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WOMAN’S PAGE. Getting in Touwch With Buyers BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. HE woman in the home who would make money without let- ting such work interfere with her job of homemaking finds the marketing of her wares the greatest barrier to her success. How- ever well she may cook, however beau- tifully she can fashion garments, how- SHE MAY EXCEL IN MAKING DE- | LICIOUS DOUGHNUTS. ever 'skillfully she can embroider or | do any of the many tasks that women have trained themselves to do well in the routine of homemaking, she feels | totally Bt & loss to understand how she | can get in touch with a buying public If the woman makes delicious bread, | ecake or doughnuts, all her friends and neighbors can_do the same, in all| robability. They wouldn't’ buy of | er. She would not consider asking | them ‘to do it. How, then, can she secure buyers of her homemade food? A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. GENATOR. “HI" JOHNSON of Cali-, fornia ran into a bit of hard luck | when it became necessary for him to launch his offensive against the mora- torium on a Monday. It's the most miserable day in the week for Sen- ator “Hi"” He ad- day preceding the writer visited the California Senator in his office under the street floor of the Capitol. Johnson was sitting at his desk almost submerged under & pile of papers A big cigar, fitted neatly in a white holder, was held rather “helplessly” in his hand. “Blue Monday!" “Bah!” “I can nevet get anything done on this day,” he conitnued, frowning. “I sleep too late on Sunday. I eat too was his greeting. | Let us see what she can do to get in touch with the consumer. One way is |to find out if there is not some pro- | vision store nearby where they would carry her cooking and themselves get sufficient profit for it to be worth their | | While to handle her things. This is | often found feasible. The woman can |ask a little ‘more for her homemads | cooking than is asked for fu‘wry-mnde‘ products, only & trifle more, uniess she is content to sell has built up a clientele of customers of that store who appreciate home cooking enough to pay the slight ad- vance price. When this is accom- plished in one store, enter food in an- other shop far enough away for no competition to exist between the two stores. In this way a larger buying public is gained. woman can be on the alert to know of clubs that meet, and who is head of each. She can then phone and ask to be permitted to call on the dif- ferent cnes to talk over supplying re- freshments which are “different” or at_prices which are tempting, or both When sich an interview is granted the woman should make price con- cessions. if must be, in order to get her food before the consumers. One order would lead to another, always providing that the woman who makes the articles astually is a good cook and if she sends the things (or takes them) in such carefully pack-d parcels that they arrive in the best condition, (Copy-ight, 1932.) Caviar, Cook some pancakes ery thin and small, the thinner the better. Spread each one with caviar, seasoned with lemon juice and onion, roll up the pan- cakes, and serve as an hors d' oeuvre with cream seasoned With salt and & dash of tabasco. sour at first until she| THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1932. BEATURES: | [LITTLE BENNY | BY LEE PAPE. | we was eating supper and ma sald to pop, I interviewed another woman | at the employment agency today, Will- | yum, and according to her own story she's one of the seven uncrowned won- | ders of the werld, in fact if there's nything she cant do better than any- | body elts it must be something thats | still in the Jand of the uninvented. She | claims to bake like & professional bak- ery and cook in 3 languages including | French, and she says she can make any kind of dizzert that anybody elts ever | made and a lot more that she designed ma said. Well yee gods we'd better lasso her before somebody elts spots her, pop caid. and ma said, Thats what I was thinking, because that duzzent end her virtues by any manner of means. For instants she claims to be a_duster and cleener 2nd to none, and that nothing pleases her more than to get down on her hands and knees and scrub till she's What kind of a looking egg is she, I pose her face would stop an 8 day pop said, and ma said, Quite the contrary, she reely looks like one of these bewtiful impossible maids with an imported French accent that you see in moving pictures, and furthermore she duzzent wunt any time off unless it just happens to suit me to give it to her, and neet, my goodness she looks as neet as a dropped pin. Maybe you better send her a telegram to report tomorrow, pop said, and ma caid, Theres ony one thing of a doubt- ful nature, and thats her reference, she had one letter of reference and I copied it off, what do you think of it, Willyum, Ill read it to you. Wich ‘she &d, being, To whoom it may concern, this certifies that Flossie Shultz was in my employ for 2 weeks and showed grate willingness to lern. Mrs. Fred D. Barker Yee gods, thumbs down on the mov- ing picture queen, pop said. Meening the reference wasent good enough New Evening Dress of Sjlk Crepe BY MARY MARSHALL. UY a new evening dress or two if you can afford to. Some of the most attractive models are most reasonably priced, and it is | much wiser to buy one while you have the opportunity to make your se- lections in & leisurely manner than to | wait until a very important evening event turns up and you have to Tush madly out and get a new dress to do honor to the event. So be prepared, and if you can't afford the new evening dress, then by all means see what you can do to get your old evening dresses | ready for an emergency. | The sketch today shows a new eve- | ning dress made of silk crepe trimmed with 8l-inch bands of satin ribbon. | These “arranged over the shoulder give the new deep armhole effect and an interesting version of the V neck. You will need two bands about 32 inches long for the armholes, one strip long enough to form a belt and two more strips long enough to follow the outline of the decolletage at front and back and to cross over to form tabs at front and back | In the original model these strips of | satin were lined with the silk crepe| used for the dress. But if you have| none of the originel material you may use silk grepe to match the satin of the strips. On a white dress you may make your bands of colored satin, a fairly light green, blue or rose, and on a| pastel-toned dress they may be of a | somewhat darker tone of ‘the same color. | on to begin his fight against the mora- terium. Perched high in the press gal- lery as he started, we recalled the Sena- tor's words of the week before. But if he had slept too much the day before, if he had eaten too much the day before, or if he had loafed too much the day before, he gave little evidence of it then. He has seldom been seen in_better form on the Senate floor than he was | on that particular “blue Monday.” | Johnson_has a spectacular style of oratory. Few can match him when he takes the floor on such occasions | He seems never at loss for words. They come in an unending flow and | with the sharpness of a blade. And as the speaks his face reflects their in- tensity At times he scowls and frowns. At other times he puts on & sort of sar- | donic grin and sneers, then grows bit- | terly sarcastic His one gesture seems effective | index finger is thrust forward from a clenched fist at his hip. One is re- minded of & man “shooting from the | hip” when he is in such & pose. He walks to and fro behind his desk | as he speaks, pausing only to take a sip | of water from a glasé which a page An much on Sunday. I loaf too much on Sunday. “I wonder if everybody else does the same things?"” The following Monday he was called MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Bananas. Whole Wheat Cooked Cereal with Cream Poached Eggs. Hashed Browned Potatoes. Toast. Coffee. LUNCHEON Ham Omelet Ice-box Rolls Boiled_ Rice Maple Sirup. Cookies, Tea DINNER. Boiled Corned Beef Potatoes. Cabbage Parsnips, Carrots, Beet Sa French Dressing Osabinet Pudding Coftee. HASHED POTATOES. One pint chopped potatoes, one-eighth cupful cream or milk, aspoonful salt, one- chopped pars- hth teaspoonful pep- mix together. Melt three or more tablespoonfuls butter in omelet pan: add to it a little chopped onion, then other in- gredients. Pack together. Fold over like an omelet. HAM OMELET. Beat four eggs very light, the whites to a stiff froth, the yolks to a thick batter. Add to the yolks four tablespoonfuls milk, bepper and salt and one-half cupful cooked chopped ham. Add the whites last. Put a plece of butter half the size of an egg in the frying pan; be careful not to scor When is sizzling turn in the egg and cook on the back of the stove until done. Fold over and serve, CABINET PUDDING. Butter melon mold, put in layer of stale sponge cake, then layer seeded and boiled raisins or candied fruit, another layer of cake and sprinkling of fruit, and repeat until mold is nearly full. Pour one pint boiling milk into yolks three eggs beaten with three tablespoonfuls sugar and one-half teaspoonful salt. Pour over cake in mold. Set mold in pan hot water on back of stove one-half hour, then bake in oven one hour, keeping it in pan of hot water, or steam it one hour. Serve with foamy sauce. ’muxt work overtime to keep filled, or to | read from some paper he has extracted from & huge brown envelope on his desk. ‘The official reporters of the Senate isa}‘ that Johnson is the easiest Senator to follow in taking down a speech. His | enunciation is well nigh perfect, his | pauses for punctuation well timed And he holds the attention of | galleries, if not all the Senators Senator “Hi” going at full speed on the ‘momwrium, packed galleries were straining almost the entire time, les they miss a word. the When 40 single men seeking work i1 Northern Wairoa, New Zealand, werc ordered to help start an unemploymer | camp recently, only 8 appeared at camp site, and the other 32 were ther s0 listed as those who must fend ! themselves hereafter. Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Open-mindedness is generally as- sumed to a first-rate human trait. Any one who will admit that he does not possess and cherish an open mind is regarded as a queer sort of an indi- vidual. The fact of the matter is that an open mind is often enough anything but & virtue. There are many persons who are so lazy mentally that they will take their ease in the open ces of an “open mind,” rather than take the trouble to look at facts at close range. One of the most curious uses (or | rather abuses) of the open-mind cult is to employ it in support of the most ridiculous of untruths. Some persons are so open-minded that they belleve anything. For example, every now and then some one tells me about a real (?) case of mental telepathy. He goes into de- tails, most of which are mere flight of imagination. I am asked to accept the account, or to give open-minded (?) reasons for another explanation. My invariable explanation is stated in five words: “There is no such thing.” Whereupon, I am asked to prove that it didn’'t happen. Of course, I cannot furnish the proof demanded. And so I am a victim of the open-minded argu- ment. (Copyright, 1932.) SCREEN ODDITIES BY CAPT. ROS! MARIE DRESSLER OFTEN ASTONISHES WAITERS Jack HoLt WON WIS START W BY DOUBLING FOR A WESTERN STAR AND JUMPING HIS HORSE OVER A 40-FOOT CLIFF/ Q@ WHO'S WHOSE COE FAUCETT. 8Y ORDERING RAW MEAT. SkE LIKES UNCOOKED HAMBURGER LOUISE LOS, ANGELES . @ BEBE DANIELS 1§ WED TO BEN Lvow CLARA JOW § WED TO REX BOLL What @ Woman Wants in a Husband Looks for Superiority \DorothyDix| Bride Who Admitted That She Was Marrying to Get a Boss Expressed the Hidden Desire of All Her S A and she yearned for some one who would make all of her decisions for her and tell her what to do. Well, she is one bride, anyway, that is acquiring a husband who ‘will come up to her ideal, for every man starts out in marriage with a well- developed head-of-the-house complex, and any wife who longs to be told what to do is dead sure of getting her heart's desire. ¥ this day of free women, and partioularly of emancipated wives, it is Startling to hear a woman boldly proclaiming that she desires & hus- band to boss her, but as a matter of fact, most women, if they told the truth, in their secret souls have the same longing. It is a suppressed desire that they are ashamed to disclose, but if every woman got her preference in a husband e wowld be a strong, Wise _ man an oracle who would do all of her thinking for her and whose pronouncements she would never think of questioning. eX. PROMINENT actress, who was married the other day, gave as her reason for marrying that she wanted a boss. She said that she was tired of trying to make up her mind what to do about things JFOR there s still a primitive strain in women that in moments of stress makes them revert to type and stand just where their cave great- grandmothers stood. Every woman, for instance, would like to be courted With a club and dragged off to his cave by the hair of her head, by some big brute who never even asked her whether she thought he could make her happy or not. With the sophisticated, modern women the timid wooer makes no hit with his delicate pleas and persuasions and arguments that leave the girl trembling between “I will” and “I won't.” It is the determined man, who knows his own mind and makes up the girl's for her, who gets her. SOMEHOW it is instinctive in women to want to look up to their mates and depend upon them. Somehow it is necessary for a woman to do this in order to love & man. In a recent survey that has been made of husbands and wives it was found that in those cases in which the hus- band was superior to the wife she was happy and satisfied, but where the woman was the superior she was invarlably restless, dicontented and peevish, and that the marriage was unsuccessful. Another illustration of this desire of women to magnify and glorify thejr husbands is to be found in the way in which women regard the achievements of their husbands. Nothing makes a woman so happy or fills her so full of pride as for her husband to do something fine and great and spectacular, Ninety-nine out of a hundred famous women would far rather be a famous man’s wife than be famous themselves, and the fly in their ointment is that tbey can't transfer their laurel wreaths to their husbands’ brows, and so really enjoy them. "[HE marriages of most women who are successtul outside of the home are fallures in the home, and this is largely because the husband and wite are forced into a relationship in which the wife looks down on the Husband and the husband is forced to look up to his wife and neither one can bear it. Of course, there are plenty of cases in which women do marry meek men, men who are their inferiors in every way, and whom they go on loving and pitying and mothering to the end of the chapter, but this is merefy because these men appeal to the maternal instinct in their wives and the love that their wives give them is the sort of feeling that they would extend to a defective child. It is none of the elements of the real love of a woman for her mate. ND, of course, there are dominant women who love to rule, and who establish a tyranny over their households that brooks no interference from & mere husband. They don't give their husbands as much liberty as a dog on a leash. But I have never seen one of them happy, no matter how much she got her own way. I have never seen the woman who loved uld henpeck. For women want to be bossed CETC P DOROTHY DIX. “BONERS” Humorous Tid-Bits From School Papers, Handwriting What It May Reveal. BY MILDRED MOCKABEE. T first glance this is a very force- ful type of writing, yet there are certain weaknesses which it Would seem the writer must overcome before she could A really be outstanding. The very large capital “T is in itselt | & sign of possible weakness as it reveals & T oney to egotism. This has per- haps been & defensive thing in that in | remlity she may fear her own abilities. Because of this she may have built a wall around her fears, exposing to the world too strong attitude of self- Ssteem. This would antagonize many Who might otherwise find her & charm- individual. g A er. 'the heavy t-bar shows a|was British himaclf strength of character that should en- | e % Overcorge any such weak- | Since dieting has become so popular e e he average group she would |many of our girls are really emanci- e, T sutstanding individual, but | pated through lack of proper nourish- the should strive to shine in'a more ment he apparently has the ::fia?r fx]fd“'ph,%malpgeqmremenu, if | N?ur]xgd--r 18 the he goose of the goose she can only acquire more real confi- | y dence in hersell. Oxidation In somothing you take into Her home is probably & very charm- | the body that unites with food to make e R irastive place, reflecting her own | {n& pOAY N’ ke n locomotive. good taste and efficient management. | (Cobyright, 1932.) Rpparently she is the type Who enjoys entertaining both large and small groups of friends. Her chief delight, Berhaps, is the more intimate kind of Darty. where a selected small number | Yould gather for an evening of inter- esting pleasure. Study clubs where stim- Ulating companionship would be found | might® also sttract her. By training Derself she should become a leader in up. such 8 T children, she should be careful about relieving them of too much responsibility. Instead she should | train them to think for themselves 50 | {hat they will be able to judge things for their true worth. 'HE LAST SCENE OF CYRANO DE BERGERAC WAS IN A HARBOR FROM WHICH LEAVES FELL. In order to become citizens of the United States foreigners must take out their civilization papers. I think Washington first warned the Americans that the 2 h were com- ing. No, he couldn't have because he My Neighbor Says: For those who have mechanical refrigerators a_deliclous dessert may be made by stuffing eclaire with vanilla ice cream and plac- ing them for two hours in one of the trays. When frozen the eclairs may be arranged on serving plates and topped with thick chocolate sauce. Don't pour boiling water over china packed in a pan. The dishes will crack because of the sudden contraction and expan- sion. To make pistachio flavoring mix together equal parts of va- nilla and almond flavoring. When making chocolate candy or frosting always melt the choc- olate over hot water, as it burns very easily because of the fat content. (Copyright, 1932.) Note—Analysis of handwriting is mot an ezact sciene, according to world in- vestigators, but all aoree it is interesting and lots of fun. The Star presents the o t spirit. % mple to Miss Mocka- J'3Fas, “aiong’ with @ will be either inter- or you will receive art whi you v, vou NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. Tllustrations by Mary Foley. Myron Sphinx Caterpillar. PHINX CATERPILLARS are great copycats! Just watch them as | they follow each other over the | Virginia creeper or the grape- l vine. Touch one of them, up he rears, and almost instantaneously the whole company of caterpillars is | standing at attention. Then they begin | waving back and forth in a most snob- bish manner. They clasp the twig in a vise-like hold with a suction foot at the tip of the body. With their heads tele- scoped into the first three segments, the horn on the tip of each back looking as if it were a great stinger or poison gun, you are ready for most anything from these menacing-looking creatures. Furthermore, they can become rigid and hold this position for hours. Bluff, pure and simple. They get | away Wwith it, too, and many a Myron | Sprinx would have been killed had it not been for the fact he looked like a dangerous fellow. His small black head has strong jaws for cutting and chew- ing the creeper and the grapevine, but nothing else. His eight true legs get him about and his prolegs hold him steady after the new position has been reached. The very large strong clasper, found at the tip of his body, permits him to swing about in seach of more leaves and to aid him m deceiving his foes. Along his body are his breathing pores, rimmed in colors. The back is a dark green or black and the sides are light green or vellow. They are gay and festive looking creatures, whose aim in the short caterpillar life is to consume as many leaves as possible. Outgrowing skins and shedding them seems to be all they do. They fast for a day before the old skin splits. The caterpillar now has a loose-fitting suit and an _extra sharp appetite after his fast. You should see him making strides toward the succulent leaf. He is most businesslike. These fierce-looking creatures are no match for a tiny, four-winged fly, whose ambition in life is to place her whole family in the body of a fine, plump sphinx caterpillar. She hovers over her victim and gives him a needle-like prick with her egg-placer. My! How he resents this insuit! Again and again she pierces his skin, while the frights ened and tormented caterpillar rears and swings. Finally the last egg has been placed and the mother, well satis- fied with her successful venture, dis- appears and is seen no more. The unfortunate victim gets over his pain_and goes back to eating the leaf of the grape or creeper. About this time the eggs hatch into little grub and they proceed to consume their hos.. He, poor fellow, begins to notice @ “gone” feeling and tries to eat mor: leaves. Then the youngsiers cut a littls hole through the walls of his body and at the entrance consaruct dainty little white silken cocoons, which give th: caterpillar the appearance of being decorated with bugles. From now or the caterpillar moves siowly with his strange cargo. Later the little flies, full- grown, will lift the lid from their little cocoons and step out. It is too late for the burdened one to recover. ‘When not the victim of this parasite the caterpillar, after reaching his full growth, will enter the earth and build himself a snug cell. In here he will change from a caterpillar to a long- tonmgued moth with strong wings and & robust body. (Copyright. 1932.) DAILY DIET RECIPE BAKED KUMQUATS. Kumquats, 24; sugar, 12 tea- spoonfuls, and canned pineapple juice, one-third cupful. Serves six or eight portions. Remove stems and leaves from kumquats and boil them in hot water to cover for about eight minutes. Be sure they do not crack open from overcooking. Drain, cool and remove slice from top of each little egg-shaped orange, but do not peel. Press pulp down in each kumquat and fill center with about one-half teaspoonful sugar. Place kum- quats upright close together in shallow baking pan, add pine- apple juice and bake in a mod- erately hot- oven about fifteen minutes. Use as a garnish for meats. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes sugar. Lime, iron, vitamins A, B and C pres- ent. Can be eaten by normal adults of average or under weight. THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Here's a cut model with all the ear- | marks of French chic, yet as simple | and smart and practical as any tiny | girl would wish for. Light navy blue | | wool jersey made the original. ~ Isn't| | the inset yoke cunning? It is vivid red | | jersey. The circular skirt gives smart | | emphasis to the brief bodice. It is as | simple_as falling off a log to make it! | | Style No. 2 may be had in sizes 4, 6 and 8 years. Size 4 requires 1y yards of 39-inch material with 'y yard of 35-inch contrasting. A plaided woolen in yellow and brown with plain brown is fetching. | Then again in wool challis with white pin dots and vivid red contrasting, it's| adorable. 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 Twenty- ninth street, New York. BEDTIME STORIES Reddy Fox Is Hunted. In name of sport are dark things done When heartless cruelty is fun —Reddy Fox. Reddy Fox was far from home. It was long since he had been so far from home in the Old Pasture on Farmer Brown's farm. But these were hard days with everything buried in snow, hard days, indeed, and hungry days. One must hunt far and wide to get enough food to keep alive. Reddy had known hard times in other winters, but never one so hard as this. Only when he slept did he know what it was to be free from a feeling of gnaw- ing emptiness in his stomach. Even then he dreamed of things to eat only to waken to the disappointment of finding them unreal. So Reddy had taken to hunting far hunting-grounds to Mrs. Reddy. Some- times he would be gone for two' or three days, curling up in some shel- tered spot, his big tail protecting his nose and face, for the sleep he had to have. He was thin and lean and tired from over-much traveling, vet never could he get a full meal that would allow him to rest and regain his strength. Now and then he caught a Mouse. Once he caught & half grown Rabbit, and would have carried it home to share with Mrs, Reddy but that the distance was too great. Farm after farm he visited in the hope of catching a fat hen, but it seemed as | it all the farmers knew that he was about and were taking special care to keep their hens locked up. Reddy had been hunting all night, with two small Mice his only reward. They were little enough to put in an empty stomach. Still, they were better than nothing and Reddy was thankful for even this little as he curled up at daybreak for the rest he greatly needed He was tired, very tired, for in his half-starved condition he tired more easily than when well fed. It seemed to him that he hardly had closed his eyes when he was awakened by a sound he knew only too well, the baying of a Hound. Reddy sat up to listen, his head cocked a trifle to one side. “I hope that Dog isn't following my track,” thought he. “I don't know this ccuntry about here well enough to be sure of fooling a Dog who has done much hunting, and if there bunters with terrible guns out this morning, I haven't any idea where they ave likely to be. Back home I Kknow just where to expect them to be lying in walt and it is a_simple mat- ter to fool them. And I'm tired. I don't feel like running. Oh, dear, I fear that Dog is on my trail” In a few minutes he knew that his fear was well grounded. There was are | “By Thornton W. Burgess. no doubt that that. Dog was on his trall. The scent was cold, but there was enough of it left in Reddy's tracks for the Dog to get an occasional whiff of it, and each time he did so he would bay. Baying is, you know, the sound made by a Hound when he is follow- ing the track of some one. Poor Reddy. It was bad enough to be tired, and hungry. Now to have to run for his life seemed dreadful and his heart sank as he trotted off, for it would not do_to allow that Dog to get too near. Reddy trotted along eas- ily, for the Dog was coming slowly, having to work out that trail. So long as the scent was cold he would have to | from home, leaving the familiar home | - - = = Hlasr = g :7/////;?‘ SO REDDY HAD TAKEN TO HUNT- ING FAR FROM HOME work slowly, but Reddy knew that once that Dog reached the place Reddy had just left the scent would be fresh, and | then that Dog would be able to follow at full speed. So> Reddy ran easily, saving his strength for the time he know was surely coming when he would have to use all his speed to keep ahead of that Dog It was bad enough to have that Dog following him, but what worried Reddy most was the fear that somewhere hid- den behind a tree or in the brush was a hunter with a terrible gun. He | strongly suspected that that Dog wasn't hunting by himself and he was right. There was a hunter with a terrible gun, one who knew well all that country round about and just where a Fox would be most likely to run. Clam Juice. Mix one quart of clam broth well with one demi-tasse spoonful of catsup, the juice of two lemons, two dashes of tabasco sauce and one teaspoonful of sugar. Strain through a fine straine |and shake in ice. Strain into cock glasses and add celery salt on top. infect handkerchiefs with dangerous germs prevent constant self-infection...use KLEENEX Disposable Tissues OUR handkerchief isa source of danger during colds,if you have used it once. It may con- tain up to 240,000 living disease germs! . . . is fit only to be de- stroyed. Impossible to destroy each handkerchief, you say? No! It is possible with Kleenex, the new handkerchief tissue which you use once and destroy. Kleenex costs so little. That's why you can destroy it after a single use. Soft, soothing Yet it's superior to handker- chiefs of cotton or linen in every way. More absorbent, softer... actually downy in texture. Kleenex never irritates tender noses during colds. It's made of rayon-cellulose,a substance firm and cloth-like. You escape all handkerchief washing when you take to Kleenex. That alone would be worth many times the cost! Price reduced! And now you pay a third less for Kleenex! The generous box ~—formerly 50c—is now but 35¢! The package remains unchanged ~—smart, convenient, beautiful. You get the same number of tis- sues. The same soft, cloth-like quality.Oniytheprice haschanged! At this new, low price you'll find more uses than ever for Kleenex. Use to remove creams —to apply make-up—to polish spectacles, furniture, shoes! Sold atall drug,drygoods and depart- ment stores, KLEENEX disposable TISSUES Germ-filled handkerchiefs are a menace to society! &)