Evening Star Newspaper, April 17, 1933, Page 24

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MAGAZINE PAGE. Conquering Contract By P. HAL SIMS: Mr. Sims is universally acclaimed the preatest living contract and auction pleyer. He was captain of the re- nowned “Four Horsemen” team and Rhas won 24 national championshirs | since 1924, Responding to One No Trump. ESTERDAY I described hands on which you may make a mild | slam try by bidding three no trumps over an opening bid of one no trump by vour partner | as dealer or second hand. When! neither of you can bid a suit, you must be conservative about no-trump | slams for fear that all suits may be equally matched in number, so that no discard cen be obtained of any Joser. The response of thrée no trumps allows you at times to get in some sUit'ypa runs only a very remote risk in bids occasionally resulting in a suit slam, but more often enabling you to forecast the play of the band — | @8 so far as the | discarding of 7 | lesers is concerned 8o that a slam will not be bid purely i | on top cards. You will have noted S | that the respcnd- ing hands given yesterday provide the certainty of making 10 or 11 tricks, s0 that even if you feel out and then abandon the slam try by stopping at four or five no trumps, you will not have jeopardized your game. When to Bid Six No Trumps Immediately. . Hal Sims. If you are so fortunate es to hold a rsponding hand which makes it a cer- tainty that six odd can be made even if your partner has no more than ex actly three primary tricks, with no kind of rebid to expect from him, bid ! six yourself. Take the responsibility and make the deeision yourself when it | is clearly up to you. Remembering | th4t you cannot make a forcing bid in | terms of no trumps and that any jump | MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Becoming Colors. VERY woman is interested in knowing what colors in clothes | are becoming and which are not. | Color charts have been pub-| lished to help with this prob- | lem. but, since it is scarcely practicable | to list every variation and combtnation | of shade in complexion. eyes and hair, | these charts have a limited value. Then, 100, there is room for misunderstanding | in /the classification of types. Such terns as “fair,” “medium” or “dark” leave much to the imagination. One{ girl may class her own complexion as | “fair” while some one else might call 1t “medium”; who is right? Considerations like these make me besitete to recommend becoming col- | interest. ors for different types. although many of my readers want such suggestions. There are, however, a few broad coler rules that should be familiar to any oné who is interested in her personal | appearance. Ignorance of such rules | leads to unnecessary blunders in the | selection of a wardrobe. One of the most important things to know about colors is that some of | them are flattering to practically all | types, while others are trying to almost | every one. Almost any girl or woman | can wear a dark blue, wine, dark blue- green, dark brown with reddish tinge, black, warm white, dull blue-green in light or medium tone and soft orange- pinks like peach. epricot, salmon and | melon. These colors ean not, of course, mdke a dull, muddy complexion look begutiful. but they flatter it as much | as possible | Among the hard-to-wear colors vivid | blues in light or medium shades come | first. For the girl whose skin is not flawless, this color is impossible. Bright | shades of violet, purple-blue and red- purple, yellow and orange are difficult to wear as predominating colors in a costume. They may be used, however, when a striking bizarre effect is sought, as in beach suits. With healthy, sun- tanned skins, these colors, especially when mixed, give a gay, holiday feeling. The girl with a florid skin—one with too much red in it—should avoid the bluish-greens and luscious orange-reds that flatter pale or sallow complexions. Dark, silent colors_and neutral tints are best for her. The effect of heavi- ness can be counteracted by using sheer fabrics or else usirg faggoting and cut-out embroidery about the neck- line. Any white worn about the neck | should be net, organdie, filet lace or something of equally open mesh Some women have a naturally bluish- red type of coloring. while a few have a slightly orange-red tinge in lips and cheeks. Women of the former type, which is the largest, can usually be MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKPAST. Sliced Oranges and Bananas Hominy With Cream |talk it over with him, elbows on the | seed and cover them and then they can Pnostrils, when you meet the robin on his Omelet Bacon Date Muffins LUNCHEON. Creamed Chicken With Greens Pepners on Toest Baked Apple Sauce Ice Box Ccoiies DINNER. Cream of Pea Soup Veal Cutlets, Tomato Sauce Lyonnaise Potatces String Beans Tango Salad, Mayonnaise Dressing Coflee Tea DATE MUFFINS. Two cupfuls flour, 2 heaping teaspoonfuls baking powder, ‘z teaspoonful salt, ¥4 cupful melted butter, Yo cupful milk, 1 cupful ,stoned and chopped dates, 2 ‘eggs. Break the eggs into muf- fins without beating them. Beat the mufin mixture hard. Bake in muffin tins. ICE BOX COOKIES. One cupful shortening, 2 cup- fuls light brown sugar, 2 beaten eggs, '; teaspoonful salt, 1 tea- sgnonful baking soda, 1 cupful chopped nuts, 3' cupfuls pastry flour. Mix in order given. Make into a roll about 2 inches thick and leave in a cold place over night. When ready to bake slice very thin with a sharp knife and bake in rather hot even. TANGO SALAD. Make a bowl of firm, medium sized cabbage by cutting off the bottom and taking out the heart. Chop 6 tomatoes and a handful of peanuts with the cabbage that had been removed. Mix and put back into the cabbage bowl. Serve raise is purely invitational, bid six no trumps yourself when you cannot force another bid by making a jump take- out in a suit, but can see that hands contain all the higl needed If your responding hand con- tains four primary tricks snd a jack, such as 8p.KQx Hts Axx DL.XQxx CLAJX it is clear that your partner’s opening bid is based on the aces of spades and diamonds and the kings of hearts and clubs, plus & queen or jack in combina- tion somewhere. It must be a virtual certainty to make six odd. If he has| in addition an extra queen and jack, bringing his holding up to four primary tricks plus a jack, e. g.: Sp.AJx Hts KQx DiLAxxx CLKQx taking th: bid to seven no trumps. With a concealed five-card suit and four primary tricks, the grand slam would be an absolute certainty, Even if he holds the very minimum: Sp.Axx Hts.KJx DiLAxxx OLKxx in order to make a small slam you need only win onc of two finesses and find the diamonds split. These are fair chances for a slam, well worth trying. Consequently, if ever you are favored with four primary tricks plus| a jack and your partner has opened with a no trump, bid six at once. Intermediate Invitational Raise. With something between three and four tricks, in combined primary and secondary form, you can make the very urgent slam try of feur no trumps, | asking partner to slam if his hand has| a queen in reserve. Such a hand as: 8p.KQx Hts.AJx DLKxxx CLAXX| is sure for four odd even if partner has opened on only Sp.AJx Ht.K10x DLQJxx CLKQx so that if he held in addition the yueen of hearts, or his diamond hold- | ing were A J x x, he could, over your! response of four no trumps, bid six | without any anxiety. | Mr. Sims will answer all inquiries on con- | tract that are addressed to this newspaper | with self-addressed. stamped envelope. (Copyright. 1933.) LEEDS. becomingly costumed in shades of | violet, red or green that have a bluish tinge. The orange-red type of color- ing is flattered by orange, yellow and yellowish green. Redheads often come in this class; their best colers are found in the color family beginning with yel- low and extending through orange to copper and bronze and warm browns. OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL HIS is going to be a good Spring for making gardens. Whenever we feel poor we turn to the ancient mother for sustenance and she never fails us. Most of us are feeling pinched on one foot or the other, so it is gardening time for all and sundry, children included. Spade up the plot as soon as you can get the spade down. Don't be stingy with the spading for the deeper it goes the longer roots the plants are going to have and the bigger return in fun and treasure you are going to get. ‘You may not know how to start your job but your neighbor knows. You can fence rail, and have the first real thrill that comes to the gardener, the friend- ship of another gardener. Two garden- ers are always better than one and if there is a group to swap seeds and plants and stories, life takes on a rare| Maybe his radishes came | first but yours are the crisper. If you | can't raise a cabbage to beat his then— well, just wait. And youll have to ive him a few of those seeds that came rom the big seedman, just to show him that you can beat him with an even start. The children will want to garden, too. As soon as they see the spade coming out they will ask for a place to dig. Give it to them and help them. Teach them how. They will not be able to dig deeply enough for the start, but after that, with a very litt'e help, they can get along first rat>. They can rake and sift the soil. They can sow their enjoy the gardener’s greatest pastime, watching them coming up and growing on to full cize for the harvest. Even if we were not feeling poor, end we should not feel that way, especially when we have a garden. we ought to raise flowers and vegetables of our own. A house is only half a home until it has a garden. If you have never raised a plant, never planted a tree or a shrub, you have no idea of the treat that is in store for you. Don't be discouraged by tales of the pests. They come but they don't stay unless you make them com- fortable. good sprayer and your honorable finger and thumb soon settle them. Getting rid of them lends gay- ety and a feeling of righteous adven- turing that adds & lot to the spirit of the garden. When you rise early and feel the fresh sweet air of the morning on your face, when you turn over the soil and its cool damp fragrance rises to your morning rounds, a wave of well bzing and peace washes over you and you have a sense cf renewal. Faith and courage and determination are born in the early hours in a garden. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Tommy wen the 50-yard dash in the THE EVENING NANCY PAGE Knitting Bags Hold Sewing And Mending. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Lois and Nancy were knitting in their moments. They knitted afghan locks from leftover wool. These blocks ‘were given to the locil charities organi- zations, which made them up inte coverings for some of the dependent families. Then Lois was knitting some bootees. And Nancy started a bedspread. She wanted to have one for a four-poster bed, which her mother promised her she | might have. Not only was the knitting a relax- etion, but it was a decorative occupa- tion, since both Nancy and Lois made special knitting bags. One of Nancy's was made of fine gingham in shades of tan and brown. It was made of patchwork pieces. The lining was of tan or buff, a shade darker than the light patches. Whalebone was put in the casing at the top. The large triangles were cut 2'; by 5 inches. There were 20 light ones and 16 dark ones. Small triangles at the sides were cut 13 by 317 inches. There are eight light and eight dark ones. The lining is| made separately, shaped like the pieced | outer part. e handles are applied. This pattern was one which Nancy re- g}x‘\_'ed from Mrs. Lamb of West Dover, | io. . Another bag, one of the two whicl Lois used, was made of squares of cot- ton material. In one bag the squares| were all cut the same size. In the other | there were two sizes, one large square for the joining blocks and four small | squares for the pieced block. Both of these had whalebone run| into the casing at the top. The handles | were of material which had been doubled and applied on the inside of the bag top. Uncommon Sense Vulnerable BY JOHN BLAKE. HAVE known a number of young men who promised well while they were in school, who seemed on the road to success when they got out, and who, a little later, suddenly sank to the average level and were heard of no more. These young men were vulnerable. Quick success made them the envy and the target of others. What was more dangerous, it con- vinced them that they were going to choot into suceess almost immediatel, And they become so busy plotting bril- lant futures for themselves that they | forgot to think about the present. Any one who tries to live 8ither in the past or the future is trying to live in a time which has no existence and | therefore is not satisfactory as a dwell- | ing place. It has been my observation that | when a man is regarded early in his career as exceptionally brilllant he is in a dangerous—a vulnerable—position. | Many people, j2alous of him, try to pull him down. This isn't cricket, of course, but it is human nature. He could beat these people, if he had the nerve. The people who flatter him and make him think that he is a wonder are more dangerous. To them he listens, for the half-baked flattery is always pleasant. By and by he begins to think he is as brilliant as he needs to be, and so he stops trying to do anything more. It is at that moment the promise he gave of success goes glimmering. To be vulnerable in the game of con- tract means that you have won a game and are therefore required to keep right on winning or be set back. In other words it may be either a hazard or a prize, and you must be extremely careful about how you play the next hand, if you are in the game to_win. Vulnerability in contract is not very impertant urless you are p]aflng for heavy stakes. Vulnerability in life is extremely important. Be on your guard against it. Every play means ger. Overconfidence means disaster. You can't help being vulnerable sometimes. But when you are, be careful. The big game in which you sare playing needs to win, not only through : good start, but continued good play- ng. You can win it despite vulnerability. But don't be too sure. Play your i cards carefully. And don’t excited | when you are dealt a good hand and | bid a slam on it when the most you are likely to make is two or three spades. There must be some chance-taking | in life as well as in contract. But don’t | take many chances when you are vul- nerable, or you may be out of the game before you realize it. (Copyright. 1933.) Tourmagent, all right, an’ he got a medal for it. But the coach give me a quarter because he said I “paced an’ carried weight besides”—— Looks 10 Years Younger Brushes Away Gray Hair Now you can really iook years younger. ordinars. Sma brish You jusi eaks or patches of ETay back | to_your n 1 shade—whether blonde, brown er biack. It s so easy to do—at homewith Browratone. Over 20 Years e hair. No need to guess. First cut a lock of hair_from vour head and spply a little | of this famous tint. 1f Brownatone does not give your gray. streaked, dull or faded on lettuce with boiled dressing. (Copyright, 1933.) | hair its natural color. youth and luster, your money back. Only 50c. All drug- | sists.—Adver Was It You? The other day a pleasant-looking woman STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C., Dow't Neflztwmm olhtll‘:d Varied Marriage! ’%Mm {DorothyDix| Not Enough to Develop Line With Which to Catch Husband, Advice to Women. Attractions to Suit Age. ETTING married and keeping their husbands in love with them 15 it 1s the best occupation the chief business of women. 3 they can follow. But, unfortunately, few wives are sagacious enough to know that they have to alter the method of running to time, and must continually the matrimonial shop from timé refinance it, or else it comes to In other words, at different times in her life a woman needs not only a different line of charms, but more charms with which to allure and hold & man. At 60 she can no more get by with the attractions that sufficed at 16 than she could run & department stére on the capital with which she opened up her first store. AT 20, for instance, beauty is enough attraction for & girl to héve, and 1t doesn’t have to be the real A-1 goods at that. Any fairly good synthetic article will pass, just so it is new and bright and shiny and painted up in gay colors. A pink chiffon dress, a drug store complexion, a little peroxide or a henna rinse, and the result is a prettinéss which catches the eye of & man and makes him invest his all in eyes. We don't demand her. All we ask of youth is to be essy on the brains, because we get our money's worth by contefiplating the ly adorned outside of a girl's heed without considering how it is ed within. We don't expect witty or entertajning conversation because all flapper chatter is silly and inane. ask whether the silvery peals of laughter spring from a sense of humer or h s. All the capital that Sweet and Twenty needs to do a land ice business on is just géod looks. BY the time a woman is 30 she has to 8dd a new line of attractions to her shelves if she holds her trade. She has to lay in a supply try. She has to begin to dress her show window so that she nly catch the roving glances of men but pique their curiosity into wanting to find out if on closer inspection she is as desirable as she seems at first sight. In a word, she must acquire the art of selling herself to men by making them think in the first place that they cannot live without her and that she is the only one who understands them and knows how great and wonderful they are, and, in the second place, by never letting her supply of fascinations run low or get stale and shopworn. Always she keeps a man's attention centered on her by having some new trick of personality up her sleeve, and she keeps him gue: which way the cat is going to jump. So at 30 & woman must not only be pretty, she must be interesting as well. T 35 a woman must stock intelligence. The flapper may babble as meaninglessly as the brook that runs on and on forever. She may even pull the trick of rolling her eyes at a learncd college professor and asking him fool questions and make him think it eute and winsome. But dumbness doesn't go north of 35 in a woman's life. After that it isn't cunning. It is dull stupidity. It isn't amusing any more. It is son;‘etmne that makes a man weep tears of self-pity if he has to live with it. If a girl's fortune is only in her face, she must marry young, of not at all. But if a woman has brains and education she stands a better chance of making a good marriage at 35 or 40 than she did at 20, be- cause she attracts mature men instead of hobbledehoy boys. Also. her marriage is almost always & success because she is clever enough to know not only how to get & man but how to keep him. IT is boredom oftener than a wandering foot that sets men philander- ing. It is when a man feels that he can no longer endure. the tedious conversation of a wife who has never had a new idea or réad a boek since the first baby was born that makes him jam en his hat and start out in search of the companionship of some woman who will know what he is talking about and at least listen to him when he tries to tell her of his hopes and plans, And intelligence in a woman means 5o much more than merély hav- ing read the cwrrent much-discussed book. or being interested in world movements and an entertaining and amusing chum. It means knowing how to play the domestic game fairly and squarely and making a man not only a comfortable home but a peaceful and happy one. It means understanding a man and appreciating him. IT means laughing things off instead of making tragedies of them. It means being able to take the blows of life on the chin and come up smiling instead of going down in & whining heap before every little rap of Fate. Intelligence is an indespensable quality for every woman to have in unlimited quantities after she is 35. r there will never be an hour or a minute that she will not be called on to use it. At 40 a woman must load up on the virtues. She must carry the largest possible stock of amiability, broad-mindedness, generosity, kind- liness, helpfulness and humor. These are the qualities we most admire in a woman as she grows older, and if she has them nothing else mat- ters much. She may have lost her youth and beauty: her complexion and figure may be things of the long ago, but if she is wise and witty and tender and understanding she is still a fascinator. DOROTHY DIX, (Copyright. 1933.) MODES: OF THE MOMENT MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1933. WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Ragistersd U. 8. Patent Ofos. When “Billy” Pranklin, one of Amer- ica’s leading blackface comedians, was entertaining _cro at Beach’s Inn, Chesapeake Beach? SPRINGTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. OTHING is harder to establish in the vital statistics of our bird | life than the lccal dates at which birds leave, Many of the Winter birds are now tak- ing the wing for the breeding grounds in the far north, such as the Winter wren, the brown creeper, the golden- | crowned kinglet, junco, sapsucker and about half of our ducks (all of which are Winter birds or pure migrants ex- | cept the now rare wood duck). But| the fact that you see a bird flying north in a business-like way does not mean | that it is as vet leaving the neighbor- hood, sand the knowledge which Wash- ington ornithologists possess of the average departure dates of birds in Spring (just at the season when ama-| teurs are all excited over arrivals and | care nothing abott departures) is due | to that patient sort of thoroughness that only professicnals can sustain. 1 One of the greatest factors in the studying of bird migrations has been that of banding. This operation con- sists in the capture, uninjured, of eountless birds, and banding their legs with a little tag giving place and date seen. Ornithologists in adjoining re- | gions, when they capture a banded | bird, are then in a position to make some calculation of its movements. Thousands of data of this sort are summed up when the Government au- thorities give out such brief and dry information as that the average Spring departure date for the American mer- ganser is April 27. ! ‘There are a good many species of | | birds, purely migratory around the Dis- | | trict, whieh must be seen ncw or never, | | for they slip through so fast that. un- less you are on the watch for them,| | you will see nothing of them. These | are the modest little pipit. which you | might mistake for a sparrow, the fox | spairow, the vesper sparrow, the palm | warbler and upland plover. The vesper | sparrow is on his way to New England | |to found a family, and the place to| | watch for him is in the open fields. perching on fences or pecking in new | | plowed ground. The preity name of vesper sparrow |leads us to expect a lovely evensong from this little fellow, but though it is | true that at sunset during the courting season there is a plaintive little trill from this grass finch, you must not ex- | pect to hear the tones of a thrush. ‘The handsome big fox sparrow does not let drop here a syllable of the sweet | things he peurs into his mdtc's car | when pairing begins in Canada a few | weeks hence. Only a little chip-chip- ! ping sound comes frcm him as he hops | busily about in the woods in quest of | | seeds, insects and worms. The Bartramian sandpiper. whi | other and better name is upland piover. | is much more worth watching for, for | ] All the | plovers are great migrators, the greatest | of all, n fact. It is rather a rare mi- | | grant, especially rare in Spring, and | | any one who sees even one will have made a discovery werth noting. Pointed Paragraphs ‘The older the trousers the better they are prepared for the fray. Self-love is more commendable at times than self-forgetfulness. When a man's trousers bag at the knee they seldom bag at the pockets. Honesty wouldn't be considered such & valuable trait if it weren't so scarce. One touch of a poor relation is apt to make the rich msn think the whole world kin. | The boarding house beefsteak is rare when it appears on the table only once a week. | The old bachelor who has two small | boys for neighbors says that the good must die very young, indeed. If a man fails to open the door when fortune knccks, she Goesn't break the | door down with a battering ram. | A little bird on the hat is worth two | that tell tales. | A base bal} crank says the rain falis ealike on the just and the umpires. | The things that come to those who wait are seldom what they started in to wait for. | An agreeable truth may lie at thel boitom of the well, but the disagreeable kind comes to the surface. | A broken engagement may not worry | Nougat Cream. Melt half a cupful of sugar in a skillet, add one-fourth cupful of nut meats, and pour in a thin sheet on a buttered plate. When cold, pound fine. Dissolve one tablespoonful of gelatin in a lttle cold water. Add half a pint of hot cream and one-fourth cupful of sugar. Blend, cool, and when starting to set add ome-fourth cupful of nut meats, half a pint of cream whipped, and one teaspoonful of vanilla. L French Dressi got on the street car and sat opposite a friend of ours. made, you know—and But it was rain-spotted coming. If you know Her dress was quite smart—well obviously expensive. and therefore not be- this woman, tell her that the Dry Cleaning Department of the Manhattan Laundry can restore the lustre her dress had when n This cleaning service harm the most delicate fabrics. ew at very low cost. is guaranteed not to The phone number is Decatur 1120. A favorite light lunch ANY of the popular vegetable salads (cooked or fresh) put together with ng. Served with crackers, toast orbread and a snowy block of ““Philadelphia™ Cream Cheese! “Philadelphia” adds the luxury touch, inexpensivéiy. “PHILADELPHIA" CREAM CHEESE Fresa...is the 3 ox. silver foil packages always plainly marked «Philadeiphia” brand. Never sold in bulk WOMEN’S FEATURES. Learning From Stamps. NE of the great things about O stamp collecting is the way 1t fits in with so many flelds of knowledge. You may have stamps which show W found in_Borneo, Afriea or America. b It you t:;' not arranging ’Wmmm y country, may grou subjects—as, ’T;r ll{lhnu’ “Animal Stamps' » FOUR METHODS OF TRA SHOWN ON STAMPS. the flag-of Portugal, Vasco da Gama went around the southern end of Africa | and across the Indian ocean until he | reached India, in the spring of 1498.| This was the first trip ever made from Europe around southern Africa to India. Four hundred years later Portugal is-| sued a stamp in memory of the great deed. | A third stamp with a travel scene| comes {rom Togo and is marked “3 Pfennigs.” It bears a steamship pic- ture. A “pfennig” is a German coin, | end you might guess that Tcgo is a| German colony; but do not be too sure | until you look it up. The fact is that Togo, or Togoland, used to belong to| Germany; but at the cloce of the World | War, France and Great Britain took | charge of it. The land is in western| Africa, near the Gold Coast. A still more modern means of travel The 0ld Gardener Says: Rosebushes should be set out as early as possible in the Spring and prefersbly on a cloudy day. Plants received from a distance may be somewhat dried out. The safest plan to follow with them is to soak them in a pall of wa- ter for several hours, or better still, to bury them in the open ground, leaving them there for a day or two. This treatment will make them plump again, after which they may be planted with essurance that they will live. It is a ke to plant any rose- bushes which are dricd, either at the tops or at the roots. One secret of succsss with rosebuches is to mound the earth up around them for 5 or 6 inches, leaving for a wesk. This plan prevents, the drying out of nevly set' plants before they become estab- lished in their new surrcundings. (Copyzight. 1933.) [[) @ “I've discovered the per- fect beauty treatment one cent a day. Just LU in the dishpan! It's co gentle and soothing it keeps my hands nmuingl?' smooth and white.” MRs. J. W. THORSEN 7 KOLYNOS Eis R L P LR g g LABORATORY TESTS CHECK EFFICACY OF | KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN' | Show Why This Delicious | Cereal Overcomes Com- | mon Constipation There are scientific reasons for the success of ALL-BRAN in pre- venting and relieving common constipation. Laboratory investi- gations show that it supplies “bulk” to exercise the intestines; and vitamin B to promote appe- tite, and help tone the intestinal tract. These two important food ele- ments aid regular habits, and help do away with the headaches, loss of appetite and energy, so oiten the result of constipation. The “bulk” in ALL-BRAN is mild in action—much like that of lettuce. Inside the body it forms a soft mass, which gently clears | the intestines of wastes. i Isn’t this pleasant “cereal way” | far more helpful than using pills | and drugs—so often habit-form-| ing! iust eat two tablespoonfuls of | Kellogg's daily—enough for mest | types of constipation. If not re-|| i our doctor. RAN brings your body twice as much blood-build- ing iron as an equal amount by weight of beef liver. Special cooking proceésses make ALL-BRAN finer, softer, more palatable. Equally tasty as a cereal. or used in cooking. Recipes on the red-and-green package. Seld by all grocers. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek.—Adver- tisement. Now try this way that DOUBLE - CLEANS TEETH _ —Results will surprise you IF you think your teeth are nat- urally dull, off-color, or suscep- tible to decay simply because brushing fails to keep them sound or make them white . . . Remem- ber this: Any preparation that polishes teeth and fails to_ kill germs— millions of germs that swarm into the mouth and cause most tooth and gum troubles—ONLY HALF- CLEANS TEETH. One dental cream in the world that kills «roublesome germs as it cleans the teeth is Kolynos. Try jt—a half-inch on a dry brush, morning and night . . . soon your teeth will look cleaner than ever before. This unique, scientific dental cream contains two priceless ingredients that give the teetha UBLE-CLEANSING. As one foams into every crevice, over every tooth surface and e away food accumulation, stain tarnish—the other kills mil- lions of germs. Thus, in & remarkably short time, teeth are cleaned right doewn to the beautiful, natural white enamel — without injury. look more attractive than you ever believed possible. They are safeguarded ggainst decay. No, you can't ;]gt by with dull, HALF-CLEAN TEETH. Don't try to. Start using Kolynos. Over- night your teeth will show great improvement. Your mouth will feel cleaner and fresher. Get a tube of Kolynos from your drug- gist today. DENTAL CREAM

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