX. | INING spaciously is one of the ma- jor ogcupations of Honolulu. | When_the Hewalian Islands in 1898 joined {heir s=mi-tropicel fortunes with those of the United States they brought with them tall, swaying banana and | coconut palms and great sweeps of | pincapple. Then the waves that break | on the white beach at Waikiki began whispering secrets about chickén cooked | arrived Ameriean flag. . The early Summer moon seems to pine for the twang of a Hawallan guitar and the fragrance of eka.l spinach and coconut. So why lay | | your bere table with grass mats. ferns. | bright flowers and a centerplece of bananas, oranges. persimmons and | limes? Then get bowls for each guest | each chair. Here is the menu for & feast for 12\ I once enjoyed in Honolulu. First came | ispe: in spinach and cocorut to the newly- of fresh grated coconut. class, the position has been & coveted one. ‘Ttese men regard a year spent with Justice Holmes as a sort of A graduate course—the ideal way of completing their preparatory legal training. For he takes them in hand as s teacher. counselor and friend. Each comes in intimate contact with the man hatled by manyeas the greatest jurist of the day. In his office at the Caj in the quiet of his study &t ., and during the Summer in the rambling old ‘house in Massachusetts built by “The Autocrat of the Break fast- Table” and dubbed by the so: “Beverly-by-the-Depot.” they work with him side by side. It is experience impossible to ob- tain in \nothrr 8 \ ‘Westerners, Southerners and East- erners have served their apprenticeship with Justice Ho'mes. And each year thev come back to him tribute, This year the was the largest in seversl years. Fifteen of the for- mer law clerks gathered in ~ is ninetieth brthday to greet Fim, & was the largest delegation in years to en- ter the door of the Folmes home, be- | cause with advancing years the jus- tice's socisl contacts have na : Leland B. Duer of New York who served with Justice Holmes from 1809 to 1910 was the ranking member of the party. Robert Wales, his present secretary, was the youngest. nd America hour. This was served with the chicken in bowls made by the natives back in the valleys. Next came a salad of peeled alligator pears sliced in rings and alternated with rings of fresh pineapple Over this went a French dressing flavored wigh the pulp of one mashed cucumber and little lime juice. Pineapple water ice came at the end, escorted in by a huge white laver cake that had just passed through a blizzard ‘Then we had Jong, thin cigars and cigarettes from lacquer boxes, coffee in tiny cups and fruit punch in tall glasses All the ingredients for this feast are available anywhere in the United States. Therefore anv one can dine his friends in the regal manner of Lilivio- kalani the last Queen of the islands be- fore they became United States terri- { the way Hawafians do. They also hang | tory. Her ample girth bore testimony , & wreath of fresh or paper flowers on | to the goodness of her native food and to the size of her hospitable heart. BOME SALADS SHOULD' BE TOSSED. | Deviled Raisins. Color and Temperature. are not tossed nor properly mfarinated | Remove the stems from large selected ave the sest of P2~ | raising and cook fhem in hot olive oil meate the ingredients. It ia trle, in- [1RR® TV SO0 U Rl T per deed, that" Americans have mot -the French delicacy of touch, or, if they do, |and sprinkle with salt and paprika. NAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. almcst see him saying: ‘No,' to himself. {1t se:ms to worry him when he sees | children putting anything in their {‘mouths. and always wants me to tell | them abeut it.” Blask Lt ambiel: | salmon Lomi in small mahogany bowls. | &4 T {One pound of smoked salmon was| Radistors painted white visid 20 3 | many threads of silk end the spokes are | placed in a~pan and covered with boil- | per cent more heat than those which dered mousseline and added. The frst two are stretched from | Ing water and drained three times. It | had not been pointed. the darker colors . ’ | crner to corner. They are most evenly | was then flaked and freed of bones. | tlso vielding less heat than white, de- e A aynatihes #10) pale pink. georgelte. Mhced. “When a1l the spokes are in she | SIx fresh tomatoes, sliced fine; one. pending upon their density. Painted | Pctaweiies 35 0 e 1 e sin lonsi -piartir rlciies goes to the center, of hub, and there large onion, chopped, and one:half | tsnks containing naphtha expoged to | sart of experience s ehocked this habit 7o 7 she tests her wires green pepper chopped were kneaded to- | the sunlight for two hours were found | The boy discovered that it didn't lock G n Black | _The guide lines do not stretch or stick. | gether with the salmon. This hors | to show a difference of 11 degrees be- | ety mitasettre m e e ity e The spiral lines give and are very d'oeuvre was then chilled. tween those painted black and those | Teit toward cetrecting "*D:.b u{ u | sticky. Wide bands of silk are used for | The main dish was a large chicken p inted white. |'the snme Sapik ot Gutlal 2t Biactt. T | the center and any excess silk is eaten. | cut up and browned in Butter. It was |- [ e et i T on It takes about an hour for her to get |then simmered in water until tender. | | nell biting, from an adult nail biter, | her webfreacy. Two fresh coconuts were grated and | E | If shé so desires, she sits in the hub, | the meat put in & cheesecloth beg and | 1 Who writes: “You are telling fhe truth | awaiting her prey, or she may go and 4 paying out the silk thread. The framework fs strengthened by impairment of health from prolonged, Hemorrhoids. ut milk was | In an earlier talk I explained that iles (hemorrhoids) are varicose veins, slight, unnoticed cr internal bleeding or chknenlc focal infections which resist all remedial when you say that punishment and scolding never help to cure such habits I was a victim of the nail biting habit. hide nearby. She has hold of a wire | which will let her know at once if a | squeezed dry The ! added to a peck of spinach that had ! been cocked, drained and chopped fine. s until the infected ! piles_are Hy treated. 1 hate to frighten anybody, but I'd emall or a large insect has bzen cayght Then the spinach and some salt jumped in her web, |in with the chicken and purred with | When 2n incect is caught the weaver | pleasure for 10 minutes. This was also | over 40 years ago, and I remember that scolding and punishment made me worse, When my parenis saw that they of acule inflammation. pain or bleed- ing where such a varicosity is already present. The derivation of the ‘term hemor- rhoids is from Gi reek roots, meaning | rather scare everybody than fail to utter 'Ifnlfi' 3 when warning is needed. o most canes a doctor tragic | . | has to deal with are ceses of rectal can- | cer which have masqueraded a little too as “plles” because the victims to drift al on such a bad| Here it must be admitted that ians are culpable because flessly quack it when the veins lable to discharge blood. One | making reason why the veins in this situation posiion: blood di- which eon. Tectly into the portal rectly anything veys blood to the liver. which tends to liver to or, ag- gravates the trouble if it 1s alreaay present. B The most direct rellef or remedy, preventive and curative, in any case is the resumption of the horizontal posi- tion, or better, the so-called chest ition (on all fours with chest on , or still bet- crawl a few times arcund the room or the monkey walk if you're too 1o crawl. Hemorrhoids (piles) are merely varl- cose veins, subject to the same compli- cations as' may oceur in varicore veids | elsewhere. Only more so. Piles are by no means so common or #0 trivisl as most people imagine. 1 have pointed out in previous talks that in the majority of cases the patient's own notion that the trouble is “piles” proves wrong on examination Pain and visble bleeding are not the oniy serious effects or complications of piles. Patients sometimes suffer grave MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Blackberries, Wheat Cereal with Cream Creamed Chipped Beef on Toast. Coftee. LUNCHE®ON Clam_Chowder, Crackers. Blueberry Slump. Iced Tea. DINNER. Cream of Spinach Soup. Veal Cutlets, Brown Sauce Riced Potatoes. Corn Pritters Prune and Pineapple Saled. . e, CHIPPED BEEF. Put a piece of butter, size of an egg, in frying pan. When melted add one-fourih pound chipped beef, Jet fry until well browned, stirring often to keep from burning. When well brown- ed, add one pint of milkk. When it boils, thicken with one heap- ing tablespoon of flour blended with water. This has a much better flavor for browning the meat CLAM CHOWDER Pry out three slices of salt pork cut ‘in small piecss, cut two onions in slices and brown slight- lv. one pint clams, remove heads. and chop the remainder, not too fine; cut up three large potatoes in cubes, put into kettie cover with water. When nearly done add clams and fat from the pork and cnions. Boil up once and add one pint of milk (or more if desired), boil until clams ars tender, add salt and pepper to taste. Oysters can be used instead of clams, making & de- sirable chowder Serve with oyster crackers. SALAD. Make an incision in 30 cooked and remove pits. Pour tion | Bive. | Probably dress | our unhyglenic ‘custam of | is a factor of bemorrhoids, | particularly the wearing «f excessive | clothi ing. It is not merely sedentary habit, but | the neglect of suitable dafly exercise | that makes folk who dodge work so| the | 5 je to piles. Perhaps the best | | of a1 daily exerises for the prevention | | and relief of piles is walking briskly, | | not sauntering or dragging along, but | stepping out as though you were in| training for something. 1 THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Darling youthful chie for all-day oc- casions is expressed in this stmple frock of printed crepe silk The softened touch of the bodice is interesting. The unusually clever shaping of the skirt in deep di2gonal lines at the front produces a decidedly slimming effect To copy it exactly takes bu ards 39-igch material for the medium size. | Styl€"No. 3032 is d-signed for sizes 16, of | | { | | | 18 years, 36. 38. 40 and 42 inch bust. | { 1ts delightiully dainty and pretty in | | evelet batiste in pale bius shade. i }u:nhnan Nobe s mhmn;'m' rioted | green prin in nnnlbu are lovely schemes for 8 pattern of this style, send 15 or coin directly to the s New York Pashion avenue and Twenty-ninth u—u.m; ! thought much about it? ‘were increasing my nsrvousness and the desire to bit= my nails by constantly trying to make me stop, they g-t me a very nice ring, and when I bit my nails I could not wear my ring for a day or two, It worked like magic With me, for T was so anxious to wear the ring, and its appearance on my finger culd remind me to keep my fingers out of my mouth.” The parents were sensible to use this leasint reminder, instsad of something orrid and disfiguring. Your pride in the ring, and your desire to keep it on <ur finger, were the incentives needed to stop the habit. This is the same principle as mani- curing the nalls with a view to arous- ing pride in their appearance and a re- luectance to mar them. All of these stimulants to a chil's pride in the appearance of the hands are legitimate ones. When they are more powerful than the child’s desire to work cff ner- vous irritation by nibbling at the nalls, habit is conquered. A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. “What Is Good for Man?” Do you know? Have you ever| think is good for you? mean to you? What are your jovs, your pleasures, your Inspirations? Wheretn do you g:t the most out of o3 The famed philosopher, Dr. Will Du- rant, recently sent out & questionnaire to a number of prominent people, ask- ing them the “What is your philosophy of life? What keeps you going? What are the sources™ of your inspiration and your energy? What is the goal or motive force of youd toil? Where do you find your consolation and your happiness? Where in the last resort does your treosure lie?" In his questionnaire Mr. Durant states (hat he has studied and uved csophy for many years, but that ns from it back to life itself, | s to know where life may be found, That is what we all want to know. We are all out to find life, but where to find it, that is the question. We sce going cn in the world & mighiy ble for wealth, for luxuries apd for social staiion, for place and power, for notoriety and renown: and all this scrambling is but a mad effort to find life. All who search for life in these directions eventually turn back with the marks of sad and tragic disappointment_upon their faces. Vhers may life be found? Let one answer who ‘went all the rounds that anybedy ever went. Solomon sought life in mirth. in riches, in knowleage. in werks, in feme. He falied w0 discover it in any of these directions. But he finally did discover ft. He tells us| where: “He that followeth after right- | ecusness and kindness findeth lfe.” | Righteousness and kindness'—God and all that God means in one's life. | Here'n is where life is found. Not else~ | where can it be found, in its hghest and’ fullest meaning. This is not to exclude from life other things, To the contrary, other things come to have a new lue and a new significance in lh; | life wherein God and r ghtcoygness an mercy dwell | In the last resort man's tifure les | in God. When we come to know God we find Him a complete and satisfac- | tery_answer to every question concern- itfe. Knowing him, we know what is good for man.” | My Neighbor Says: To 1emove stains from baking casseroles, o2k in a strong so- luiion of borax and water A feit blackboard eraser is best n cleaning the top of the kitchen stove.. If grease gets on the stove the eraser should be used while the stove is still hot. The eraser is much more satisfactory than # cloth and it keeps the hands from getilng soiled. When eooking sour fruit. add & pinch of carbonate of soda to the juice and it will require less ‘What do you | ‘What does life | following questions: | Penny Poppy Show. Did you when you were liltle make A penny pe 1f you did, you know what a delightful task 1t is for a | warm afterncon in Summer. If you | did not. T will tell you how, and then you will know what a pleasant pastime poppy shows can be. You find some small panes of glass We get ours from the slides of an old camera. After they had ben cleaned they were admirable for our purpose. | You take one pane of glass the right size, not too big. and some tape to bind the edges. Make sure it is sticky tape and fresh enough to stick fast and soon You gather the blossoms you like best in the garden—just a few of them The prettier the petals are the better Colors are what make the design stand out, so pick the nicest colors you can find if you are allowed When you have your blossoms pick the petals off. Now lay them in the prettiest arrangement you can conceive Make a design or a picture of them. OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL | friends offer prizes for the best one. The prize is an extra spoonful of ice cream or one candy more than A flower petal w G carry & heavy prize. A } then any other sort of prize for & penny poppy show Another flower game is always a suc- cess when little girls play it. You gather flowers and make garlands. Then you wear the garlands and make believe you are somebody out of & story. Any- body who is beautiful and who was be- loved will do, but mostly queens Clovers mixed with daisies are fine Oak leaves make lovely crowns. Wild strawberries are fine for jewels, and by and by they can be used for more prac- | tieal purposes. Interior decorations, it were, An afterncon spent under a weaving garlands or making penny poppy shows while some one telis stories or recites poetry or plans a play is a restful way of passing sn_hour that might otherwite have been dull enough. Children love simple things like flowers and fairy tales, and if one can combine tree | them the day becomes a holiday the little group a party have some bits of glass handy? book of fairy tales? (Copyright. 19313 Remember, you are working on the wiong side of the picture. and lay your colors accordingly. When vour design is finished lay a Stiff piece of paper the exact size of the sheet of glass on your plcture. Smooth it down Now bind the paper and the glass together with the sticky tape. Gently draw it along the table to your outstretched hand. Turn it face up—and there you are! The and Maybe you And a French administration of Indo- China i5 warring on tropical diseeses rushes to him and begins spinning silk and wrapping it about him. Should he | be too determined to get away she gives him & steb and in a little while he | quiets down. Then she takes him to | the center of the web or to her place of | seclusion and cines upon him. After | the meal she throws the remains away. If the insect is a tender cne, it will be eaten. After the web is in- all served in bowls. There was a banana snd coconu pudding made of six ripe bananas put through a sieve and mixed with one- half cup of arrowroot flour first moist ened with a scant cup of milk. Then, to improve matters further and to edd a little more good-nourishment, one- Il cup of sugar and one tablespoonful of melted butter joined up, and the | whoi= thing went into a buttered bak- ing dish and cooked slowly for oune ' | l spected to see that all lines are perfect, | she again awaiis the unsuspecting fiyer. | Many times these webs must be re- | paired and muc is spun. How- ever, nothing is ever wasted. All silk 1s eaten and used egain. The tiny orb i weavers make their baby orbs and some | do a thriving business. Gnats and, mos- | ouitoes get, caught very easily, and you should sce the little hunter rush out and get her breakfast. She knows how to mend her web and get it all in readi- | ness for another cateh, and pretty soon | she is rewarded with another insect. | Sometimes the one caught is too big for her to handle and it gets all the threads so tzngled they are not useful any mciz._She does not sit and worry not she. In & few minutes the young- | stet is as busy as can be throwing out | her foundation lines and making a| stronger and better web. (Copyrizht, 1931 Flattery is bogus praise. 1 know 1 should abher it makes me engry with myself To think that I adore it It Let it set. and you have a penny poppy show. Handle it gently. or you will shake the petals out of place You charge a pin or a penny for a look. That is why it is called a penny poppy show. The children of the Puri- tan time picked popples and made their pictures of their gay petals. I hope they got pennies for a peep, but I fear they had to take their pay in pins. The pins were likely to be thorns with ber- ries for heads. but at that it was all fun it and sce. Sometimes your His Mast Choice our cottage ; cheese! It makes such re- freshing salads. And it comes in the new family- size package . . . just enough for generous por- tions, and ne leftovers. Ask yonr milkman to bring you some . .. it costs only 10 cents, ® CALO is cooked, ready o feed. Always fresh. Recommended by leading veterina vigns. In 1-pound cans, at il stores, ! C A DOG ond CAT FOOD | “His Master's Choice™ l Aue U e mar ees 156 FREE! Voluabie bookie! on Trale ing wad Core of Dogs. Wrile e { Culifornia Animel Products Co.. 1 &7 W. 44k St New York Gity, A WHEN YOU'RE MAKING S ummer L1STEN 70 the National Dairy Radio Program every Tuesdey night, from 7.30 t0 8.00 (E. 5. T.) over wic and associated N. B. C. stations. hestnut Farms Dairy Ii"l,‘.fi‘ OF NATIONAL DAIRY This unpleasant job ended 4 Jforever by KLEENEX DISPOSABLE TISSUES ASHING handkerchiefs is no longer a nec il This unpleasant task is ended for- ever—if you choose to join the thousands who have adopted leenex. What is Kleenex, you ask? is a remarkable tissue— far softer, gentler, more absorbent qthan you ever dreamed a tissue ! substance could be made. Tests | prove it's twice as absorbent as an l old linen han@kerchief! Always clezr, fresh, dainty Kieenex comes to you in dainty that’s car- with the handkerchief Try Kleenex for removing face creams. Authorities say it's best, because Kleenex is so powerfully absorbent that it blots all impuri- ties from the pores. Many home uses Use Kleenex for wiping spectacles and razor blades. For dusting and polishing. Mothers find Kleenex in- valuable in caring for babies. Kleenex is so enormously popu- lar that any drug, dry goods or de- o be remved with one hand. If you have Hay Fever... —vou'll appfe the soitness and - g .».M.E. . Kieenex, E put up with 9 It is T

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