Evening Star Newspaper, September 3, 1931, Page 36

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WOM AN’S PAGE. , Picnic Luncheons for Holiday Next Monday is Labor day, and in this era when motoring is the pastime of tiose of average means as well as of the wealthy, thousands of families will take their recreation on some little auto excursion, Much of the fun s the pic- nic luncheon eaten on the shore or in the shade of inviting wayside trees. “This meal can be a regular dinner, hot and satisfying to the hearty appetite, -and yet be as easlly prepared as any other luncheon that is substantial. Lét us suppose that the family going CORN ON THE COB, WRAPPED IN PARAFFIN PAPER, IS DELICIOUS AT A TICNIC. off on such a picnic does not have any vacuum container for keeping food hot. A vacuum bottle for coffee, tea or hot chocolate is so usual that it is as- sumed there is such a contalner. In- stoad of a beverage, the bottle can bs filled with soup. Substitute a bread or cake box for the vacuum focd container. In it is put a hot roast just from the ove: Put the roasting p.an in the bread bo> THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Of course you're thinking about a dress for eariy Fall. And now is the time to make it. Today's model is very snappy—a splendid dress for travel, for town and for college wear. t is charmingly carried out in black ple woolen, which promises to en- Joy much popularitv this Fall. This model would also be adorable in gayer colors, as primitive green can- ton crepe, Yankee-bluz woolen or dark | BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. jor if it is too large to go in, put the lrmt in a heated cake tin, and put the filled tin in a large, heavy paper {bag. Cover the bottom of the cake tin with several thicknesses of heavy wrap- | ping paper and set the paper bag with 1‘;‘ contents on it. Line the bread box with thicknesses of wrapping paper. | "'Fill the box with vegetables, each one vooked and well wrapped. Baked Lipos | tatoes are delicious on a picnic. ey can go in a paper bag. Green corn Is unusual and one of the most tempting of all the vegetables. It takes but 5 minutes to boil the husked ears. Plunge | them into a kettle of boiling water and as soon as the water starts to boil again cook the corn just 5 minutes or it will Jose some of its sweetness. The corn can be spread lightly with butter and sprinkied with salt and each ear wrapped in parafin paper ready to serve or it can simply be wrapped with- | out seasoning. Avoid watery vegetables such as Sum- | mer squash. Onions are inadvisable on |the menu, as sweet breaths are desir- |able. Vegetables that discolor are | among those to leave out, such as beets, | for instance. String beans make a good green picnic vegetable. They can be strung and cooked whole. Carrots are | also excellent to include. | "I the meat is cooked in & large cov- | ered roasting the vegetables can be | put unwrapped (except the corn) into the pan and the pan be well wrapped ‘ln wrapping paper and put in a basket. 1 Beef is advised as the meat, or chicken, | as either takes but a short time to roast |and can be on immediately the home- | maker starts to prepare breakfast. If the veggtables are also cooked at the same time they will be ready to pack | when every other preparation is done. A one-dish casserole meat and vege- table preparation can be taken in the bread tin if the liquid is thickened so that it wil not spill and the cover fits the casserole securely. This is & com- plete meal in tself. There should be another container for bread and butter sandwiches, celery, | pickles, etc., and the necessary eating | utensils. Don't forget paper napkins | and have plenty of them. They can be |used to napkin-wash (that is, wipe | clean) the dishes and utensils when the meal is done. Also, don't leave any refuse or paper about where you lunch. Priday—An adage that has its uses and limitations. | (Copyright, 1931.) Sweet Potato Salad. Combine three cupfuls of thinly sliced sweet potatoes with halt a cup- ful of sliced celery, half a cupful of | broken nut meat and season With salt |and paprika. Add some botled salad | dressing and toss the salad with two | forks 50 that the potatoes will become well masked with the dressing. Chill | | and arrange individual servings in crisp | lettuce cups. i - Parsley Butter. Cream half & cupful of butter. add three-fourths cupful of finely ground one-fourth tea- E drops of tabasco sauce and half a tablespoonful of lemon juice, and stir until well blended. Use as a sandwich spread. If making fancy rolled sandwiches, place a sprig of watercress in each end. DAILY DIET RECIPE " BREAKFAST. Bran with Cream Fish Cakes Egg Sauce Toast Marmalade Coffee. LUNCHEON. Stuffed Egg Salad Tozsted Cheese Rolls Baked Indian Pudding | Hard Sauce Hermits 1 DINNER. Consomme Broiled Syordfish | Tartare Sauce | | Delmonico Potatoes, Green Beans | Tomato Ealad 3 Mayonnaise Dressing Apple Tapioca Coff FISH CAKES. Boil ', pound of salt codfish till tender, drain, take out bones and shred finely. Mix with 2 cups mashed potatoes, beaten egg, 1 tablespoon milk, salt and pep- per to taste. Make into balis, dip in beaten egz and crumbs. Fryj in deep fat. Serve with the fol- lowing sauce: Egg siuce—One cup white | | sauce. 2 chopped hard-boiled eggs, | | 1 tablespoon parsley, 1 teaspoon femon juice or vinegar. Add eggs, parsiey and lemon juice to white sauce after removing from fire. STUFFED EGG SALAD. Boll 3 eggs hard, remove shells, split eggs lengthwise. Remove | | yolks, ruo to a paste, add 3 sar- | din-s, pounded and seasoned with salt, psprika and lemon juice. Pill halved whites with this mix- ture and place cn crisp lettuce leaves with a tablespoon of French dressing poured over top. APPLE TAPIOCA. One-Falf cup tapioca, 3 cups boiling water, little salt. Cook in double boil'r until clear. Pare and core 6 large scur apples and put in shallow bakirg dish. Put teaspoon of sugar in each cavity, sprinkle with nutmeg or cinna- mon, pour over the tapioca and bake until apples are soft. Serve with thin cream and sugar. (Copyright. 1931) "FOR HEALTH Drink this cool, invigorating, delicious Chevy Chase Buttermilk? Peaches Tea. ee. GET the habit of drinking it with your meals. A real health-builder, full of . 9 those ‘‘vital vitamins.” It’s good for you — and quenches hot-weather thirst. Have a glass of it whenever you want a THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. Handwriting What It May Reveal, BY MILDRED MOCKABEE. AT _Mounr Lip OV Aeaas 35:«‘ A skl A olismres HE long, rounded, lower loops in this writing are very ex- pressive. They indicate an un- pretentious person, easily satis- fled. The writer probably does not indulge in idle day dreams, but goes along easily, content with )»-r fate. She is not overly sentim:nial, but rather judges things in a practical way. This does not mean that she lays great stress on money. Quite the re- verse, she likes simple, plain things, She would be out of place wtih people who tried to make a display of their belongings. Friends mean more to Her than possessions. Her writing is vertical and fairly well rounded. This suggests a careful, easy- going person. She is probably reserved with others and may find it difficult to | make friends. Once known, however, she should be very popular, for she sel- dom gives way to any type of temper display. Her friends are always perma- nent ones. She frequently eliminates the be- ginning stroke to her letters, another indication of her plain tastes. This may also be interpreted as a sign of executive abllity. She does not care about petty details, but can see things as & whole. She probably would not be a great success in very confining work where she could not express her own personality. If given free swing, she should be able to accomplish a great deal in a very little time. She may appear easygoing to her acquaintances, but they will probably find it bard to sway her from what she believes the right course. Note—Analysis of handwriting is not an ezact science. according to world in- vestigators, but all_aoree it is interesting and lots of fun. The Star presents the abgve feature in that spirit. o will receive @ hamdwriting analysis chart which you will find en interesting study. A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. Sublime Lives. honor.”—Ps., Vviil.5. Made in the image of God. the.divine ideal for him is that he shail be & God- like creature, “crowned with glory and | | honor.” " He 'is made to have dominion | over all the works of God and all His lower creation, to stand above “all sheep and oxen, yea, and the beasts of the field.” Many men are more like the beasts of the field than the creatures God i tended them to be. A beast is a crea- ture of the dust. and ther: are many men who are little more than creatures of the dust, living upon the low, creep- ing level of the unthinking and unas- piring beast, moved only by fleshly de- sires, with seldom a thought above the ground. When La Fontaine saw & broken block of marble lying in an out-of-the- way place, he stood gazing at it and soliloquized, “What will come out of it—a table, a wash basin or a god?" | That question is one that we may each | well ask concerning our life, “What will come out of it?>" If we live merely to gratify our lower natures, our baser ap- petites, then life will give us a table— eating and drinking, and animal pleas. ure will be all that life will mean to u: If we devote ourselves to social ameni- ties and r>finements, ontward appear- ances, the outside cleanliness of the cup | and platter, then life will give us a| wash bowl—making a show of ourselves | will be the only satisfaction we get out | of life. But if we deny our lower selves and fleshly desires, discipline ourselves to a rational restraint upon our animal nature. bring ourselves under the con- | trol of our higher faculties, and give the supreme attention to the spirituali- ties of life, then t> the question, “What will come ‘out of life?" the answer will be “A god!" The most tragic sight in this world is to see & man living like an animal, when he might be living like a god. It is not life merely to eet and drink and have a good tim>. It is not life merely to dress up the outside of ourselves and make an appearance. Life is not meant to be the shallow and vulger thing that many make of it. We are meant to be crowned with the glory and honor of Godlikeness. With the means God has | placed at our disposal for our help and guidance, and having the desire and will to do s0, “we can make our lives sublime.” - . e | Sandwich Spread. ! Peel and chop and salt enough cu- cumber to make one cupful when chop- ped. Drain well. Chop enough nas- turtium stems to make two tablespoon- fuls and mix with enough chopped green pepper to meke two tablespnon- fuls. Add enough mayonnaise dressing to make a mixturs that will spread well Relishes. Chili sauce seasoned with horseradish and a bit of table sauce adds zest to servings of salmon, tuna fish or crab| meat. Pickled beets are given a different spiced vinegar mixture LOOK FOR ME ON EVERY BOTTLE The “Kick™ Within the Law Yes, si () “Hast crowned him with glory and | thing that might come from a hundred | thousand girls in the United States. Man is the crown of God's creation. | She says: only to find that I then was offered from one-third to one-half of what I've been earning right along. s0 much, 5o long as I could have risen gradually, expanded. children to support. tion, Frances. ter than office work. agreeable. work in an office get a trained factory worker. son, office workers get le: heavil wark factory. ahead in a business office as it does in a factory. forewoman would not be able to get | | is tree times six——but if you really wants tang that is very pleasant by the addi- | to know I bet I kin find it fer you in tion of a few caraway seeds o the | the book. , that’s the only way of being sure that you are getting the genuine. upon the bottle be “LITTLE MAN™ DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Dm MISS DIX—Nature was not so kind to me, for I have neither s wonderful personality nor the looks of a sheik. Hence, it is rather hard for me to find girls of pride and high ideals to go to shows and social affairs. They prefer more romantic and better-appearing fellows. Is there any special formula for cultivating personality? How can a young man be popular with the girls and not be used as a convenient means of having a good time and being sort of a meal ticket? I am tired of being taken for a sap. DONALD. ANBWIE—H: is not possible for & young man to avold being made a convenience of to a certain extant by girls, any more than it is for girls to keep from going out with a lot of young men who bore them to tears, because it is only by being in the crowd and playing the game that ou stand a chance to meet the one girl or boy whom you really can fall for. If you segregate yourself, you are bound to lose out. Feeding the gold-diggers and making oneself agreeable to the wearisome Willies is the Erice of admission to society. ‘You must have a bad inferfority complex if you think girls don't want to go out with you because you are not an understudy to Valentino. Men turn down a girl because she is not pretty, but girls have more sense. Provided a man is neat and well dressed, they don't care a rap ‘whether he has & pug nose or a Grec!| profile, and they would far rather €0 out with an intelligent man with a keen line than with a dumb sheik ‘who made them work to keep the conversation going. OP’ course, personality can be cultivated. Any man can make himself an interesting companion if he will read and improve qu mind and will refrain from talking about himself and show an interest in other people. He can acquire good manners and s pleasing address, and he can learn how to do &flnn y watching more sophisticated people. There is no excuse for any man of ordinary intelligence not to learn what forks and spoons to use and how to eat and how to conduct himself like a gentleman instead of a boor. As for pleasing women, that is as simple as falling off a log. Pay them little attentions. Remember their tastes in small matters, and whether they like violets or roses or chocolates or dill pickles. Be generous, but don’t let them work you. And talk to them about themselves. This rule never falls. N DOROTHY DIX. DEA.H. MISS DIX—I have & small business and my home and have been able to keep my mother and myself by hard work and strict economy. Bix months ago my sister with her husband and four children moved in <n us and they are still here with no prospect of leaving. I have to feed and keep them all and my moth<r thinks it is no more than I should do. My sister is very disagreeable and 50 is her husband. What shall T do? JEANIE, Answer—Heaven knows, unless you spunk up and throw them out. Otherwise you will spend the balance of ycur life slaving for thm. The most curfous thing in the world is why mothers sacrifice one of their chil- dren to the others, but they do it continually. Nobody knows any way to transform the family goat into anything else. Once elected to be a goat, you are a goat to the end of the chapter. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1931) The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD, Who started her career as a frightened typist and who became one of the highest paid business women in America, It Pays Better, But— |office 4f you worked there. In other ; | words, if "you are not of the make-u Listen to Frances, who writes some- | that makes you somebody in yeur far tory, or your unfon. then in an office | you ‘propably would stay indefinitely in a small job and never make much is possible that your would be pleasanter, but I do not be- lieve that your hours would be shorter, In fact, they might be longer. Years ago, when T was teachng Eng- lish in the evening for the Women's Trade Union Lecgue of New York, a “I have been working in factories for seven years, but I am| not the generally, accepted type of factory girl. I love good litera- ture, music and the beauty of fine arts. I recoll from coarseness and vulgarity. ‘Trying to better myself, I completed a bus- iness course, going in the evenings, a factory making underwear. She was an extremely good worker and was earning about twenty-one dollars a week, at that time good wages. It would amount to about thirty-five now. But she hated factory work and was detgrmined to become an office worker. As she spoke almost no English, to be- come a stenographer was a stunendous undertaking for her. She had to learn English, she had to learn stenog- raphy, typing and American business customs—indeed, she had to become & | different person’ altogether. She stuck it out. It took her about three vears, and then she got a job in an office for ten dollars a week. Thinking she might do. better away from New York, she went to the Middle West, ard the last I heard of her she was earning twelve dollars a week as sterographer, Imagine the privations she suffered. Many a day she did not have enough to eat. She was a fine girl. But I wish she could talk to Frances. For me, I'd advise Frances to take a course in English, or drawing, or music, or something that will give her artistle expression aside from ' her viork. Helen Woodward. “This wouldn't have mattered to me But I bave two FRANCES.” You are up against the usual situa- Factory work pays bet- But it's less So_many girls would rather that it is easier to trained office worker than a For that rea Gir's pa for the chance to say that they in an office rather than in a It takes the same qualities to get If you cannot become a in ‘a factory, then you head in an SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY, (Copvright. 1931) Filled Cookies. Use & recipe for plain sugar cookles. Roll the dough thin and cut into any desired shape. Place a spoonful of jam or marmalade on a cooky, moisten the edges with water. place another cookie on top and press the edges together. Bake in a medium oven for about 15 minutes. If preferred, the following filling may be used: Put through a food chopper half a cupful of raisins, half a | cupful of dates and one-fourth cupful of nuts. Cook with half a cupful of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of flour, half a cupful of water and one tablespoon- | ful of lemon juice until thick. Cool before using. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1931. “BONERS” Humorous Tid-Bits From School Papers. HENRY VIII HAD AN ABCESS ON HIS KNEE, WHICH MADE WALK- ING DIFFICULT. A carafe is an animal with a long neck, which carries its young in & pouch. Abraham Lincoln was born in a little log cabin which he helped his father to build. In Christianity a man can only have one wife. This is called Monotony. A hamlet is a little pig. The Gorgons were three sisters that lived in the islands of the Hesperides somewhere in the Indian Ocean. They had long snakes® for hair, tusks for teeth and claws for nails, and the: looked like women, only more horrible. * A Girl Scout uld salute the flag | when 1t is Jowered or hired. . (Copyright, 1931.) NANCY PAGE Out-of-Job Men Get Home Ready. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Peter was a good citizen in his community. He contributed to the community chest, he voted, he even belonged to the Parent-Teachers' Asso- ciation. ‘This happened to be a most progressive one where fathers took as much interest as did mothers. Need- less to say, the meetings were all held ‘work girl who came to my class worked in in the evenings. But the thing whic was most on Peter's mind now wes desire to do something for the unem- pioyed. There were so many of them and winter was so close at hand. The combination of the two thoughts gave Peter his idea. get_his house read %0 doing, give empl, ng_work. He checked his heating system. but decided that wes in in good shape There were a few pipes in the base- ment which needed new w s to make them more sightly and to insulate | them. He called in‘a man to do that. Next he looked to his window strip- ping. There were rooms that had al- ways had a cold draft when the wind blew a certain way. Here was his | chance to make them more completely | airtight | A small alcove in the attic had never {been finished off. By using insulating | board he achie alcove. The g board was put together with nar rips of paneling before the whole thing was given a coat of sizing and two coats of paint He had a couple of new thelves put in the cleaning supply cup And hocks were screwed into the under side of the bottom shelf. Eyes were crewd into the handles of the brooms and brushes which made it a simple matter to hang them up ann get them off the floor. He had a pole®put crosswise in one of the clothes closets. On this hook were put the clothe: gers and lo, the cupboard held twice as many clothes, which were thrice as accessible as they had ever been before. for winter 2nd in ‘ment to men nced- i 4:30 P.M.( | aAlwavs TO JANE” ON TUES 'se sorry I can't tell you how much (Copyright, 1931 MY WASH LOOKED SO 4 ng the Anything clse is LISTENING IN ON“WHAT HAPPENED DAYS AND THURSDAYS ~WELL, | USED RINSO TODAV. ITS WONDERFUL ! Engovy ARE FASCINATING — | MUST TRY THAT SOAP —ITS JUST AS WONDERFUL FOR DISHES, TOO NEVER BRIGHT AND SNOWY — SO DO IW THE RINSO TALKIES FEATURES. Flip Ignores Twitchtail. You'll find "tis often well if you Can get another's point of view. —Flip the Terrier. ‘To ignore another person is to pay no attention to him; to act as if he wasn't anywhere about. Flip the Ter- rier, whose one ambition in life had been to catch Twitchtail the Squirrel, suddenly began to act as if there was no such person in all the great world as Twitchtail. Farmer Brown's boy couldn't understand it at all. He began to wonder if Flip was sick. If Twitch- tall suddenly popped .up out of the grass just ahead Flip would turn his head and pretend not to see him. Never before had Farmer Brown’s boy known | him to act like this. But Flip wasn't sick. wasn't sick at all. He had simply done a lot of thinking. It had all come | about as a result of the fright Talons the Golden Eagle had given him when both had tried to catch Twitchtail at the rame time and Flip had broken his own record for speed in getting back to the house, There in a dark corner of a shed he had panted for breath, and shivered and shaken with the fright that great bird with the great hooked bill and curved claws had given him. Little by little he had put himself in Twitchtail's place and found his point of view. .‘That fellow wasn't after me, he was after Twitchtall, and I guess he would hn\'s‘ caught him if it hadn't been for me,” thought Flip. “My, I would hate to have that terrible fellow hunting for No, sir, he BEDTIME STORIE me every day! I really didn't want Twitchtail. 1 chased him just for fun. | | I didn't need him for food. I had no | | real reason for killing him. It wouldn't have done me any good if I had caught and killed him. My, I should hate to ve people hunting for me every d 1d feel that I couldn't move witho hing for enemies. I guess Twitch- | tail has plenty of them, and I have | | been just one more to add to his trou. bles. I'll leave him alone after this. I | know now what it is to run for my life. | |I never did know before. I'll leave | Twitchtall “alone after this. I don't | really want him. Yes, sir, I'll leave him | alone. It will make life easier for him. | Besides, it may keep me out of trou- | ble” He shivered as he remembered | the terrible bill and claws, the great, | pow wings and the flerce eyes of ns the Eagle, Twitchtall, on his part, had alg learned a lesson. “It is a wonder I am Twitchtail to Mrs. Twitch- 1 was so intent on teasing that Dog that I never once thought of | any other danger. My, I never have had a worse fright.” | “It serves you right,” declared Mrs. | Twitchtail tartly “I've told you all along that you'd get into trouble sooner | | or later if you kcpt on teasing that| | Dog. I hope ycu have learned a lesson | that you never will forget. | \ “I have, my dear,” replied Twitchtail | meek], T'll never take another chznes | like that. It was fun to tease that Dog. because he was always so sure he could | catch me when 2l the time I knew he coul but it was a foolish thing to d>, and I know it now. I wonder what | happened to him. If hell just leave me alone T'll never tease him again.” So it came zbo that little by li Twitc il discovered thzt he no longer had an enemy in Flip. One day Flip actually surprised him so far from safety he would have had no chance to escape, but Flip pretended not t5 sce him. He ignored him and zcted just as there wasn't a plump Ground Squir- | rel within miles. Twitchtail knew then that scmething had happened to change Flip and he was no longer to be feared. | Why couldn't he | d a ncw little reading | LIPTON t ' preserves By Thornton W. Burgess. He wanted to believe Flip had decided that it was useless to chase him: that he, Twitchtall, was too smart for him, but right down inside he knew that this wasn't so. But something told him that Flip had had a change of heart, and after that he felt almost friendly toward the lively little Dog. As for Farmer Brown's Boy, he doesn't THERE IN A DARK CORNER OF A SHED HE HAD PANTED FOR BREATH. understand to this day why Flip so suddenly Icst interest in chasing Squir- ;911; for, of course, Flip never has told Hearty Sandwich. Cover a piece of toast with & slice of chicken. ~Adjust another slice, cov- ering it with a slice or two of sauted tomato. Adjust a third slice and spread on the top side with pineapple sprinkled with coconut or chopped peca®s. My Neighbor Says: Foods that spoil readily, such as milk, soup stock and meats, should ‘always be kept in the coldest part of the refrigerator. Dahlias, gladiolus and cannas should be put in Winter storage before the ground freezes. Any. time after the first killing frost and before the ground becomes frozen will do Dip pie knife in cold water be- fore cutting a lemon meringue pie and it will be much easier to serve ft. A good way to keep pumpkin is to dry it. Cut into thin slices and place around fire to dry. When wanted for use soak an hour or two, then cook in the usual way. (Copyright Domino Largest selling Cane Sugar On the air Saturday nights at 8.30: “Sweeten it with Domino” 1931) So simple to pre- pare—and so re- freshing-Lipion’s Tea iced—will al- ways be the most popular summer drink, because its marvelous taste cannotbeequalled. e T CHOICEST ORANGE PEKOE & PEKOE WITHOUT RINSO. — WHAT— YOU DONT USE IT! WHY | COULDN'T FACE WASHDAY IT SAVES ~MY, THAT MUST BE EASY ON THE CLOTHES, 700 ! SCRUBBING AND BOILING (Millions yse Rinso, €6 quhes says Mys. 3016 R “I could give f most importane white imaginape, '}, hen, too, j¢ saves nso suds; they’ s cup for cup, How thoge }, 7 hes come ,: td-wor G St. {f}' Teasons wh: 15 that j¢ wash, col w’liter,” Studds, N.w, y Ilike Rinso, bug the 5 clothes the whiegg Wa:lzingtos: D. ¢C. , lively suds a [jree as lightweighe, ne ESSLINGER’S LAGER. Order a Case—Phone = - . - creamy suds for g; i oot @ THE GRANULATED SOAP BIG ) = For e hwash. r Your Nearest Dealer 174 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. National 2400 the BIG handy for whiter washes tangerine flat crepe silk. nolt genu The bias cut of the skirt gains the easily fitted hip line. You'll find it a very simple model to make. | Style No. 3233 may be had in sizes | 16. 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust. | Sz 36 requires 3'4 yards 54-inch with 15 yard 33-inth cootrasting. For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to ‘The Washington Star’s New York Fash- jon Bureau, Fifth aven and 20th street, New York. Our large Summer fashion book offers a wide choice for your Summer ward- robe in darling styles for the children 2s well as the adults. Price of book, 10 cents. really refreshing drink! BEER was never better Telephone West 0183 Wise Brothers CHEVY CHASE OL!MM Millions use it in tub, washer and dishpan

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