Evening Star Newspaper, May 10, 1933, Page 25

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MAGAZ Conquering Contract By P. HAL SIM INE PAGE. 1 would raise to two no trumps without ! bidding the diamonds. My partner must have spades under control, may even have five of them to the ace-king, and in that event the opponent may well hold four each, and t! 1s likely | to be the natural opening lead against { him, provided I do not induce him to | reveal the suit, as he is likely to do if | I bid two diamonds and make that sec- | ondary bid of two spades so easy for 'him. ~ If the bidding goes—one no trump, two no trumps, three spades: | now bid three no trumps, and who knows but what a diamond may be the | blind opening lead? With a Five-Card Major Suit. ‘The discussion of the last few articles applies in exactly the same manner to major suits except— First. With a singleton or void, bid THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., That Body of Yours BY JAMES W. BARTON, M. Mining Discovery. HE whole scientific world is ‘watching with deep interest the opening up in Canada of what is called the Bear Lake mining district, because it is likely to mean that & great amount of suffering will be relleved and thousands of lives saved to the world by the discovery of a huge deposit of pitchblende. It is from pitchblende that radinm is ob- tained. At present, it is being brought out by airplane to the railroad and car- MODES OF THE MOMENT WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 1933. OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL Silent Sufferers. HILDREN must remain silent upon their own grave concerns. I have in mind the schools. Schools exist for the it of 1t children self-defense, they “Tell in him to do. he can't learn French. and sol seems as though they were the last who counted in the matter, if, indeed, they counted at all. Lately I have listened to many stories told by troubled fathers and mothers. Their boys and girls, particularly their boys, did not want to go to school. ‘They could not get high marks in their studies and they got plenty of blame from the teachers and the family. In were lea: ving home. " sald one of the fathers, “how we can make this g0 to school where he must sit in quiet for hours on end trying to do what is not He can’t do algebra and how they y forms.” ‘With the He likes to ward to, many & thin realising that, while extreme slimnes is in fash- ion for the town or country, it is not attractive for the shore, lake or swim- WOMEN'’S FEATURES, MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS Bathing-Suit Figure. OT ali women and girls who wish to improve their figures are too stout or too thin, al- these typu“ - e on Gbtain “bathing ault season to look for- girl 1s 10 to 20 times. Turn around 5 e T oo o g Al nes as -] R and bend the standing leg to & squate ting position. This ex will br lnwmzh{ the muscies of og. t the 'n, right and left leg alternately 10 to 1 times. Do the exercise n\ov{y. Exercise (2) Stand erect, hands and re- left discovery mean 30 much to humanity? It means that ra- dium should soon be available for cancer sufferers throughout the draw, make plans and work with wood and metal. We persuaded him to stay on another term, holding out the prom- ise of work in the shops, and along comes the order to shut ti and make the children stay five hours, five and & half some days. in the class the long major suit, as the hand may play more conveniently than in no trumps. In our consideration of very weak hands I said that the best game hope is in no trumps when the opener disregards the weakness rebid and goes renowned “‘Four Horsemen” teamn ons for taking out in the suit when when the suit itself is headed by lower minimum grade to such as is con- With 5-4-4-0 under the condi- hands. When the P. Hal Sims. when you have found a suit which the Mr. Sims is universally acclaimed the greatest living contract and auc- and has won 24 national champion- ships since 1924. ¢ is headed by two of the top three aonors, or even by king-jack, but cards than this. The reference, of course, is only to hands sufficiently re- render totally un- necessary any veyed by & rebid of the suit. distribution, I fa- vor the bidding of tions and in the manner recently hand is strong, do not be too en- opening bidder supports. There is not only danger, but likelihood that there is tion player. He was captain of the ] the last article I explained the rea- for preferring the raise in no trumps moved from the warning message, With a Void Suit. the suit or suits explained for weak thusiastic about your vold sult, even an absolute duplication because your partner holds ace or ace-king of your | void suit. Slams need aces, and they need the right aces when one partner has a void. With three well garnished suits but no ace I would not insist on a suit contract if my five-card suit were a minor. In fact, with no major suit as good as K 10 x x, I would not even bid the minor suit as a take-out. ades— Diamonds—K 10xxX arts—K 10 x x Clubs—Q J x X ‘would elicit a response of two diamonds from me; but unless my partner now bid hearts, I would take or steer the declaration to three no trumps. Hold- Diamonds—K J x x X ades Clubt—K 10 x X Jearts—Q x x x BEDTIME STORIE Chatterer Greatly Puzzled. Four courase vou should not compare ith what some other folk may dare. —Old Mother Nature. HAT is because what requires courage in one, in another may not require any at all. So the latter, seemingly brave, in truth is not brave at all. Never for- t that in passing judgment on other lolk. It requires no courage whatever for Jerry Muskrat to dive in the water, but it would require a great deal of courage for Peter Rabbit to do it. Chatterer the Red Squirrel was look- ing for the nest of Creaker the Grackle. It was nearly time for that nest to be three no trumps. In connection with the weil-above-minimum hands we are now dealing with, game is equally cer- tain in either declaration, and in rub- ber play you should tend to take the| declaration to four in the suit if ever | your partner supports the suit, as the play may be more secure and effortless. Second. In tournaments the suit fit generally makes me still more eager to | play for 35 points per trick instead of | 30, providing that the bidding has not | indicated that, apart from any danger in no trumps, it may be easler to make one more trick in the suit than in no trumps. A singleton does not affect this angle nearly so much as a void suit. 1t is then a question of ruffing out or cross-ruffing. not of obtaining discards. | as nothing less than three discards will | eliminate the losers from a suit of four | cards in which you have only one con- | trolling high card. For the time being 1 will merely mention the principle in- | volved. Later we will have some tour- | nament hands illustrating these and | other points of advanced bidding and | play. | (Copyright, 1933.) | M-, Sims will answer all inauiries on con- tract that are addressed to this newspaper with self-adaressed, stamped envelope. | By Thornton W. Burgess. Just then Mrs. Creaker appeared again and Chatterer hastily dodged out of sight until she had passed. She was | on her way for more material. Chatterer was just going to start for the next | tree 0 as to be nearer that nest when | Mrs. Plunger appeared and alighted on | the edge of it. Chatterer hastily dodged | out of sight. He kept out of sight. He | neither moved nor made a sound. He was so intent watching Mrs. Plunger that for the time being he quite forgot Mrs. Creaker. And then she appeared again. Chat- terer didn't see her until just as she was approaching the great nest of the | Plungers. Then he saw her and unless | his eyes deceived him completely she | world, whereas at Br. Barten. present the supply is limited and the price beyond the ability of hospitals to pay. It has now been definitely proven that where the radium can be applied to the cancer within a reasonable-time after it is known to be a cancer a cure is possible in nearly every case. This has been very definitely shown in a series of cases at the Howard A. Kelly Hospital, Baltimore. Dr. Edmund Kelly reports some hundreds of cases of cancer of the lip treated from 1921 to 1929. Of these, 96 per cent were in the lower lip, and 93 per cent were in men. Smoking and exposure to weather and to intense sunlight were some of the causes, as most of the cases were among farmers, sailors, soldiers| and outdoor workers. | Why is radium to be preferred to the | knife? It has a “selective” action, in that it selects the cancer cells and de- stroys them and does no harm to the healthy cells around the cancer. Dr. Kelly states that in those cases of cancer of the lip where there are no swollen glands—which would show the cancer to be spreading to some distance from the lip—he would recommend ra- dium as better than removal by surgery for four reasons: 1. The results and percentages of cures are excellent—over 93 per cent two-year cures and 81 per cent five- year cures 2. The appearance of the face and the use of the mouth are better. | 3. There is a vast saving In expense and time to both patient and hospital. | as the patient does not need to remal " | in hospital at all. 4. The patient can go about his usual work, thus losing no time. The big point to be remembered, of course, is that radium must be applied | only by those skilled in its use. (Copyright. 1933.) Uncommon Sense Finds This Requires | More Head Than Heart " | DorothyDix| Psychologist’s Advice to Young eMen, to Decide Qualities They Want in Wife and Then Find Girl That Measures Up. That is fine advice. And it wild work when humanity attains that pitch of pure reason when it prefers necessities to luxuries and craves skimmed milk that is good for its stomach instead of champagne. But the trouble with us all is that the things we yearn for are not the sane, safe, wholesome things that we should have. We want the things tha | are sure to disagree with us and give us a headache. | LEARNED psychologist tells young men that in order to be happy though married they should decide in advance what qualities they want in a wife, then look about until they discover their ideal, and when tiey find her marry her. tum PEOBABLY there never has been a man in the world who, before he fell in love hadn't figured out to a T exactly the sort of girl he was going to marry When he regarded the misfit wives of his friends, he couldn’t understand how they used as little judgment as they did in picking out their life partners. No such blunder for him. He knew what he wanted in a wife. Then along came some little flufly rufes who was as pretty as & picture and dressed up like a Christmas doll and who had a wave in her day. with such boys. work. There 18 no work. them to go to school, but school will | = h!{’leel"{l lnwt.hh: only way they | can elped. t is the use of | mode: forcing bovs (o ga to school if you give | e em nol g when they get there? - the sioline whe 3 desk recently asking for advice and ex: home and this is the reason. What is to_be done, I ask you?” This is no_time to drive boys out of | ;‘c}lmolhlnd home. | old them there by every means in our | slouching shouls Ftflu’d hT;hEd ncm{‘mu o(‘ school must are pnllyhue‘;ld;::rllzd in a bathing clude hand work, creative work that e A ok ceative work that | suit. but swimming is ene of the mokt pleteness. The book work it necestary, | but it must be adjusted to the needs of | the boys and girls. When it becomes ' help to flll out thin thighs or wind the only activity a great group of chil- | y | G ariara o et P spaces if they are performed regularly | not help fear or favor. room, sitting, sitting. sitting, and wisa- ing they were anywhere else. “Tell me what we parents can do| ‘We can't send them to | ‘We want | ming pool rounded and have graceful curves in | order to appear to advantage in the Several requests have come to my My boy has left ercises to fill out spaces above the knees. | Others want to trim down excess fat about the hips and thighs, calves and ankles, while others are anxious to| It 15 the time t0 | round out s flat chest and straighten | 1 and from | ‘They join the army of wan- youth or fail in their specific mission. taxpayer who has a grudge against the shop teacher and wants him dis- missed, and starts a campaign against the shops because they cost money, is | cheating children and doing his coun- try an injury. ‘The head master who loves ies and scorns the activities of cheating a great group of children and youth and does his community an 1l | Pne teacher who hates noise and un- | |certainty and personal expression of choice and work and consequently lends | his weight to the side of and silence and acquiescence is disloyal to his profession and to the great trust | that has been placed in him. | | The schools serve the children. mot ' the taxpayer. not the influential citizen, | not the teacher with pet theoriee. The school, if it is to endure. must serve all | the children of all the people without Schools are for the chil- | dren, silent sufferers in this troubled ' MENU FOR A DAY. All these defects jon the eighth count. beneficial exercises for obtaining or | retaining a graceful figure. | Here are a few exercises that will My Neighbor Says: class- | Tibor is Have a small horseshoe magnet in your work basket fastened to the end of a tape or ribbon of sufficient length so that it may be dropped to the floor to pick up scissors and needles. Try ironing men's soft collars on a Turkish towel doubled to four thicknesses. The collars will iron much more easily. They will when finished. uniformity ’ material. (Copyright, be smoother and shine like new A small wvindow may be made to look larger by setting the cur- tain rods beyond the casing on each side and using draperies of s material heavy enough so that casirgs will not be seen through 1933.) JOLLY POLLY A Leseon in Etiquette. a vg:kupe. Bring legs together slowly. Repeat 5 to 20 times. . Exercise (4) Stand erect, arms out- stretched to balance the body. right out as nearly at right angle to the v as ble. Now try to lower body to and touch with knee while right leg is held out n front. This exercise is rather difficult to perform at first, but it is excellent for developing the lower limbs. Repeat exercise with right leg while hoiding left leg out straight. Exercise (5) Stand erect, rise on toes, count 10, lower the body until the heels almost touch the floor; repeat 8 times, touching the floor with the heels only Repeat the same execise rising on the heels. After the exercise period massage the legs with warm olive oil or warmed cocoa butter and knead the muscles lightly with the fingers. Remove ex- cess ofl and e down with tollet ‘water or rubbing alcohol. (Copyright, 1933 ) golden hair and a come-hither look in her eye and a “way” with her, and he forgot all about the sterling qualities he demanded in a wife and only BREAKFAST. | wanted one who made his heart turn somersaults in his bosom. peesin gy ITTLE as you may like t, you| [T is & terrible and cynical truth that the woman who comes wp to & | eyl UL Croam: must always be under obliga-| man's ideal seldom fires his fancy. Only too often the practical, Popovers, ' tions. Left alone in the world. sensible, industrious girl who would make such an A-1 wife has no more Coftee. nowever competent you might| thrills to her than a bread pudding. The quiet one is dull company. The S be, you would not last very long.| lomestic one reminds him of the kitchen.” The one who makes her own UNCHEON. The swaggerer who declares that he| clothes and hats looks like it. The one who is mather’s little helper doesn't Salmon Timbales, Cream Sauce. owes nothing to anybody, and that he know how to play up to & man. Green Peas. jcan manage perfectly by himself would | Of course, any man in his senses knows that the safe matrimonial Graham Biscuits. | be painfully surprised if he woke up bet is that nice, plain girl whom mother has picked out, who is £o kind to Boston Cream Pie. some morning sick, but without any her parents and such a good cook and who has & tidy bit of money and Tea. doctor to call. | who is just cut out to make any man an ideal wife. And he knows DINNER. Civilization is merely a state of in-| perfectly well that that little flibberty-gibbet with quicksilver in her veins Cream of Pea Soup. | terdependence. The work of thousands| Who is always laughing and making whoopee is likely to develop temper Pried Pork Chops. | of other peopie helps you to live and.| and nerves after she gets married. Apple Rings if you know how, to be happy. In| Wuo«_ Boiled Spinach. return, you give your own work, which, ine. Fronch Dressing. | no matter what it may be, will be use- Brown Betiy. Hard Sauce. | tul to other people. The more helpful Coffze. you are, the more contented you will BOSTON CREAM PIE. b Cream part—Three cups milk, three tablespoons sugar. one egg. | | inches high and can be used e‘ven [y ':;,h’ee] that he is a in a rock garden. The varlety, mber of the ea: ir . ] one and one-half heaping table- | | Miniature Golden.” with starlike | |a hopeless invalid has a right to el ne e vanilla. Put sugar in_three- flowers colored rich yellow. is | | that way B o particularly good, for the plants ou e morning from a bed | nree have a neat, compact habit and | |which has been built for o ‘by Per | gm‘t‘:m‘;‘f i;h;emm_:nkd»" gi&;‘ll‘: lu_m of the danger of inhaling the fumes fine foliage. The varlety “Klon- | | haps 10 or 20 men, each of “whom| comstarch in remainder of milk | | which the old phosphorous matches dyke” is often catalogued. The | |made a part of it. You take your 344 this to first mixture add | | gave off just after lightin of I%k:;y t‘1’ i‘:pmdcw"h 1t nsmxh ;?:elinm. '1‘:" S pdoes:gegf lgr?: ::: | Akt constantly until thick, Fiaver \ For example: have you a delphia is to grow it in | | ; X o s ¥ et Keeping them plunged in | |when men first discovered that it was o Crust part—Thres eggs. beaten | | last year's sports-dress that is per- MRS CREAKER WAS HEAD] fhe ground during the Summer, | |more pleasant to go to work with a parately | fectly good in style and material STRAIGHT FOR PLUNGER'S | | byt lifting them in the Fall be- | sense of personal cleanliness. —t B fd GREAT NEST. fore there is danger of heavy The water you turn on so easily prob- - aded, or out-of-date in o Tintex will restore its orig- inal color. Or give it a new Pans Spring shade, 1f you wish. Just “‘tint as you rinse ! . Sounds lim'Ple, doesn’t it? And it is simple. Tintex is quick, built and after it was built there would soon be four, perhaps five, eggs in it. Every time Chatterer thought of that his mouth watered and it seemed to him that he just couldn’t wait to find them. Mrs. Creaker's eggs were big| enough to be worth a lot of trouble; to n alighted on_the foundations of that| Independence nest directly beneath where Mrs. = Plunger was sitting. - | S “She couldn’t have! She wouldn't! dare! Yet she did! She is there this very minute” muttered Chatterer. “Now. what did she stop there for?” A greatly puzzied Squirrel was Chat- terer. = . NO, JUST A The first thing to do was to find the R (Copyright, 1933.) AR — e The Old Gardener Says: Cosmos has long been & popu- lar garden flower, but in late years has been improved in many respects. Formerly all varieties bloomed very late, but there are now early flowering kinds, which will give a long season of bloom. There is also a miniature form, which will not grow more than 18 With Tiatex Easy Te Qive Your @ Apparsl The $Spring T. H—The well-mannered person .1-1 ‘* M Iunu ways lights his companion’s cigarette o It's smart 10 wee Tintex! before he lights his own. Before the | advent of the modern match it was the | @ 0rt hecause it means dollars saved. Smart—because it keeps practice to light one's own cigarette first, thereby relieving the second per- your entire wardrobe up-to-the- minute in color-fashion. E knows that a poor man has no business marrying a girl who looks like a daily hint from Paris. Ard he knows that a man who is set on doing the grand pasha act in his home and having the females of his househola kowtow tc him does a fool thing in marrying an independent, high-spirited girl. But he goes on and marries her just the same, in spite of the fact that she isn't his ideal and hasn't the qualities that e thought he wanted in a wife, just because there is something about her that stirs his pulse. or catches his eye or because she appeals to him in some way he cannot explain any more than why he prefers caviar to roast beef and potatoes. UDOUBTEDLY. if men married the women who had the qualities they desire in & wife they would save themselves and the women & Jot of grief and take marriage off the gambling list and put it in the sure-thing class. All would be well even if after having gratified their de luxe taste in wives they staved satisfied with their bargains. { But they don't. They marry a woman for one quality and then spend the balance of their lives berating her for not being something that is the exact opposite, which is as unreasonable as if a man purchased a car because it was a nifty speed car with stream-line effects and all the new gadgets and then felt that he had been taken in and cheated because when he got it home it was not a truck. flour, baking powder. two tablespoons milk or water, flavoring. Divide the bat- ter in halves and bake in two medium-sized tins. Bake in rather quick oven to a straw color. When don= and cool. spread cream between each. Sprinkle powdered sugar om top crust. frost, and taking them indoors ably comes from far away. Thousands for Autumn flowering. | of people were needed to dam up (Copyright, 1 ) | streams and bulld conduits to supply that water. mest. Chatterer didn't expect to have | much trouble in doing this. Creaker | and Mrs. Creaker are such big birds that they are easy to watch and their nest is big enough to be a;;uy rou?dA He had expected to find it one of a little group of pine trees in which the | e o, of e e mvs | GOOD TASTE TODAY had long been in the habit of nesting each Spring. This year Creaker and | Mrs. Creaker were mot there. It was clear that they had chosen another nesting place and Chatterer had set out to find it by following them as they flew over with building material. Now, looking ahead, Chatterer could see & nest. But it wasn't the nest of | (¢ the Creakers. No. indeed. It was the biggest nest in the Green Forest or anywhere around. Chatterer knew all sbout that huge nest. In the Winter when the owners were away he had visited it more than once. It was the nest of Plunger the Osprey. Chatterer | lerly. was more cautious than ever now. He had no desire to be seen by Plunger or Mrs. Plunger. At any other time or place he would have had no fear of them. but he knew that they knew his fondness for eggs and that it was the part of wisdom to keep out of their sight while near their home. But where was the home of the Creakers? Chatterer remained hidden beneath a big limb of a tree and waited. | Presently he saw Mrs. Creaker coming | with a bill filled with dry grass. Straight over the tree in which Chatterer was hiding she flew. She didn’t see him. He peeped out and then climbed up on the upper side of that limb and peeked around the trunk of the tree. ~Mrs. Creaker was headed straight for Plun- er's great nest! He had to believe it | gecnuse he was looking right at her. Even at that he rubbed his eyes, and Jooked again. It seemed to him that she had flown straight to that nest. “Now, what did she do that for?”| muttered Chatterer. “Can she be help- ing Mrs. Plunger repair that nest? I never heard of such a thing. It must be that she, flew around that nest and kept on and I can't see her because the nest is in the way. She probably is building in a tree beyond that one.” Know Him? ES a dark, fairly good- looking man who usually wears a gray suit. It's a per- fectly good suit except that it needs cleaning and press- ing badly. Why does this man let such a small thing ruin his appearance when a phone call to Decatur 1120 would bring the Manhattan Laundry’s Dry Cleaning Man to call for his suiy,, clean and press it, and deliver it to him like new. WWHY they expect marriage to work a miracle in a woman that will change her whole make-up and alter all her tastes and habits and points of view in life and metamorphose her into another personality no one can explain. But they do. A man will marry a little society butterfly and condemn her because she isn't & hard-working girl. He will marry a twittering little creature with no more brains than a canary bird and be bored to death with her because she isn't an intelligent companion. He will marry & spflilet;la sel{]\sh girl and break his heart because he never shows him any consideration or tenderness. 810N 5 brilli It is this unreason in men that bewilders women. They can't feesional work. 35 brilliant, long- understand why if & man wants a cook or a penny-pincher or an intel- lasting oolors from which to Jectual companion or whatnot he doesn’t marry her in the first place i choose. 15¢ too. Takes but a few minutes. BY EMILY POST. Results? Perfect!—equal to pro- Famous Authority on Etiquette. ’ 8 At alldrug and notion counters n TINTS and DYES nstead of expecting & poor bride to do a lightning-change act and become wnat he wants her to be instead of what she is. And not even any man knows the answer to that question. DOROTHY DIX. Copyright dainty ‘‘Philadelphia’” Cream Cheese at hr:k‘f-t asyouwouldcreamorbutter. Fresh ... in the amall foil Never sold in bulk Largest selling cane sugar “Sweeten it with Domino” “Tooth and Nail.” A KRAFT_PHENIX PRODUCT | “They fought tooth and nail!”, mean- ITS NO us:,.u! THOSE MEDICINES I'VE BEEN us who went to achool to- more popular. For the ‘“class” there | what else you could suggest as a means | ejther case, there are anywhere from 8 éity like this to friendly and hospitable in this neigh-| | e e and never see the|noon tea, so when neighbors came to fixed date, now and | looked upon as putting on airs. It seems ing they fought flercely and vigorously. Answer: T agree|a cup of tea could cause comment.| A good guess at the origin of this excellent plan, and | ple. Perhaps if you gave them a very | doubtless true. But for the actual re- Emily Post aged to become expert in the old- | of cakes, they might think you unrea- ment,” dating 1550. A little later it ap- Neighborhood Friendliness. |and then have lunch, usually s stand- | up one and extremely simple. But in gether were wondering teacher—some one of about starting a sewing high reputation. At a club, the mem- | of continuing to see each other regu- t5 20 members who meet on one day a | whose “Workis” were tansiated for w Unless we make definite plans, | week. | by J. Sylvester. In both instances, the drift about With porhood where my husband and I have just onme or two|come to live. I am s Canadian, and at BY JEAN NEWTON. E . - Japanese imports into Dairen are in- others. About 12/ call on me I naturally offered them a| of us think we'd cup of tea. Lately, a neighbor told me | ve's | “Tooth and nail” indicates a fight with- then, where we'd |strange to me that any one could take continue our school exup{lon to this courtesy.” { out rules and all bars down, & fight to thal to keep in|After all. the offering of refreshments | expression would be that we have it touch with your | to one’s guest goes back to the instinc- from the jargon of prehistoric man. I also think it ex- | elaborate afternoon tea, with two or | corded cellent that young | three varieties of hot breads and sand- | to the sixteenth century. fashioned art of sewing! Many sewing | sonably extravagant. 1 don’t Know, | pears in_a better known source, the circles still meet once a month or once | but I can think of no other grounds | “Divine Weekes and Workes” of Du- DEAR Mrs. Post: A group of | this day a bridge class or club is far| circle or reading class OF | pers merely play among themselves. In it 1s so easy in & ' ~Dear Mrs. Post: T would like to be | How it Started | form is “with tooth and nail.” special girl friends|home my family always served after-| creasing. { like some sort of that my afterncon tea service was _ association.” | Answer: I can't imagine how offering jifu st girl friends is an | tive gesture of hospitality of all peo-| Of the spirit of the words that is women be encour- | wiches and two or three different kinds | in an old work, ““Jyl of Brentford Testa- in two weeks, sew for an hour or two |upon which they might eriticize you. Bartas, who lived from 1544 to 1590 and OH, JIM, IT'S WONDERFUL - SINCE EATING YEAST | HAVEN'T HAD TO TAKE A-SINGLE DOSE OF MEDICINE/ AND HAVEN'T YOU NOTICED HOW IT'S J PN CLEARING MY SKIND LOCAL DELIVERY *1.50 PER DOZEN DR. BONANOME, famous professor in ] the University of | Rome, says:— : MAY BE EXPRESSED TO DISTANT POINTS CARNATIONS Pink or White (FRESH STRAWBERRY) (REAL VANILLA) SOUTHERN DAIRIES ICE CREAM ORDER IN ADVANCE FROM ANY SOUTHERN DAIRIES DEALER OR CALI SALLY SOTHERN Met. 4800 Al SAY-1 THINK 1L A food, Fleischmann's Yeast actually JUST THREE TIMES A DAY~ e s It tine—tatasns fota ONE CAKE BEFORE EACH MEAL-MOST OF MY CUSTOM- | ERS SAY THEY EAT (T JUST PLAIN AM—A>Pr mxXmMmm3I W

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