Evening Star Newspaper, May 9, 1933, Page 27

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MAGA ZINE PAGE, Packing Menus for Picnic Mealls BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. 'HEN you want a hot and hearty lunch to take on a motor picnic try some of the following foods packed ir the ways suggested. They have all been tried out and found most successful. You can have the range from a simple hot sandwich main dish, or piping hot baked beans and brown bread, to a full chicizen or roast dinner, and any of them with no more trouble Baked beans can be carried in 2 vacuum bottle or a fruit jar if wrapped as described. Hot meat sandwiches put in empty tin containers with well fitting covers and wrapped with newspapers will be made extra hot when gravy, carried in vacuum bottle or fruit jar, is poured over them oh their serving plates. For the roast dinner pack the cooked | vegetables around the meat in the | couble roasting pan or in a bread or | cake tin. Baked potatoes are good to take and the larger sized vegetables | rather than smaller ones, such as peas, ring beans, ctc, although if these put in a separate container they, | 100, can be packed about the roast. | Everything must bz cooked and ready | to sorve when packed. Then use many | thicknesses of ncwspaper to wrap about the well covered container with its ample contents and the food will keep hot a long time. |, To the individual dishes and cutlery |taken add a sharp carving knife -and |large fork for cutting and helping out the bird or other roast. Paper cups are handy for picnic use. | Celery, radishes, pickles, olives, etc., s or all are welcome extras for the | dinner of whatever sort. Cake and | tarts are casily carried desserts. Pruit of some sort and a wee nibble, at least, ‘nl candy is appreciated. Hot coffce, tea | or cocoa should be taken when the hot meal is stressed. Don't forget to take salt, pepper and sugar. Unless sand- | wiches are part of the menu, be ‘su: take buttered bread or rolls or butter and bread. 'and thoughtfulness of Miss Kersey. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Us fellows have been trying a good trick on the ones that don't know it yet, and this afternoon I tried it on ma, saying, Did you know I was a mind reader. ma? You're quite-brilliant, T have no doubt, go and wash your face before supper | much white with small black dots or NANCY PAGE Fish Tails Come From Georgia. FLORENCE LA GANKE. “Georgia sends us our pattern for today. Grace Kersey of Meansville, Ga., is the generous person who is sharing her ‘Fish Tail' quilt with us.” ‘The members of the Nancy Page Quilt Club liked the pattern, liked the name and appreciated the generosity “One of the nice things about this club, Nancy, is the way in which we get patterns from all over the country. Because generous quilt lovers share their patterns with us we really get some which we could not find eise- where.” “Right you are, Margaret. I am always so eppreciative when I open the mail and find a nice fat envelope. 1 incwee I am almost sure it will contain a drawing or a pieced block.” ‘This block is best made into an all- over pattern. As developed it calls for three colors, no white. The four squares in the corner are all of one color. The | patches shown dark in the small draw- ing are of another color and the ones shown white—that is.the small dia- mond ones—are of a third color. This quilt could be developed with the squares in black and white print, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Are Women Parasites in Marriage?—Which Is Better, Tidy Scold or Amiable Sloven?—Baby Adoption. to men, haven’t women always picked out their EAR MISS DIX—In regard to women's right to proj D popped the question to them? marriage usbands and Isn't woman's love more material than man's? Do you ever hear of men selling themselves to girls for the sake of luxury and good times? Do you ever hear of men complaining that thei‘hlve made a the good times they bad pick of a wife, or that they miss d when they were single? You hear women con- “tinually finding fault with their husbands and saying they are sorry they didn’t have sense enough to marry Haven't men always shown that they loved more than women? men always written all the songs, sober men instead of drunkards, etc. Haven't 'ms and stories about love? Haven't , men a better mental capacity for choosing their mates than women have? Isn't it women who are the parasites in marriage? EPH. ANSWER: Well, Joscph, giving woman the right to pop the question to man doesn't compel him to marry her. He can always say “no,” that this is so sudden, and that he had no idea she entertained such sentiments toward him and that the most he can do is to be a brother to her. I think that men will have a better chance to escape marriage, if such is their desire, when women pursue them in the open than they have now when it is done by stealth and under cover and a man never knows what designs upon him a woman may have hidden in scme casual attention. Perhaps women always have picked out their mates. Or at least they have known what particular men they would choose to spend the balance of their lives with if they had the say-so in the matter, but the trouble 15 that heretofore the conventions have forbidden them to take any active steps toward securing the husbends they desired. They have simply had to sit on the sidelines and look willi g, and only too often the man who could have made them happy and whom they could have made happy has been too blind and dumb to see them and read their signals aright. PERHAPS women do marry oftener for position and money than men do, but that was a necessity forced vpon them in the past by their inability to get the comforts of life in any other way. Now when any woman can make a good living for herself very few sell themselves for lucre. But if you think men are indifferent to such sordid considerations as a bank account, you are vastly mistaken. Also, you will observe that there is a constantly increasing number of loafing husbands who let their wifes earn the family's support. The world is full of the wailing of the husbands whose wives do not understand them It is the theme song of every philanderer, who uses it as his approach when he starts a new affair with a new girl. is the alibi of cvery poor, weak failure. Also, it Did you ever know a drunkard who didn't claim that he was driven to drink by his wife, or a man who went _bankrupt who didn't blame his' wife’s extravagance instead of his own bad judgment? NOR can ycu substantiate your theory t men love better than women SONNYSAYINGS /BY FANNY Y. CORY. Oh, Heabens! time 'bout the couch cover an’ pillers havin' just been washed an’ ironed so nice! (Copyright. 1933.) Uncommon Sense Find Out BY JOHN BLAKE. | ON'T be annoyed by people who, when they first meet you. self, your family and your business. The most aloof and would not ask these questions, but he | nevertheless would want to know the answers. We are a curious race, and it is an excellent thing for us that this is so. Women of the sewing circle are said to be inquisitive, but they are no more I just remembered in | ask you questions about your- | cold denizen of urban New England, WOMEN’S FEATURES " MILADY BEAUTIFUL ‘ BY LOIS EAR MISS LEEDS—Is there any remedy for fleshy knees? 1 find it very embarrassing, particularly in the Summer: time when I go in swimmin Answer—Exercise, massage and cof- rect posture will help you with your beauty problem. See that you wear shoes that are comfortable. . While it is natural for some types to have large | knee joints, various injuries #nd in- | ternal disturbances may cause the knees to become puffy and misshapen. | If these conditions exist, it is better to | have medical treatments. Walking, | swimming and dancing are excellent | exercises for stiff or fat knees, how- ever. Try the following exercises every | night and morning for several weeks: | | Stand erect, one hand resting on hip, | the other resting on the back of a/ chair. Raise the knee obliquely for-| ward, point the toe downward and ro- tate the lower part of the leg in wide | circles. Rotate 10 to 20 times in each | direction with each leg alternately. | (2) Stand with both feet turned slightly | outward, one foot advanced a little in front. Rise on the balls of the feet, then slowly flex the knees deeply; rise up again, lower the heels. Repeat 10| to 20 times. Massage the fleshy part | with rubbing or massage alcohol. Ap-| ply hot end cold towels for several | minutes at bedtime. Then give a good massage treatment with the rubbing alcohol after the exercise. Please send a self-addressed stamped envelope and ask for my leaflets, “Reducing Lower Limbs” and “Care of the Feet and | Legs.” They will help you with your beauty problem. LOIS LEEDS. Pimples on Her Back. Dear Miss Leeds—I enjoy your beauty column so much and feel -that you can help me with my beauty prob- lem. I have a few pimples on my back and shoulders. I do not want them to spread and I am very anxious to get rid of them before the Summer season, 50 that I can wear my low-| back swimming suit. NANCY M.C. | Answer—Bathe the parts affected with warm boric acid solution after | cleansing bath at bedtime. Use the jlotion hot. Gently press out the ripe | | pimples and bathe again with freshly LEEDS, of sinz, one dram sulphuretted sh, six ounces rose water. Mix well. ply with a pad of clean absorbent cot- ton and allow it to dry on the skin. The sulphur salve is obtainable ready prepared at any drug store or you may have your druggist mix the following ingredients for you: One teaspoonful (or dram) of precipitated sulphur, two teaspoonfus powdered starch, two teaspoonfus powdered zinc oxide, four teaspoonfuls petrolatum. Mix well into a smooth salve. Tanning and mild sunburn are excellent for healing skins inclined to pimples, so wear your bathw ing suit by all means. When posible expose the back to the sun's rays for several minutes every day. LOIS LEEDS. (Copyright. 1933 “Takes Out Color Like Magic! Also removes stubborn spots and stains Fast colors—midnight blue or even jet black—can now be removed like magic, without harming fabrics in the slightest! And all lhmufil the use of an amazing product developed by RIT chemists and available for home use everywhere! It is known as White RIT. d0. You know what the poet says: ‘A man’s love is of man’s life a Sip s Biuc MIT waiee bR thing apart, 'tis woman's whole existence.” Far more men are unfaithful | than women. A man seldom loves an erring wife enough to forgive her, i but thousands of women love their husbands well enough to take them back after they have betrayed them seventy and seven times. You have and youwll be even more remarkable, me_said. Bemng sourcastic, and I said, Well G, ma. this is serious, I bet you a thousand dellars if you take a cent ar a dime S B Saiees It is easily 7] The other colors could be plain green and a figured green and white, or fig- ured lavender and figured green. i made boric acid lotion. |go than their Gusbands and brothers.| MaGe orit A0 e, L, 1s casly Supposing all men had been like the | Spoonful of boric acid in one pint of | | o boiling water. Divide it in half and hard-boiled, typical upper-class Briton | 0 %% Tonr Biot‘the skin dry with | pe. T 933 S STILL STEAMING T W THE PAN WAS UN- COVERED AT THE PICNIC. than for an ordinary luncheon. Containers in which to pack the hot luncheons run the gamut of vacuum bottles and other vacuum containers, double roastinz pans, metal bread or cake boxes, fruit jars and double-padded parer bags, stch as ice cream cartens, are put in when ices are bought to take home. It is bags for picnic use. vacuum b or nced cxtra ones malte excellent substitutes. Put cach ia an ordinary paper bag or a padded ons and wrap it about with hicknesses of newspaper. He the bottles covered as vell d bottom as at sides. All hot iners except those with vac- uld have outer wrappings of many thickncsses of paper. Sly Rascal. The world is made up. you avill find, Of rood and bad of every kind, Old Mother Nature. HATTERER, the Red Squirrel, ly rascal. Every nows that. There are times when he is bold and always he is impudent, but of all the people in the Green Forest none i sly than he He is a spy and a spy hos to be sly. He ways spying on his neighbors, trying to eut what they are doing and all about their affairs. ‘This is one reason he is not better liked by Lis neighbors. Now it is in_the Spring and early Summer that Cb © gets nto the worstmischief. are bad, sad stories about him and the things he has done. Like most people who are mischievous he often is suspected of doing things that he doesn't do, but he does do many things that his friends wich he didn't do. other things he steals eggs. Yes, sir, he steals eggs. And just as you like a dinner of tender chicken, he likes a dinner of baby birds. So in the Spring and early Summer Chatterer has no friends among the feathered folk. The moment he is seen he is suspected of no good purplse and the alarm is given. This has made him sly. He keeps that at other times noisy tongue of his still, and he moves about silently and tries to keep out of sight. Of course the eggs that steals arc the egzs of the smaller feathered folks. He f taking these He would prefer the bigger eggs such as those of Blacky the Crow and the members of the Hawk MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Oranges Wheat Cereal with Cream French Toast Bacon Coffee LUNCHEON. Shrimp Wiggle Toasted Crackers Pruit Salad Cookies DINNER. Lamb Stew with Vegetables Boiled Potatoes Reet Greens Lettuce Hearts. French Dressing Apple Pie Cheese Coffee TOAST WITH BACON. One-half pound bacon, or more: fry until brown and crisp; reserve some of the drippings. Beat 1 egg, add '- cup milk, dip 5 slices stale bread, one at a time, in the mixture, fry until light brown in bacon drippings. Serve on a platter. Salt bread lightly. Put bacon around the toast. If some prefer pork sausages, serve the same way. SHRIMP WIGGLE. Melt 4 tablespoons butt: 3 teaspoons flour mixed with 1z teaspcon salt and 'z teaspoon pepper. Pour on gradually 11, cups milk and as socn as saucs thickens add 1 cup shrimps broken into pieces, 1 cup peas, drained from their liquor and thoroughly mixed. LAMB STEW. One pound neck of lamb or mutton, sprinkle with pepper and salt, and place in saucepan. Cut 1 pound string beans and siice large Spanish onions. Cover meat with onion and lay beans on top. Place cover on sauce- pan and leave on side of fire for 2 or 3 hows. This dish requires no water cr butter. (Copyricht, 1 Tea add one | Among | Chatterer | quite safe in | or something and look at it and con- centrate all your mite, I bet I can tell | you the date 3 How can be So silly? ma said, and I said, ot, ma, go ahead and ! try it just to stop the argewment. | O all rite, anything for peace, ma s2id. And she took a dime out of her | bag and started to look at it. me saying, Now concentrate, are vou thinking hard, are you concentrating? ! ves, now tell me the date? ma and I said. May the 9th. o | What? ma said. and I said. That's the date, today and she ‘said, Well I declare, you crazy | thine, that's quite a joke. Why don't you try it on pop. ma, he's | always saying you don't know a joke | when you see one, I said, and ma said, That's not a bad ideer, hee hee. And after supper pop was smoking| and_thinking and ma said, I've got a | good one for you, Willvum, hut | wait a minnit till I get it all strats Now let me see, I forget what date tuis she said. and pop said, it's the 9th | of May, and ma said, Yes, but that has nothing to do with it, naturelly, I want you to take a coin out of your pocket, any coin at all, and concentrate on it 0] Ilnd allow for scams in cutting. May the 9th. aint it? | § and I'll tell you the date, she said. | | Tmpocsible, pop said. And he started ' to look at a cent with a_hipmotized ex- | ession, and ma said, Are you concen- | trating? and pop said. Yes, and ma | said, Then concentrate more, good, now | T'll tell you the date. | | May the 9th, pop said, and ma said. Willyum Potts you knew it all the time | jand you just let me waist my time, I don't think that's smart. You can't tell me vou guessed it yourself and I | consider it very mean of you, she said. Getting madder and madder the more Ime and pop laughed. ORIE family, but it isn't often he dares take these. He has a wholesome fear of the stout bills and great claws of { By Thornton W. Burgess. more | SO CHATTERER SNEAKED ABOUT AND HID WHERE HE COULD WATCH THE GRACKLES. | these folks. .So he spends his time | looking ~ for nests of the smaller feathered neighbors. Even these he does | not rob boldly, but watches for a chance | to steal the eggs when they are un- guarded for a 1ew minutes. You know the feathered folk have a way of band- ing together to punish a thief, and their bills are sharp. From the time Creaker the Grackle |and his friends had arrived Chatterer had been keeping watch of them. “Graekle eggs are big enough to be worth while,” said Chatterer as he talked to himself. “They are worth a litle time and trouble to get. I don't| ant any trouble with Creaker or his friends for they are big enough to hurt if they get in a few good blows. No, sir, I don’t want any trouble with any of those birds, but I do want some | of ‘their eggs. Probably they will build in those pine trees where they built last year. I would like to get Creaker's eggs. He and Mrs. Creaker are the smartest of those Grackles and I never yet have been able to get any of their eggs. I'll keep my eye on them and sce where they "are building.” So Chatterer sneaked about and hid where he could watch the Grackles. One by. one he located the nests in the pine trees and studed how he could best get at each when it might be un- guarded, and how he could best get away again. But though he kept a sharp watch he did not see Mr. and Mrs. Creaker in those pine trees. ‘Can it be,” thought he, “that they are not going to mnest in one of those trees! 1 never have known them to fail before. 1If they are nesting some- | where else I must find out wher | At last Chatterer caught a gn | of Mrs. Creaker flying with her bill | filled with nesting material. He knew that she would fly straight to the nest che was building, so of course he knew the direction in which to look for it. At once he set out after her, traveling in the tree-tops as much as possible, Jumping from tree to tree wherever' he could, and all the time taking the greatest care not to ba seen by any cne. When he saw Mrs. Creaker re- turning for more materiai he fiattened | himself on the under side of a big limb until she had passed. Then he hurried {on. Presently he moved more slowlyI stu g the trees ahead. He was locking for that new nest. At the same time he kept watch behind for the return of Mrs. Creaker or Creaker him- celf, that he might get hidden before they shculd see him. You see What a sly rascal Chatterer js. But as I've said before, mischievous people usually are sly. » l (Copyright. 1933, | 3 The color scheme is really an indi- | vidual matter. Be sure materials are color iast and of small pattern, for this design does not use patches large enough to “carry off” big patterns, nor | ones with much white in them. | For an all-over quilt of double-bed size I'd allow three yards for small | diamonds and four yards for squares. Follow directions for gettin patterns The actual pattern for the Fish Tail | Quilt Design may be obtained by sending 3 cents and a self-addressed. stamped envelope to Nancy Page. in care of this | Back patterns may be secured by | sending additional 3 cents for each pat- ern requested (Copyright. NATURE"’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. 1933.) Ladybird Beetles. Coccinellidae family. | Ladybird. ladybird. fly away home! Your house is on’ fire and your children | will bura, HE ladybird must be amused at this rhyme. She never builds a | home, “and her children are greedy littie caterpiliars, so busily engaged in stuffing them selves with tender plant-lice, that even if they could hear a fire alarm, it 130 = j LADYBIRD BEETLES: would mean nothing to them. Ladybirds have kept abreast with the times. They are now traveling by mail in capsules. a vest improvement over long, tedious trips by wing. These beetles are our most important insect | friends and we are always glad to wel- | come them in our gardens. At night, | the mother ladybiii creeps under a leaf and rests there until daybreak. If ‘ you live in the country and are abroad | at that time, you will see these little assistants of ours racing hither and | thither like mad. They are seeking | a likely ieaf on which to lay their eggs. Ladybirds are most careful about their tcilets. but at times in their great haste to settle their families, they for- zet to tuck their “nighties” or petticoats in. I am sure you have seen a wee edge of wing exposed to view. If you disturb these busy workers, | they apparently “drop dead” at your feet. They lie on their backs and re- main in this position until they are | convinced all danger is past. Working their feet like a whirlwind, they right themselves and go blithely about their business. In the early Spring you will see lady- birds creeping-from their Winter quar- ters—a pile of leaves or maybe trash. They seem to know just where the aphids will be pumping some fine plant’s life away, and hie themselves to the rescue of the plant. It is this thoughtfulness that endears them to us. In the very midst of the little plant | suckers, she lays her eggs. In a day or | two there will be a fine family of little | black babies, with red and orange dots | on their coats and on each segment a | wart! These are decorative and have the effect of bumpiness. Their legs are wooden-like props, but they get their owners about. After feasting and casting off tight clothes, the plump consumer is seen | tinting with known dozens of women who have nursed sick men with a love and pa- tience that never faltered through the vears: women who waited outside of penitentiary gates, but a man's lov: disgrace. seldom survives invalidism or g As for men having a better mental capacity for making a wise choice in marriage, look at their picks and you will not think there are many Solomons among them. But before w along that line we will have to see much to boast of on either side. * * can judge a woman's capacity her ‘choice. Probably there won't be DOROTHY DIX. * * DEAE DOROTHY DIX—Does a tidy, shrewish woman make a better wife than a good-natured, untidy one? Answer: Depends upon ease whether you would rather h Your disposition J.R. K. of mind versus ease of body, and e & wife who saved your pennics or saved A woman can be a_human vacuum cleaner who keeps her house as clean as the proverbial new pin scrubbed, every window polished, every chair in place She may have every floor She may set well cocked food on the table on the very tick of the clock, and yet make a home that is such a place of torment that her husband and children flce from it. THERE are other homes that look as if a cyclone has just passed over them; where nothing is ever orderly or overly clean: where meals are never on time and are badly cooked: where there is a iamentable lack of thrift and management, but where there are alwavs laughter and good nature and sympathy and understanding. * x DOROTHY DIX. * EAR DOROTHY DIX—We have four children, the youngest a baby 4 months old. My husband says thiee children are all we can take care of and he wants me to give the baby to a nice couple whom we know who have no children and want to adopt him. They are well-to-do and could do for the child more*than we can. My husband is crazy about the three other children, but doesn't seem to care for this little babv. Iam afraid if I do not yield to my husband about this that it will break up our family and we have always been so happy and congenlal do? What should G. G. M. ? MRS. Answer: T think that when it came to really giving up the child your husband would find that he couldn't do it * His love for the little helpless creature would be too much. So why don't you get the couple who want the child to keep it for a few months and see if the arrangement works? (Copyright. 19:13 ) DOROTHY DIX. sisters. He is seekirg a quiet place in which to hang himself by his tail. His last discarded suit hangs in tatters about his neck as he proceeds to change his' form. Through the transparent |’ pupal case you can see his eyes. wings and legs. (Copyright. 1933.) WHO REMEMBERS? BY DJCK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. 7 / A ) ! When the “Divine Sarah” attracted Washington theater-goers by the thou- . moving away from his brothers and |sand? the NEW DIAMOND TINTS NO BOILING NECESSARY @ You've never seen such lovely lustrous colors— all the popular new shades! @ You've never seen colors last through so many launderings! " Atall druggists Made by the makers of Diamond Dyes In a short time the veil | | covering him splits and another lady- | bird beetle is on the job. How It Started BY JEAN NEWTON. The Crack of Doom. | ‘The “crack of doom” is a familiar expression to denote the Judgment | day, or Day of Doom at the end of the world, when, in the belief of some people, all souls will be judged. This may sound like the phrase- making of a modern evangelist. But as a matter of fact it dates back as far as 1606, and takes its origin in Shakespeare's tragedy of “Macbeth.” It is in the fourth act. in the scene between Macbeth and the witches, as the apparitions of the eight kings ap- pear before Macbeth, that he says, after seeing the first four: “Why do you show me this? A fourth! ~ SRart, eyes! What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?” (Copyrix Sandwich Au Gratin. Spread buttered toast with deviled ham sandwich spread. Make a rich cream sauce, adding diced, hard-cooked eggs, chopped green peppers and grated | cheese. Pour over the toast and sprin- kle with paprika. Serve at once. This makes a very delicious luncheon dish. Instead of the sandwich spread, left- |over ham may be ground and mixed | with mayornaise dressing. who scorns to ask questions of others. | We should still be making stone | hammers like the cave man. who wes convinced without asking any questions |that a stranger was an enemy, and that the only safe course was to knock | him over the head. | * x % x | __The Creator, infinitely wiser than we, | stilled in man a native curiosity, | which he hgs used more and more, as his mind developed. in educating him- |seif, and in passing his education around. Had men been as incurious as the old gentlemen who sit in club windows appear to be, there would have been no problem about the shape of the earth, and our forefathers would have taken it for gronted that it was flat, and surrounded with an impassable ocean. Columbus was the first man really to employ this curiosity for the benefit of man, for the Norsemen who came | here before him were only curious about fish. and probably never knew | that they had set foot on a new conti- | nent. | Columbus died without knowing that !a new continent had been found by 'him, but he was convinced that the | werld was round, and that by sailing in one direction long enough he might return to his starting point. His mis- take was in not thinking that perhaps this Western waterway might have on it a few obsiacies to navigation. Copyr 105 | MAKE YOUR NEW DRESS B ] ¢y Simplicity 'l o Triple-Style i Pattern ¢ The simplest, easiest pattern to use. See the gorgeous new summer styles in the new SIMPLICITY MAGAZINE 10¢ at your favorite depart- ment store. SIMPLICITY PATTERN CO. 44 W. 18th $t.,, New Yerk City NO END TO TWS JOB! DIRTY DISHES, POTS, PANS AFTER EVERY MEAL OH, YES—RINSO GETS CLOTHES 4 0RS SHADES WHITER WITHOUT SCRUBBING WITH RINSO! WELL, IT'S JUST AS WONDER- FUL FOR DISHES, AND IT SAVES YOUR HANDS, T0O. TRY (T AND SEE SOAKS grease right offl SAVI work three times a day—save time—save your hands—use Rinse for dishwashing. Grease flashes off in jiffy. You'll be through in half the time—or less! Spoon for spoon, Rinso gives twice s much suds as lij puffed- up soaps. Rich, on washday! Most women use Rinso for all cleaning. Get it st your grocer today. | a clean, soft towel and apply a little | sulphur salve or the following lotion | to the sore spots: One dram sulphate aouble stal Diapers come ouf soft and snowy wi White RIT hite. priced at 25¢ the Creamy richness— luscious flavor —extra nourishment Quick UAKER OaTs At about }; the price of a year ago Cake Day Plain and Wa Electric Range—the last capacity of our model tomorrow—Wednesday. —gives you wonderful results. Effigient, ient, dependable and economical. Tomorrow Wednesday, at 2 P.M Mrs. Zimmer will demonstrate the making of a variety of different cakes—baked with both Self-Rising FLOUR Doing the baking in the latest type of @ Electric Range It's ‘a combination that insures perfect results— with the greatest convenience. Washington Flour is specially adapted to family recipes—and the G. E. word in electric ranges conven- Try to come early—to be sure of a seat. The kitche: utmost for these demonstrations. is taxed to the 2 PM— You'll Receive Free Samples of s Washington Flour —both PLAIN and SELF-RISING—sent to your home §f you are attending the demonstration for the first time. National Electrical Supply Company E. C. Graham, President 1330 New York Avenue

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