Evening Star Newspaper, October 13, 1931, Page 49

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WOMAN'’S PAGE. When Meat Supplies Are Short BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Every homemaker knows the delight and despair of having unexpected guests arrive about dinner time, guests whom you are so pleased to see that they are Urged to remain for the meal. although DUMPLINGS MAY AUGMENT A STEW. # will tax ingenuity to know just how to eke out the meat so that it will ap- pear ample. The main meat dish can be aug-| mented in various ways according to the kind and method of cooking. For example, dumplings for a stew or rag- out take but a few moments to prepare and cook. Be sure not to put in much shortening as the fat from the meat supplies almost enough. M made for a ragout which is in & rather shallow saucepan, especially if the cover does not fit absolutely tight, it will be nec- essary to transfer the ragout to a deep- er pot, with well fitting lid, and add a little more liquid, either water or soup stock. Put in enough for the dumplings to cook for 15 minutes without the in- gredients burning. There should be a rich gravy. Steamed baking powder biscuits make a good substitute for dumplings. Put them around the serving platter and pour the gravy over them. If hamburg steak, or any minced meat preparation, ! is the main dish, rounds of toast under | small cakes of servings of the meat help | out decidedly. A simplified “assorted cuts” meat dish can be made when cold sliced meat is | the main dish, and there is not ample |of any one kind. For this the emer- | gency canned food shelf may be called upon. Slices of corned beef and tongue can be alternated with whatever va- riety of meat you already have. Ar- range the.slices attractively in alterna- tion and dress the dish with parsley, celery tops or whatever green succulent vegetable there is on hand. If there is nothing of this kind available, edge the platter with sliced hard-cooked eggs and oli Rose geranium leaves can be used and are decidedly ornamental. Baking powder patties can be used for any meat preparation, minced or diced. Celery can be added and various other ingredients which not only in- crease quantities but add to the de- liciousness of the flavor. Sweet pepper slivers, mushrooms, chopped carrots, to- matoes and shreds of uncooked onion or chopped boiled onions are favorite in- gredients to include in these patty- Alling mixtures. Cut & circle from the center of each biscuit and scoop out most of the inside to form shells from ready-baked biscuits. Or make flat thin biscuits and put a ring of the dough on to\: of each, securing the two together with white of egg. and bake. | The hollow will be ready for the filling. | (Copyright, 1931.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS, ‘When You Day-Dream. The next time you day dream stop | and think it over. That is, if you can. It's easy enough to think a day dream_over after you have just had | one. It's another, ‘and quite another, | psychological stunt to make an analysis | of a day dream while you are day | dreaming. The fact is, it is next to, if not impossible, to make a study of & day dream in action. The reason is this: Day dreams are constructed out of your emotional | make-up. This material bobs up un- | wittingly out of the unconscious. You { have no control over its coming and very little control over the forms this emotional mind-stuff will take. The only way you can handle such mind- stuff is to let it have its way and then rather half-heartedly think it over | afterward. Half-heartedly, because most | people are rather ashamed of their day | dreams. People will talk ebout their | dreams, but not about their day dreams. This is because they regard their day dreams as something more personal | than their night dreams. | Since day dreams are so fllusive, it does not follow that they are not worth post-dreaming examination. They are very important. They are mood indicators. And moods mean a lot in | the course of the day's work. (Copyright, 1931.) YOUR BABY AND MINE MRYTLE MEYER ELDRED. Don’t Judge Harshly. ‘The parent who can “get along” amiably with her meighbors is often & wildcat when she feels her child is being mistreated or slighted. She ex- pects her offspring to be appreciated at his full value, though she has no hesitancy about pointing out the un- likableness of the neighbors’ children. ‘There is no doubt that the best of us cannot give the neighbors’ children quite the appreciation we give our own. ‘We are inclined to consider their mis- behavior, their bad manners, their quarreling, inexcusable. Our own little lamb is, of course, blameless or at is unwise and silly to quarrel with neighbors because of their children actions toward our own. The neighbors’ children are seldom any better or any worse than ours. We view them through distorted l"!h”es. Mrs. G. H. M. to tell. You've probably heard one like it, or been a partner to a similar | situation. “My little boy is 4 years old,” she writes, “and there is only | one family on our street with whose children he can play. The children’s ages are 313, 7 and 8. They are so mean to my little boy. .When he over to their house, they pick on him 80 that he always comes home crying. If he so much as touches their toys, they strike him. But when they come to our house, they run through it like & drove of wild animals. Usually he is so0 tickled to have them play with him that he would give them every- thing he possesses. It just makes me burn with indignation. “I have spoken to the mother about . but she just laughs and says. ‘Let them alone’ I don't think she cares what they do to my child. Sometimes I could just ery, I feel so badly for the little fellow. He is so lonesome and Deeds companions so badly. What shall ‘The two older children should not y with the youriger ones. When here is such disparity in ages, chil- dren cannot be companionable. In- vite the younger child to play with your boy and exclude the older ones. Give them sll the toys you have and then busy yourself elsewhere, letting them learn to get along with each other. If they fight roughly, don’t blame the other child, but view them impartially and separate them. Tell both of them that when they can stop fighting. thev can play together again. That ends all discussion of who was DAILY DIET RECIPE PEANUT BUTTER CAKE. Peanut butter, one-third cup. Sugar, one cup. , two. Milk, one cup. Vanilla, one teaspoon. ‘Wholewheat flour, two cups. Baking powder, four teaspoons. Salt, one-fourth teaspoon. Icing. Hot strong coffee, five spoons. Peanut butter, one and one-half tablespoons. Vanilla, one teaspoon. Powdered sugar, two cups. TWO-LAYER CAKE. Cream peanut butter and sugar. Add well beaten egg yolks, milk, vanilla and flour mixed with baking powder and salt. Then fold in beaten egg whites. Bake in moderate oven in two layer pans about 25 minutes. For icing pour coffee over butter and add vanilla and sugar and beat until almy. Enough to fill and ice e. table- DIET NOTE. # Recipe contains protein, starch, sugar and fat. A rich food. Lime and iron are also present. Should not be eaten by one wishing to reduce nor should it be given to children because of the coffee, Should be eaten in moderation, either with fruit or at any meal with plenty of green vegetables, as a familiar story to blame. Let them both suffer the penalty of having to play alone. Stop viewing your child with tear- filled eyes. He isn't to be pitied. Do not stand over him. commiserating with bim and letting him see how good you think he is and how mean the other children. Such an attitude develops in him a smug priggishness which will make him eternally disliked by other children. X A mother has a right to separate children when they are hurting each other. That is all the interference she needs to make with their playing. Per- haps readers would find “Help in Se- curing Neighborhood Peace” a helpful leaflet to possess. Just a stamped, self- addressed envelope sent with your re- quest to the “Your Baby and Mine" department of this newspaper will bring | & copy of this leaflet. KITCHEN COMMENTS BY WILLA HOYT. WH.EN planning to make cake, think first of the time you wish to use it. A plain cake recipe is quite all right if the cake is to be eaten at once or on the day it is baked. Choose a cake, made with more butter Sort Alling, 4 you" expers it "to. Keep 50 g, if you expect it to fresh for several days. = Think how much more accurately you can measure ingredients if you have a glass measuring cup, instead of & tin or aluminum cup, and one that is divided not only into half-cup and quarter-cup sections, but into third- cup sections as well. The glass cups are not expensive. You can suggest variety in salads merely by using a new or elaborated dressing with the same old salad greens. Thus you may serve sliced tomatoes with French dressing one night, quar- tered tomatoes with Russian dressics the next, and whole tomatoes stuffed :thflx:u{g‘nrxaufije‘ ;ndfichopped egg dress- g the t without running the "‘5 of l'm.'/nd otony. il you do not like eggplant that is fried in deep hot fat, try it sliced fairly thin and dipped in egg, then once in fine cracker crumbs. Fry rather slowly in butter and serve at once. The secret of goodness here is not us- ing a too-thick or too-coarse coating of crumbs. Many find it more satisfactory to serve dinner at the earliest hour possible —even as early as 5:30, where all mem- bers of the family can gather at that time. In homes where there are chil- dren this is especially convenient, and viewed from the health standpoint, the e‘;rll{e menel {lhvm Io‘t:ld a better chance come thoroughly digesf the diner goes to bed. RSNt . To Serve on Toast. Cut four slices of bacon fine and cook erisp in a skillet. Add two medium sized tomatoes, chopped, and cook until soft. Slightly beat three eggs and add ::}‘Ldll:d p,ep'ger. fl'lcg stir all until of a onsistency. Servy i 18 Y. e on a lettuce Alec the Great I THE EVENING STAR, ‘| WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Offiod was a big attraction at the Gold Globe Theater, on the old post office site? THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE An empire costume slip that you'll find essentially smart for the new Eugenie frocks. It is shaped to give a brassiere ef- fect. It hugs the hips with gradual widening toward the hem. | It's the most comfortable slip to |wear. And to make it! Youll be amazed! Just a few seams to join. Style No. 3369 may be had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 36 requires 2!; yards 39-inch Remnants of crepe de chine and flat crepe may be purchased now in ex- quisite quality for a very small amount. Choose now! You might also con- sider it to make for a Christmas gift. It will receive a hearty welcome. For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The Washington Star’s New York Fashion Bureau, Fifth avenue and 29th street, New York. Don't envy the woman who dresses well and keeps her children’ well dressed. Just send for your copy of our Fall and Winter fashion maga- zine. It shows the best styles of the com- ing season. And you may obtain our pattern at cost price of any style shown. The pattern is most economical in material requirements. It enables you to wear the new frocks at little expense—two frocks for the price of one. ‘You will save $10 by spending a few cents for this book. So it would pay you to_send for your copy now. Ad- dress Fashion Department. Price of book, 10 cents. Taffy. Stir four cupfuls of medium brown sugar with one tablespoonful of corn syrup and one cupful of water in a large saucepan and cook rapidly until the bubbles seem thick. Add half a cupful of cream slowly and continue cooking until the syrup dropped in water is quite hard and brittle. Do not stir. When the syrup is quite hard add one teaspoonful vanilla, and without, stirring pour into & shallow n and let cool. When cool enough to ndle, pull until light in color, When too hard to pull, lay on the table and cut into strips or pieces. Look Lovely Tonight ‘Brings new skin beauty to sallow, dingy com To_look your loveliest, you must neutralize the harmful skin acids that are ruining your complexion. Doctors acid inside body with milk of magnesia. And now derma- tologists are se- curing amazing results in banishing complexion faults with cremed magnesia. All you do is anoint your skin with it, massage and rinse with water. It’s as simple as washing your face. You will be surprised and delighted at how much even one week’s use im- proves your complexion. Tell-tale lines of age, sallowness, coarse pores and blemishes clear right up. To get genuine cremed magnesia, ask your druggist for Denton’s Facial Magnesia. The dollar size contains twice as much as the sixty cent size. DENTON'S CREMED | *. K acial Magnesia WASHINGTON, D, €. ‘TUHBSDAY, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX EAR MISS DIX—I love & young lady, who is very selfish. If she doesn’t get her own way in everything, she frets and whines and says things for which she is sorry afterward. She also has a very bad temper. Every one says she ‘has been spoiled from a little girl up. Now what I would like to know is whether this girl will change after we are married. Will this girl make a good wife, or should I try to IoneDto her? Answer—No, she will not change. A girl who has been 'UBTFUL. iled spof by her parents makes the worst possible wife and she expects her husband to be the same kind of doormat her father and mother have been. She never changes, because what has been bred in her from infancy up has become part of her character and can never be eradi L & selfish girl. She will make you perfectly miserable ‘1‘)0 y;uo do. Don't marry THY DIX. Dum MISS DIX—Which is greater, love for your parents or for your husband? I married three years ago, but a year and a half later I left my husband and went back home. parents I still loved my husband and longed for him. back to him and wish I was back with my But when I was with my Now I have gone parents. You see, Miss Dix, 1 am full of life and fun and my husband is very quiet. .At home with my father and mother and brothers and sisters we have a nice time together, always something doing and fun and laughter among ourselves, but with my husband there is no even talk to me. Is it too late to pleasure, no amusement. He doesn't g0 back to my parents? JUST 21 YEARS OLD, Answer—What you want is not a husband, it is & playmate, and it is & pity that the man you are married to isn't wise enough to see that and do something to keep you amused and satisfied. He thinks he has been a good husband because he is good and kind to you and he doesn't see that you need pleasure just as much as you need bread. I AM always sorTy for young girls who belong to a big, gay, affectionate family, and who have had a joyous home life, when they marry and 80 to live by themselves, with just for company a husband who is away all day, who comes home too tired at night even to talk and who wants to flop down and rest. Nobody can imagine the loneliness and the homesickness of these young brides who miss the going and the coming, the laughter and the jokes and the turmoil that they have been ac- customed to. But, my dear child, when you marry you take upon yourself very definite obligations and you must in honor fulfill them. You promised to cleave to your husband “until death do us part” and you must not be running back home to mother just because you are lonely. When you marry you start the real business of life and you must think of that in- stead of amusing yourself. You must adjust yourself to your husband’s life and take this for your comfort, that in a little while if you stick to it you will get over your homesickness and make new friends and be happy. (Copyright. DOROTHY DIX. 1931) Teaching Boys to Obey ¢T'HAT darned old teacher! She's given us more night work and I don't think it's fair.” Bill slapped his books on the swing and slumped down dejectedly beside | them. His father, who happened to be at home, called up from the lawn where he was arranging the sprinkler. “What's the row about now? What's the mat- ter?” “Night work! Darned old night work! We've got that old Miller woman for a teacher and she fires night work at us and us kids want tb play. If our new team doesn't get time to practice we might as well bust up. Only Jim and me have night work—the other kids have decent teackers. Bill's mother came out to hear the tragic news. She got it. “Well, I agree with him.” said Bill's dad. “What's the use of giving young- sters night work weather Plenty of time when the snow flies and they have to stay in. Don't do it, Son, and I'll go and see her.” Bill brightened. “Honest, Dad! All right, and I'll go and coax Jim's daddy to do it too. It just ain't fair. I guess I know when things are fair.” “Joe, you'll not do any such thing. I'm ashamed of you both.” “Ashamed!” cried the two together, the 10-year-old’s voice holding the greater indignation. “Huh! What for? When things ain't fair you got a right to stand up for what's right, haven't you?” “That's not it. You have to learn to obey orders and your father's got to stop thinking that it's everybody else’s fault but yours when there's some- thing to do. Perhaps Miss Miller didn't need to start giving you night work, but perhaps she did. “She’s got a hard grade to teach, and a long one, and I heard her say the class seemed too young to do the work. If it's anybody's fault it isn't hers, it's just the way the school work seems to be arranged.” “Oh, all right, side with her. I'll do it. T'll give up everything on earth and be perfectly miserable and you'll be happy.” His mother did not smile. but she looked far from offended. “How many problems have you?” oo they aren’t s0 hard. That's not it—" ‘Then he handed over his arithmetic, pointing to the page. “Least common denominator. Three mixed numbers to add in each prob- lem and not a denominator over seven! Why, Bill Corey, you really ought to My Neighbor Says: ‘When roasting chicken or tur- key, place the fowl with the breast down in the baking pan for the first half-hour of roast- ing. This allows the juices to flow into the breast, making it moist and tender. Artificial flowers may be at- tractively arrahged in & bowl half filled with sand. After plac- ing each stem in the sand, pour hot paraffin over the sand and the flowers will remain perma- nently in position. To clean @ light felt hat rub it gently with a block of mag- nesia, then brush against the nap with a soft brush. Equal quantities of celery and cold diced potatoes make a de- liclous potato salad. p"cobyrlthl. 1931) like this? | be ashamed. This won't take you 20 minutes. “In the time you have been stewing | out here you could have had them done. Now go on and play foot ball and then at 7 o'clock you get right to work. The trouble with you is that you have an | obsession—an ‘obsession against orders.” “What's that?” o | _“Some of Mud's big words,” sighed | Dad. “She springs them on me, t0o. | But she's usually right, that's the worst of it. I'm out of & job right this min- ute because I had—well—what she said just now. I guess we've all got to learn | to take telling.” “Oh, I guess a couple of problems won't exactly kill me,” said Bill. “So |long. Tl be seein’ you when supper's ready.” | One jump and he was down the steps and off. . 1‘;5-.)', Lil, how'd you ever get so | “Because I can't take orders myself. I loathe them. "I hate to do anything expected of me. I hate to go in and | get supper this minute. I'm no Polly- anna, but I try to grin and bear it. I | wish some one had taught me when I was little to fight obsessions.” | Don't we all> “That's the difference precisely between work and play. It is | not_ work that Kkills, it is the obsession | against _duty, or to put it differently, “orders” that gets us. | “Children should be taught to accept and carry out orders cheerfully, not for any particular reason in themselves, |but for the psychological principle in- volved. “BONERS” Humorous Tid-Bits From School Papers. A HABERDASHER IS A MAN WHO WASHES OUT HARBORS. ‘Where was the Declaration of Inde- pendence signed? At the bottom. A proposition is for s country o have no alcolic drinks in it. Define the first person? Adam. ‘The form of government most com- m‘:g:y used in cities is keep to the right. The fact that King Henry VIII treated his wives so cruelly proves that 'lgsilave for women was merely Plu- nic. clock ahead an hour. (Copsrignt. 2931.) 0cC “Twilight Sleep” means you set your 'TOBER - 13, "1931. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. When daddy went to work 'iss morn- in’, he said, “Well, I must get out an' get our bread an’ butter.” Baby watchin’ fer him to come home bringin’ bread an’ butter wif him, 'Course I knows it was dest a joke! Fashions of Today BY MARIE SHALMAR. Brown Shoes. Brown shoes are becoming more and more a matter of necessity and less something that you may choose if you wish to do s30. No one ever thinks of wearing. black shoes with a brown dress 's, as they might have done in ys when black shoes were the most usual sort of street shoes for cooler weather. Now you must have brown shoes if you wear a brown suit or dress or coat, and the chances are that you will choose brown shoes to | go with your green costumes, too, un- | less there is a distinct accent of black in the trimming of the green dress, or | unless you have decided to wear- the | new very dark green shoes. You may choose a pair of high-heeled | Oxfords of dark brown suede or a pair | of straight-heeled Oxfords of brown suede with alligator. Pumps, too, show a combination of brown suede and alli- | gator, and there are pumps that com- | bine brown suede with brown patent | leather. | _One of the smart shoe shops shows | pumps made with upstanding tongues |and laige Colonial buckles—a type of | shoe that would have been out of the | Question with really short skirts, but which can be worn to good effect with | the boot-top or ankle-length afternoon | dress. | And just because skirts are longer | | don't imagine that you can give less | thought to your shoes and stockings. | We are a long, long way from skirts | that actually hide the stockings and | | shoes, and the present skirt lengths are | | every bit as exacting as the shorter | | skirts that are entirely out of date. | | There is every indication that very ( ‘.heer stockings will be even more in demand among well dressed women now than ever before, and, oddly | enough, the coming of cool weather | seems ‘to increase the demand for stockings of cobwebby sheerness. A new leasef on life ‘ THAT’S what you sign when you register at Chalfonte-Haddon Hall! Salt sea air, good food, exercise and sound sleep are clauses in the lease. A million dollars’ worth of furn- ishings for your com- fort, a thousand serv- ants trained to rhake your stay pleasant. This is one lease you can sign very profitably right now, for new low 1931 rates are in effect. Special four-day week end railroad tickets now available. Write or telephone 4-0141, American and European Plans | CHALFONTE- HADDON HALL ATLANTIC CITY Leeds and Lippincott Company Tried for years to brush away ugly yellow then-— Whitens Teeth 3 Shades in 3 Days OOK in the mirror. Are your teeth ridged with yellow- tained, decayed in spots? Are gums drawing away from teeth and growing pale ? If so, now is the right time to try the scientific Kolynos Dry-Brush Technique —a half-inch of Kolynos on a dry brush, morning and night. Ovemnight you'll note dental cream kills ons of germs an improvement. For this unique that sweep into the mouth- with every breath and cause most tooth and gum troubles. In just 3 d r teeth will look cleaner and whiter —f:li; 3 -lu:ly:c !vul:icey. Gums will feel firmer and look healthier. Your mouth will tingle with a clean, sweet taste. The very moment Kolynos enters the mouth it FOAMS, KOLYNOS DENTAL CREAM thus permitting the use of a dry brush which makes Koly- nos 10 times more effective. This penetrating FOAM gets into a-: :lnnldout every tiny pit, fissure and crevjce. Killt'mi!liou of destructive mouth-germs, 190-million- in amysr the first 15 seconds. Erases RIGHT DOWN tartar and stimulatesthe gums. THUS TEETH ARE QUICKLY AND EASILY CLEANED AS THEY SHOULD BE CLEANED TO THE BEAUTIFUL NAKED FEATUR e ~ The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD. ‘Whose uniquely successful career, both in business and private life, enables her to speak with authority on problems of the modern woman. An Unmoral Tale. Lucy was a climber. Her whole mind was set on getting ahead. She heard about people who got ahead by working hard, but she had no use for work. ~ Her plan ;Inl;l to ‘cultlvllte portant people. Being charming | to people who could help her was ‘often hard work § because they were always people whom she “liked. [ | 8o she didn't waste 7 any of that charm. 4 i al);e :hg:ghxt you couldn" of any Couldnt be of 81 Helen Woodward. ‘wouldn’t bother with you. ‘There was a good job in & manu- facturing company which she wanted. | She knew nobody at all connected with | the firm. But some people named Brown, whom she had alweys ignored, were | {riends of Mr. Gregory, the owner. Lucy | immediately became pleasant and po- | lite to the Browns and was soon invited there for a party. ‘When she arrived there she looked around the room at once with a calcu- | lating eye® Lucy was a pretty girl and lively, but she didn't look around as most girls would—tb see which man would be the most fun. She was look- ing only to see whether there was any- body there who could help her to get the Gregory job. In the corner sat a small, insignificant man. When the hostess introduced him as Mr. Gregory she sald it so fast that Lucy didn’t catch the name. She thought it was Briggs. “How do you do,” she said, and went to another part of the room. She wasn't so stupid as to be impolite or | rude, but she didn’t waste any of her | talents on Mr. Gregory. When, the | next day, Lucy found out what she had | done, she was in despair. | The end of this story ought to be that thereby she lost forever her chance of getting the big job. That's the way | it would be in & nice moral story. But | that's not the way it is in life, where | the wicked are rewarded handsomely. | 1t so happened that Mr. Gregory was a modest and shy man. He was always being flattered and pursued by people who wanted money or a job. Most of the people at the party that night were nervously polite to him. It didn’t occur to him that Lucy didn’t know who he was, so he de- | cided that she was a proud and inde- | pendent spirit. And he thought to him- self, “Now if I had that kind of working for me, she would always the truth.” ‘When, therefore, a week later somes body brought in Lucy's name as & candidate for the special job, he ime mediately O. K.'d it. Lucy's still working there. Nobody else likes her, but Mr. Gregory thinks she’s so honest and courageous that she can’t be fired. (Copyright, 1931.) Nut-Coated Marshmallows. ‘Walnuts, pecans, blanched almonds op a mixture of these may be used. Chop enough of the nut meats very fine to make three cupfuls and shake through a sleve 50 that the pieces will be the same size. Mix half a teaspconful of salt with the nuts. Boil two cupfuls of light brown sugar with two-thirds cup- ful of water without stirring until the sirup threads from a spoon, remove from the flame and place in a larger pan of hot water. Brush the loose Pow- der from 17, pounds, or 120, fresh, soft marshmallows and drop them one by one into the hot sirup. Stir with forks until coated with sirup, lift out, drain, roll in the chopped nuts and place on waxed paper to dry. If the sirup be- comes too thick, reheat it, but do not allow it to come to a boil. Cheese Croquettes. Combine two cupfuls of rice cooked dry with one cupful of grated cheese, Ferm into balls and flatten them a little. Roll in half a cupful of cracker crumbs and bake in a hot oven for a few minutes until the croquettes are heated through and browned. Largest selling Cane Sugar On the Monday nights at 9.30 “Sweeten it with Domino” Self-Infection Menace Ended by KLEENEX Disposable Tissues IRTY handkerchiefs are repul- sive enough, as every sensi- tive person knows. But that is not the worst about them. Every use discharges germs into your handkerchief. Germs that do not die, but live and grow! ‘Thus your own handkerchief is & constant source of danger. Used once, it is fit only to be destroyed. Kieenex is safe Kleenex costs so little that you destroy each tissue immediately after use. Germs are instantly destroyed before they have a chance to rein- fect you, or to spread infection among others. Every tissue that touches your face is fresh and sani sanitary, ‘These disposable tis- sues entirely do away ‘with han ief laun- dering. Kleenex costs less than commercial laundering. If you wash handker- chiefs at home, Kleenex relieves you from this disagreeable task. is made from rayon cel- lulose, is far sofcer than the oldest linen handkerchief. And nearly twice as absorbent. Kleenex can never irritate. Its downy softe nees is a wonderful relief . . . espe« cially during colds. A modern necessity You'll soon find you can’t do with- out these marvelous super-absore bent Kleenex tissues. For blotting up embedded impurities of dirt and make-up from the pores when removing face creams they have no equal. Use Kleenex for pole ishing spectacles. For manicuring. For apply- ing medicines and bane daging minor wounds. Keep a package handy ; in the kitchen, bath and bedroom-—in the car. { Kleenex is sold at all used during_colds include the danm. F'm Staphylococcus (pus germ), ‘neumococcus, Streptococcus and Ca- tarrhalis, bacteriological tests show. Any doctor will tell you the danger of carrying such germs about with you. Any doctor will advise Kleenex issues for safety. KLEENEX Disposabie TISS UES Dirty handkerchiefs are a menace to society! 4

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