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WOMAN'’S PAGE. BY MARY MARSHALL. If you talk about the new fashions for Autumn, you must talk about fagot- ing, because f2goting is one of the old- time dressmaker finishes that has been revived to give the feminine touch to many of the new dresses. It is used both” on silk and sheer wool and ap- pears on dark dresses as well as light of cherries and replace them with one | yne” cladles and: food cells old wax is blouses. Actual it has always been. v the fagoting is the same os But 1t is used with | distinction and is not applied merely for ornamentation. The material is not | cut into strips just for the sake of | puting it together again with f2goting | between. But the fagoting is used in | | & structural way to join gores, panels, | yokes, cuffs and other distinctly sep- | arate parts of the dress, and usually it | | follows a diagonal line. | For early Autumn, fagoting has ap- | peared on black satin dresses, oft>n ap- pearing as the cnly bit of trimming | and emphasizing the diagon 1 lines that |are so important at the | So well were these received by women |of good taste that the fagcted black | satin dress has become an outst:nding resent time, | featur> in the present mod>. But that | was only a beginning, and now fagot- ing has bean adopted for other mate- ria's and other types of dress. So if you want to give your homemade dress |'a look of dresmaker dist'nction by all | means do some fegoting. 1It's the same | | old fagcting that vou have doubtless | us>d in making children’s dresses, and it i very easy to do, but it has gained new distinction in the eye of well dressed women. | (Copyright. 1931.) | Beet Roses. Bo'l five med'um-sized beets in salted | water until tande:, or £-r about 40 min- | utes. Wken tender, push off the skins and with an epple corer Gig out a hole | in the root end cf the beet. Fill the hole | with tvo medium-szed carrots diced in | quartar-inch cubes and cook-d until | tender. Place the rse on a lettuce leaf | »nd pour over f it a_tablespoonful of mzlted buiter. Serve hct. o % | Cherry-Nut Salad. | Remove the stones from one large can cupful of skelled hazel nuts. Place with | lettuce leaves on salad plates. Use | | either a French or mayonnaise dressing. i A WASHINGTON ‘DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. 'HE new Senator from lowa—white- T haired. handsome Lester Dickinson, fresh from the House—probably real- ized he would get a rise out of Pat Harrison the other day when he asked the Mississippi Senator a set of qgestions about the tariff bill. +Dickinson may be a newcomer to the Senate. but his hplf dozen terms as a _member of the House have glven him ample opportunity to kpow how Senator Pat reacts to such things So he probably wesn't surprised at a]l when Harrison responded with a challenge for a joint debate “at any time and any place.” “Such a debate, if it is held—and Hickinson has ‘accepted—holds promise of being an event well worth one's time. th principals are powerful orators, though their styles of oratory differ widely. ‘Byron Patton Harrison, called by some “the Mississippl bearcat,” is_the prize baiter of Republicans in the Sen- ate. He counts that day lost that does not find him hurling caustic criticism at the G. O. P. and lts principles “His wit, his sarcasm and his logic are familiar to those who bave seen him in action. He has been known to keep pushing his finger against a raw Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. . The Two Selves. t Every one of us has a double self. \larious names have been given to these tivo selves, but for our purposes it will do very well to call one of them the “¥eal” self and the other the “mask.” If we could all throw off our masks, we would be very much alike. The fact that we don’t throw them off is the bi reason for inditidual differences. Si when you try to study somebody, you #fe veally studying his false face. . Mark Twain studied people rather than books. He tells a story of identical tiins, one of which was drowned in a bath tub in infancy. which was drowned until the grown-up survivor decided that he was the one that had been drowned. The story passes for literature, because it tells one fact about the meaning of life: By the time we are full grown. we are not sure which f onr selves is the real one. We continually confuse appearances with reality, the mask with the real self. Sometimes, however, the self we lost frr the psychological bathtub haunts us fike a ghost. Many a man facing this ghost of his real self resolves thereafter to be human. But he doesn't get far before he finds it necessary to retrieve his mask. Perhaps it is, after all, the best thing td do. Some people appear queer merely because they behave like human beings. : (Copyright, 1931.) g 0 MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Baked Apples Hominy with Cream French Toast, Plum Jelly Coffee LUNCHEON. Ham Omelet Pickles, Olives, Icebox Rolls Chocolate Blanc Mange Oatmeal Cookies Tea DINNER. ‘Tomato Bisque Hamburg Steak, Brown Gravy Delmonico_Potatoes Green Beans Pepper Salad, French Dressing Peach Pudding Coffee FRENCH TOAST. Two eggs, one-half teaspoon salt, few grains pepper and a little butter, two cups milk and six slices dry bread. Beat eggs slightly; add salt, pepper and milk, strain into a shallow dish. Dip bread in mixture and cook on a hot, well-buttersd pan until the under side is brown. Turn and brown other side and serve very hot. CHOCOLATE BLANC MANGE. One-half cup sugar, one table- spoon cornstarch, two tablespoons cocoa, one and one-third cups milk, one-half teaspoon vanilla. Mix ingredients and cook in & double boiler until thick. One tablespoon cornstarch may not be enough as different brands vary s0. Remove from stove and beat two minutes with an eggbeater. Serve cold with marshmallow or cream. This recipe serves four (small servings). PEACH PUDDING. Pare and cut fine ripe peaches in halves. Crack a of the zlu. remove and blanch the ernels. Butter a deep baking dish, put in two layers of the fruit, dredge each layer with flour, sprinkle gencrously with sugar, dot with bits of butter, then add the kernels and one cup of water. Place a dish over the peaches. cover with a rich biscuit dough and bake in a hot Serve with lemon sauce. (Copyricht, 1931.) ew | frequently | Senate floor. once expressed it | Republican nerve until somebody Is provoked to a scream. But with it all they like him. They'll confess to you that he has a way of being effective on such occasions, but, never personally offensive. It is not Senator Pat’s way to make knife-like thrusts at his opponent as | Caraway of Arkansas does. Nor does he resort to the thunder of Joe Robin- | son of Arkansas. the honeyed way, the y banked with flowers, the | path of delight. His blows are delivered with a smile. At all times he is the ties up with h‘m on the “The Senator from Mississippi has the ability to charm a bird out of a tree.” Senator Dickinson employs_different tactics. Aside from his activities on the floor of the House, he has ben a chautauqua lecturer on farm problems His colleagues in the House regarded him as one of the most powerful orators on agriculture. President Coolidge once recommended_him to a Massachusetts audience as the “strongest speaker” on this subject. He is quick to show his temper, but he_subsides just as quickly. | “Perhaps the late Nick Longworth described him better when he once said it Dickinson ever needed an affidavit that he had b>>n a “hell-raiser” for agiiculture he should come to him. BONERS” Tid-Bits From Papers. Humorous School No one knew | GO TO AFRICA TO HUNT PEOPLE | RHINOSTRICHES. i | A grass widow is the wife of a vege- | taria | An invoice is another | conscience. n. A mayor is a he horse. To avoid auto-infection, put slip cov- ers on the seats and change them fre- quently, and always drive with the win- dows open. Letters in sloping type are in hys- terics. Mussolini is a sort of material used | for ladies’ stockings. | A monolouge is a conversation be. tween two people, such as a husband “ and wife. | (Copyright, 1931.) | Potato and Cheese. | Mix five small potatoes, grated, with two slightly beaten eggs, five table. | spoonfuls of grated cheese, five tea spoonfuls of flour and one-fourth cup- | ful of milk. Beat until light. from a tablespoon into hot lard and | fry until they are light brow ANY substitutes Jook like Kotex. But few offer any- thing like the strict, hygienic purity of Kotex . . . the pad that's bought by hospitals in enormous quantities. This bealth protection should be your first concern in selecting a sanitary pad. You have itin Kotex. But how about those unknown sub- stitutes, of whose makers you know nothing? How are they made? Where? Would hospitals sanction them? Would yow, if you knew their origin? | three tablespoonfuls of melted butter. name for ! but singular in construction. say, “Is there any news?” not ‘“Are | insisted that “news” was plur: Drop | once telegraphed a reporter: THE EVENING NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. Illustrations by Mary Foley. CIV. Wax Makers, Hymenoptera. ESTOONS of little wax makers, with their “tummies” facing outward, the little wax makers hang for' hours in the very hot hive. Twenty pounds cf honey to make one pound of wax. The bee- keeper supplics his bees with as much wax as he can. After the wax maker has eaten all th> honey she can hold she climbs to the ceiling gnd clings there with her front feet. Her sister worker comes alcng and hangs to the hind feet of the first wax maker. When the last| worker's feet touch the floor, a new festoon is begun. Then the festoons swing toward each other and catching hold by the middle pair of legs they cling together in a cluster. By some special internal exertion they produce an intense body heat. In several hours thin transparent disks of wax will appear on their abdominal wax plates. The wax worker n-w ap- pears. She clips cff the disk with ic wax shears and chews it up, mixing it with saliva. To the empty frame she climbs; molds with trowel-lik> jaws the pliable mixture into the wejl known hexagonal cells. One worker' does not complete a cell, she merely adds her bit and goes back for mol Each comb is composed of a double layer of thesc cells. There is one partition as base and bottcm of each tier. If the family is emall, the wax mak-; ers also do the cell making. New wax is used for the fresh honey. For used and often it is mixed with pollen. When cells are not in us> they are broken down and reused to build other combs. Nothing could be more clean and dainty than the new wax made to hold the golden honey. The bes are fa- mous for their cleanliness. The nec- tar is gathered from the deep cup of the flowers, mixed with th> acid which the bee manufacturers before it really becomes_honey. Man has dcmesticated the bee for his nceds. There are cver 100,000 bee- keepers in the United States. Millions of pounds of honey are used and mil- lions of pounds are going to waste be- cause of lack of bees to gather it for us. Beeswax is an important product and thousands of pounds of it ars used in the arts and trades. The little worker leacs a busy life and during the| rush season she lives only a few| months. In the old days thousands of | useless drones consumed great quanti- | ti*s of honey and the t'me of the work- ers to feed the lazy fellows. Today, man regulates the number of star board- ers and saves quite a bit of the stored sweet. Bees have many lessons to teach us. They do not sting their friends and it is most interesting to see them work in the crowded glass hive. No jostling or quarreling. each about his work and ! minding his own business. . Vegetables Au Gratin. Mix two or more kinds of freshly- cocked or left-over vegetables, such as string beans, carrots, turnips or cauli flower, and place in a shallow baking dish. ' Pour over the vegetables a thin | white sauce to which some cheese has been added. Cover with buttered bread crumbs and bake in a moderate oven until the sauce bubbles and the crumbs are brown. | Carrot Custard. Beat three eggs slightly, add one and one-half cupfuls of grated raw carrot or mashed cooked carrot, three cupfuls of milk, one teaspoonful of salt and Pour into a greased baking dish, place on a rack in a pan of hot water and bake in a moderate oven for about one hour, or until the custard is set in the center. Serve at once. Turnips may be used in the same way as carrots. JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. :ARE THERE ANY NEWS?” ASKED DAD, HERE IS AN ITEM ABOUT A WOMAN WHO CREMATED HER THIRD HUSBAND,” | ANSWERED. “SHE HAD HUSBANDS TO BURN) WAS DAD'S RESPONSE. o b sl b N. E. G—“News" is plural in form Thus we there any news?” Horace Greeley, the amous editor and reformer, “Are there , The reporter ahswered, Trust no Substitute | because it “looks like Kotex” Why take chances, ever? Kotex is available everywhere . . . just in- sist on genuiize Kotex. Kotex is wonderfully soft. It is treated to deodorize. Adjustable. Disposable. Wear it on either side. KOTEX itscy Napkind STAR, WASHINGTON, MODES=== OF THE MOMENT For ear Pt brown satin cont WL seamlbess cape AL HE BY WILLIAM This Is a Gold Star Letter, To Dr. Brady: Although you don't know it, you are a very old friend of mine. 1 read you daily, quote your teachings on all occasions and strive always to practice what you preach. During_the past year I have often | thought I should like to tell you about & most exciting incident in my life, but the mother of four small children doesn’t often find uninterrupted mo- ments for correspondence. So far as rainfall is concerned. this is oftan a dry country. My husband felt he was doing his bit when he con- | structed a six-acre dam on my father's 1 hadn't seen the place for sev- | farm. eral months and didn’t know that after the dam had been completed my hus- band dug & hole 11 feet deep near a well to keep the dam water from over- flowing into the well. I was working in a garden nearby when my 7-year-old son asked to go I gave permission, telling him not to go beyond a certain I felt he would be safe in the shallow water. Not long afterward my 5-year-old daughter screamed that “Ellis fell in!” He had stepped off into that 11-foot hole. I must have stcod for several seconds, then started to run straight toward him. I suddenly realized that I could get to him more surely if I approached from another point. I ran back through many rods of shallow water and plunged into the hole and ! found him floating just under the sur- face, head down. I have never been able to swim, and I can’t swim today. My toes were five feet from the bottom. Yet I did not sink. I wore an old- fashioned stiffly starched sun bonnet. I swallowed much dam water but got none in my nose. I grabbed my boy by the wrist with my right hand and somehow turned toward the edge of the hole. I slapped the water feebly with my left hand and tried to tell myself that if I hadn’t sunk yet per- haps I could stay that way till some help arrived. I had screamed at daughter to run for daddy before I entered the hole. Then I thought: “Dr. Brady has said that even if a child JORDAN’S NEW RENTAL PLAN 5 CENTS A DAY—RENTS A MAJESTIC eecric REFRIGERATOR NO METER FORMONEY Many have asked if we at- tach a rental meter for daily collection. not do. often it is there is a danger of current being cut off if leave for a few days. He spoiled food. We send a for the monthly rental, This we do We realize that hard to keep change in the house, and that D.:C., Paris 2l days : i shovulders. The Aem ru/{f& /&rc.r in /rma,é crn[’y. | ALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. D. has been under water an hour the child may be saved by artificial respi- rEa]vl.’lon. If I can keep afloat I can save | s.” | Suddenly I thought: “A person in the water must do something with his feet.” 1 began to do something with my feet and touched the edge of the hole. I got out and into the shallow water, dragging my boy. He was not breath- ing and was limp like a rag. Dry ground was many vards away. I very tired. I sat down in the with my knees folded under me pulled my boy acrcss my lap, keeping his face out of the water and his arms stretched out above his head. I tried to press down with my hands on the small of his bick and follow directions | T had read in_your column. I don't| know how well I 'did it in that awkward | position, but suddenly he breathed and then began to cry exactly as he did when he was born. Twenty hours aft- erward he was ss active as a 7-year- old could be expected to be. If you have read this long story I have taken up too much of your time, and I suppose it is valuable, but I thought you might be glad to know that a South Dakota mother feels that to you and God she owes the life of her’ eldest son. New Testament mira- cles seem true to me now. They didn't before. Sincerely, K— K Glad to know it? When I started your story, ma'am, I was pretty well. In fact, I'had just passed an examina- | tion with a standing of about 98.2 per | cent good health. But before I fin- ished I was suffering with a bad at- tack of hay fever or something. Il say it is the finest illness I've had in quite a while. May I not offer some timely advice | now? Why not make up your mind that before the Summer is over you and every other member of your family | shall know how to swim? 1t is a val- | uable accomplishment. Nobody's edu- cation is quite complete without it, even in a dry country. (Note: Several other readers have thanked God and Dr. Brady for some- thing. This is the first one who has acknowledged my priority like that.) Brand New —Now you can Refrigeration for daily as your ice bill. Many people have hesitated | flour and one-fourth teaspoonful of salt. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1931 LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. THE WEAKLY NEWS. ‘Weather: Mixed. \ SISSIETY PAGE. Miss Mary Watkins the famous char- ity werker found a little mouse cawt in a trap in their back kitchin Wens- day afternoon, and before anybody elts had a chance to see it and drownd it she quick made Mr. Puds Simkins come in and open the trap and leeve it ex- cape while she stood on top of a chair screetching. Mr. Sid Hunts big brother Fred is not werking at present on account of waiting for somebody to give him a| chance to lern motor boat racing. BIZZNESS OPPORTUNITIES. For sale or exchange—A alarm clock that hasent ran for 5 years so it awt to be just about reddy to go again. See Shorty Judge any time. INTRISTING FACKS ABO! INTRISTING PEEPLE. One time Lucky Leroy Shooster swallowed a dime, the lucky part be- ing it dident belong to him. Glasses Magee likes to look up long werds in the dictionerry to find out what they mean in case he ever gets a chance to use them, wich he never does on account of forgetting them again; rite away. ' POME BY SKINNY MARTIN. Nuthing There to Wash. I have no ambition to be an erster, I think they look like heck, The only thing in their favor | Being they dont haff to wash their neck. | DAILY DIET RECIPE | | BLUEBERRY MUFFINS. Flour, two cups; sugar, three tablespoons; baking powder, four teaspoons; salt, one teaspoon. Milk, one cup; egg, one; melted shortening, three tablespoons; blueberries, one and one-half cups. MAKES ABOUT 12 LARGE OR 18 SMALL MUFFINS. Mix and sift dry ingredients. Add milk (fresh or diluted canned milk can be used). Add well beaten egg and melted shortening (butter or substitute). Add blue- berries. If speed is used in stirring muffin_ mixture texture will be fine. Bake in greased muffin tins in hot oven (425 degrees F) about 25 minutes. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes starch, pro- tein, some sugar, fat and fiber. Lime, Iron, vitamins A and B present. Can be eaten in mode tion by normal adults of average or under weight and by children 12 years and over. Sauce for Fish. Blend four tablespoonfuls of melted butter with three tablespoonfuls of Add two cupfuls of milk and stir con- stantly until thickened. Chop two hard-cooked eggs and add to the sauce with one tablespoonful of lemon juice and pepper to season. A well beaten egg yolk stirred into the mixture after it is taken from the fire makes it richer. Coffee Gelatin. Soften two tablespoonfuls of gelatin in half a cupful of cold water for five minutes, then add three and one-half cupfuls of hot coffee, half & cupful of sugar and a little salt. Stir until the elatin and sugar have dissolved. Pour nto a wet mold and leave in & cold place to set. Turn out onto a plate and serve with plain or whipped cream. Alec the Great i «“ i \\( /"; {A‘:}h. o £ P 7 302 S st T quite like the figure I have. I wvouldn't care to be thinner. That's why I'm never, never late to heed th= call to dinner. Brand New enjoy Electrical the same amount in the purchase of Electric Refrigeration thinking that the purchase could be made at some later date and that the while longer. old ice box would do for a Now is the chance to actually have the pleasure and the enjoyment of sanitary refrigeration at an expense no more than the dail ly ice bill. Our new plan will give home and apartment owners and renters this new and practical way of preserving their food. Come in and ask about this NEW RENTAL PLAN. You will be more than delighted. Just think—only 15¢ a day! ington. month basis. For FOUR DOLI PIANO and for TEN DOLLAR! Just why should we not apply rator Department? Rental ord the Refrigerator without the obligal the you nce bill We believe that this is the first time this plan has been offered in Wash- For many years we have rented pianos on a month-to- LARS we rent an UPRIGHT S we rent a GRAND PIANO. a rental plan to the Refrige ers will be filled only in the manner in which they are received. Do not delay if you are interested in having the enjoyment of an Electric tioh to purchase. Call NAtional 3223 for rental agent to call—or, better still, come in for information ARTHUR JORDAN 1239~ G Street~ Cor 13 FEATURES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Muscle Toning. | Every woman realizes that the years take their toll from her facial muscles by making them less elastic less | firm. But it is heartening to realize | also that the proper form of facial mas- sage will help keep these muscles toned and firm. When possible it is delight- ful to have this work done by a com-| petent beauty operator, but in many | cases this is impossible, and after a busy day milady will find that giving herself a facial is not only very rest- ful, but if given frequently enough, such treatments are sure to bring a perma- | nent benefit to the muscles of the face. | First wrap a towe] afound the hair to protect it from the cream and then cover the face and neck with a gener- ous coating of cleansing cream..Remove this with tissues and apply a tissue cream to lubricate the massage. Begin the massage by placing the second and third fingers of both hands in the cen- ter of the forehead. Now go back and forth across the forehead, making semi- circles with the fingers. The next step is to massage the crow's feet cr laughing wrinkles around the outer edges of the eyes. Hold the second and third fingers of the right hand apart and place them over the Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Baby May Spit Oll;o:lrfl Taste of New . Adults "accept as commonplace the fact that they had to “learn to likc olives.” All new foods are olives to the baby. He isn't used to the taste or the texture of them, and because of this his first impulse may be to refuse them. When feeding the baby a thick food, mothers are apt to place the food in the front of baby'’s mouth. When he rolls this around with his tongue, it is very easy for him to push it out. He may be quite eager to swallow it. but he “isn't given a fair chance. Small spoonfuls of any thick food stould be put far back on the baby's tongue. Swallowing is automatic when food touches this portion of the tongue. The mother should not show her annoyance if baby accidentally spits out the first few mouthfuls of a strange food. Of course it does annoy her, for she has prepared it csrefully and knows bsby should have it. But baby very easily gets the idea that this is some new kind of game. He can spit out the cereal faster than mother can spoon it into him, and he can always be the winner If he so desires. It is better, then, not to play that game. Mrs. L. L. S. wishes I would help her is problem. “My 6-month-old she writes, “has never had cereals or any solid foods. She has had orange and tomato juice since she was one month old. Recently I started to give her cereal and she refused it ab- solutely. For several days she has re- fused her orange juice. Right now she is teetting. Would this cause her re- fusal to eat” he weighs 18 pounds. What foods are suitable to her at this age? Shall I wait for cooler weather to offer them?” The leaflet I frequently offer to mothers discusses. “Diet for the child from two to 12 months.” In it you will find the foods, in addition to the milk formula or nursings, that are essential at_this period. If the baby is feverish, lacks appe- tite. and the bowels are disturbed, you may suspect rightly that teeth were being cut. During this short period, scarcely more than a week, it is better to reduce the regular diet. and most unwise to offer any new foods. If the weather is hot, make no changes in the diet. Do not offer any cereal for a few days, but permit baby to recover from her temporary indisposition and regain Fer appetite. Then stirt cereal again, foilowing the suggestions in the first of this article. Orange juice. cod liver oil cereal and vegetables are all in the diet of the 6-month-old child. | under the eyebrow. LEEDS. skin :exx‘t to t?!theye. Now with the secon nger of e left hand massage between the spread fingers of the right hand with a rotary movement, which goes down and out from the eye. Witn the middle finger of each hand, beginning at the inner corners of the eyes. follow along the bony cavity just Pause and rotate at the outer corner of the eyes, then bring the fingers back lightly across the eyelids. 3 Beginning at the inner corner of the | eyes, use just one finger and make small circles down each side of the nose. Then beginning at the wing of the nose, use the second fingers of each hand and use the rotary movements up to the temples. Beginning at the cor- ners of the mouth, use the same move- ments up to the ears. To lift the lines of the mouth place the thumb and first finger under the chin; separate them and move them up each side cf the chin with a lifting movement to the corners of the mouth. Repeat_the movement. this time going from the corner of the mouth to the wing of the nose and up to the inner corner of the eyes. To strengthen the muscles at the sides of the face, execute tiny rotary circles from the center of the chin along the side of the face up to the lobes of the ears. Finally, massage the neck thoroughly with long stroking movements with all the fingers, - . Ham a la King. Saute one large green pepper, minced, in four tablespoonfuls of butter. When tender, add four tablespoonfuls of flour, and when cooked add two cupfuls of milk, gradually, and seasoning. Wipe the fat from & piece of ham from the end and remove all gristle. Cut up fine and add to the sauce. When ready to serve, add three hard-cooked eggs, cut up. and mix all together. Serve on toast. Serve with a fruit salad. Savory Sandwich. Use about two tablespoonfuls of chili sauce to half a cupful of baked beans, mash the mixture until it is smooth :nd ’;prpafl on brown bread or graham Tea My Neighbor Says: Mend clothes, especially starched ones, before sending them to the laundry, so that when they are returned. clean and nicely folded, there will be no need to disar- range and crumple them for mending purposes. Few people know how to hang sheets properly on the line. Shake them well while still wet and hang them with the hems to- gether and the hem edge pinned 10 the line. This prevents whip- ping the corners and lessens the we'r and tear, while the sheet will need less pulling into shape for the ironing. f or mutton drippings which 0 be used for pastry should beaten to a cream with a ca~poon of baking powder and a few drops of lemen juice. If this will be much b o (M&.—y FOR BABY SSafe.. FOR YOU and YOURS EXTRA CARE 2/ PROTECTION at NO EXTRA COST ‘Wise mothers, anxious to safeguard the health of their families, nd thrifty housewives delight in the snowy whiteness of their linens, the freshness of wearing apparel and daintiest personal articles when returned by HOME LAUNDRY .. . and the cost means a real saving in they know “Nothing time and money. Then, too, is ‘Lost” at Home Laundry.” DAMP WASH—I-Day Service Everything washed neatly folded and returned damp in wax paper. spotlessly clean, Sc b THRIFTY—2-Day Service All articles carefully washed, flac work and handkerchicfs finished, wearing apparel nc completely pl folded and returned damp in wax piper. DOUBLE CHECK' All articles, carefully sorted for fabric and color, are washed in NET BAGS with rain-soft water and pure soap flakes. 3 to 3 successive suds baths, 4 to 6 rinses, drying without wringing or crushing, careful finishing end SANITATION. d efficient inspection assure 10090 CLEANLINESS Enjoy this extra protection at no extrs cost, Call ATlante 2400 HOME %n’h ; Gihe HOME .. LAUNDRY