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MAGAZINE PAGE. Instructions for Cake Making BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. ] membered and followed. handle the mixing spoon lightly. It will help to think of gredients as delicate or foamy. The “fold in the beaten egg expressi whites,” indicates that they are not to be roughly, but delicately treated, lest they Icose their feathery ure. ‘While the ingredients such as sugar, flour and butter are solid or of close N order to make cake well, there are certain things which should be re- One is to the _in- ing is to measure quantities accurately. Avoid guessing. When a quarter cup of butter, or half a cup is stipulated, see that the butter is patted down into the ht amount. Do not tever shorten- melted shortening. The recipe will say if the latter is wanted, otherwise use it unmelted. Level spoonfuls are meant in modern recipes, unless rounded or heaping :poonfuls are given. To level a spoon- full of contents, draw the blade of a knife over the tcp, seeing that the knife touches the edges of the spoon while s0 dcing. | . Ingredients should be mixed in the! order stated. When the order is not | given, it is assumed that the ingredients | will be put together as follows: Cream | | sugar and butter, add beaten egg yolks, | and flavoring, then flour and liquid | | alternately, beating in each one before | | adding another quantity. Last of all, fold in the beaten whites. If the | | eggs are to be added without beating, ils in pound cake, it will be so stated and how many to add at one time. | If eggs are to be beaten but not sep- arated, this will be stated. | It is advisable to add a dash of salt | to cake mixtures. As salt helps to make egg whites beat well, the salt ! | may be added to whites before beat- | | ing. Or the salt may be put with the | baking powder into the flour and be} | sifted into the cake with the flour. | Sifting flour three times before meas- uring tends to increase the lightness of the cake. | (Copyright, 1933.) LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Me and Puds 8imkins and Sid Hunt was standing around the lam post tawking about diffrent subjecks such as whether you can skate faster on one skate than what you can on 2, espe- cially if one leg axsidently happens to be a little longer than the other w‘ push with, and Puds said, O boy look. whose here and dock what he's got on. Meening Shorty Judge with a green ~ecktie with beg yellow cercles, me say- ng, G, Shorty, what's that. the new Chinee national flag? and Sid saying, | O, is that you, Shorty, I thawt it was a big circus perrade coming up the street. 1 I thawt you had a hunk of wall paper stuck under your chin, where did | you get that, Shorty, at a fire sale?| Puds said. and Shorty said, No, my ant gave it to me when I went to stay at her house Sattiday and Sundey. And | she gave me something elts, too, hel said. G. what elts did she give you, a red ' undershert with pink stripes? I said, and Puds said, I bet I know, I bet she gave you a pair of white shoes with | black dots and orange shoelaces, and MCST KINDS OF CAKE SHOULD BE OF A LIGHT CONSISTENCY WHEN PUT INTO THE PANS. | consistency, they are expected, after the cake is made and baked, to come | out ligh “As light as a feather,” is' the term often applied to fine cake of | certain kinds. It will fail to warrant| such a recommendation unless the in- | gredients have been handled lightly. Certain ingredients should be beaten, rather than stirred, while cthers should be whisked into the mixture, | Another essential to good cake mak- BEDTIME STORIE Plunger Sees the King. rey. —Plunger the Osp PLUNGm the Osprey, whom you of Mrs. Plunger, but before he | got there the excitomen: was over. .He | Sid sald, I bet you're both wrong, I bet she gave him a tattoo outfit to tat- too himself all over. | Well you're all wrong, she gave me a half a doller and here it is rite here, Shorty said. f And he showed it to us. being a new shiny one, and I ceid, G. Shorty, are vou going to epend it? And he said, I mite, and Puas sald, G, when, today? and Shorty said, Maybe. Well gosh, Shorty, that's not such a bad tle, what's a use of having a new necktie if it's some dum color and no- | body’s going to notice it? Sid said, and Puds said, Sure, Shorty, a necktie’s meant to be seen, and the ferther away you can se> it the less doubt there is about it, and I said, Sure, Shorty, gosh, the trubble with us is we’re proberly Jelliss of it. Bhorty not spending any of the half a doller anyways, but us fellows still having the ccnsolation of knowing he’s still got it and aint mad at us. By Thornton W. Burgess. find that the whoie surface was covered with ripples which were rapidly be- . coming little waves, for the wind was | increasing. Fish were not likely to be | so near the surface, and if they were | it was not easy to sce them. Plunger swung off toward a quiet cove he knew of, a cove protected from the wind, 50 that the surface of it was fairly smooth. Many times had he had gocd fishing there when he had had no luck | NG STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1933. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y CORY. I didn't hab a chance to see could I move that pile ob tin cans with Faith, 'czuse just as I was gettin’ in my best licks Daddy come out an’ had a race to see who could get their rub- bish can filled the quickest. But I'm tryin’ it out on my spellin’ today. (Copyright, 1933.) College Humor = - She—Is that the house that Jack uilt? | He—Yes, and it would take a lot more | jack to rebuild it!—Pepper. | Tiréd student—Joe, I'd like to go where I'd be cut off from the entire world. Cynic—Try a telephone booth.—Red | Cat. “Tom is so original! He says things | no other man would even think of | saving.” | “What! Did he ask you to marry him?"—The Log. Ethel—I think that I will take up | horseback riding. All the girls at school are doing it. They say that it increases your social standing. Elinor—I dont know about the social part, but it certainly will increase your standing—Red Cat. Professor—If there are any dumb-| bells in the room, please stand up. A long pause and then a lone fresh- man stands up. “What—do you consider yourself & dumbbell?” | “Well, not exactly that, sir, but I hate to see you standing alone."—Voo- | Too. Your Baby and Mine Unselfishness. BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. HILDREN are naturally selfish. But cven tiny bables can be taught that objects have own- ers. | “Give it to mother” says that parent. “It's mother’s plate. Take this, baby. It is baby's.” So mother invites the return of her plate and substitutes for it baby’s ball or something which he may use as he | chooses. If he presses the object upon her, she thanks him for his generosity, | so that he imitates her carefulness and | her thankfulness when he is handling something which belongs to her. One lesson will not drive this home. We have to repeat these sentences ana | ceremonies over and over until baby begins to differentiate between what he | can enjoy without asking and the ob- jects which he can touch only with mother’s premission or in her company. | Next we convince him by experience . ~the family. that is one thing. € DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX EAR MISS DIX—When I finished high school I stayed at home to help with the work there is in the average household w] there are younger children. But after a few years when si Mary finished high school, was I released from my post so that I might go out to do the things I wished to do and for which I had a talent? No. I had to continue as big sister so that Mary could have advantages. Later still, when Esther finished school, she also had to go on having advantages, leaving me still to wash, irom, mend, cook and keep the house neat for their guests. Now in all justice, why should not Mary and Esther have taken their turn in being big sister and given me my show in life? Why should I have been made the household drudge? If I had seen this vears ago as I see it now, 1 would have asserted myself and my whole life would have been changed. Let my experience be a lesson to all those girls who are just lun%ou as big sisters. BIG 818 N NSWER: If a baby were wise. it would pcsitively refuse ever to be born the oldest\in a poor family, for thereby it almost invariably becomes the family goat. It is always the oldest children who are sacrificed to their parents’ criminal mania for h;ving more offspring than they can support. It is always big sister and b rother who have to stop school and go to work at the earliest possible moment to help feed and educate and give advantages to little Sally and Mamie and Johnny and Freddie and Bobby, and on whose tender shoulders are laid burdens that the younger children are never asked to bear. In the beginning nature and circumstances are to blame for the difference that parents make between their children and the partiality they show the younger ones. You can hardly blame a poor, overworked father and mother, with bables arriving on each other's heels, for grabbing at any prop that is within their reach and drafting the poor, oldest child into service. Pather needs the few pennles that George can make by selling papers or running errands, so George gets some sort of poor job at unskilled labor and father takes as his right his thin little pay envelope to help support the family. Mother needs somebody to mind the baby and help with the housework. so Mary becomes a little mother while she is still a child herself and never knows any playtime either as child or girl. ALL perhaps necessary at the time, but the trouble is that when the younger children grow up they are never expected to take their turn at helping the family as the older ones have done. Big sister and big brother are never emancipated. They are expected to go on continuing to sacrifice themselves for the younger ones, and to toil and do without the things they want in order that the younger ones may go to college and have advantages that they never had. Nobody ever heard of parents who said to their older children: “You have done your duty nobly by us and by your younger brothers and sisters. Now they must stand on their own feet and try to repay you. You are free to go and live your own lives” O, indeed, father and mother continue to grab big sister's and big brother’s earnings out of their hands and lavish them on the younger children. John is so talented and must study some profession that big sister and big brother will have to slave for 10 years to pay for. Sally is so pretty and must have fine clothes, even if big sister has to wear her last year's hat. Gertrude is so much in love that. of course, she must marry and have her happiness, though nobody remembers that big sister and big brother turned their backs on love and happiness, because the family needed their services and all the money they could make. Just why parents should be so partial to their younger children, no one knows. It is just one of the facts of life. It is always the Benjamins that are the favorite sons. It was not the oldest son who stayed et home and worked and served, but the prodigal son to whom the father’s heart went out. e rebnf & DOROTHY DIX. EAR Dorothy Dix—I have been happily married for 10 years. have always worked and helped my husband earn what we have saved, but have been able to be with my 8-year-old child after her school hours on weekdays. Now I have an opportunity to make more money. but the work would take most of my time and energy. And the question is Should I neglect my child by leaving her in another's care? She could be with me, but my mind would be on my business. My husband is a good business man and I have all I need, as my needs are small, for I have been brought up in the thrifty middle class of Americans. It is a serious deciston I must make, because it will mean years of work if I succeed. ‘What shall I do? A FRIEND. 1 Answer: Inasmuch as you have a comfortable living as you are. I should earnestly advise you to be content with that instead of going into an occupation that will force you to neglect your child. Your personal care and companionship are worth far more to your little girl than any advantages that the money you might earn could give her. IN these days of lax standards and loose morals it is no easy thing to rear a girl with the right principles and make her into a fine, clean woman. To do this takes all of the tact, all of the close association. all of the skillful molding of character which a mother can give her child, even when, she can keep her under her eye in her own home. ‘What chance, then, has the little girl to grow up right if she is left to the care cf hirelings. who seldom have the wisdem or the interest or the patience to guide the stumbling little feet into the safe path? How can you keep a little girl from temptation if, when she comes home from school. there is no mother waiting for her, no mother even to know whether she comes on téme or not, no mother to know where or with whom she spends her afternoons? OF course, if a woman is driven by dire poverty to working outside of her own home and to giving the best of herself, her thoughts and her interests to some jcb that pays mcney that is required fcr th= support of “Needs must when the devil drives,” as the old proverb has it, and she should be honored for doing the best she can under the circumstances. But being a wife and a mother is all the work that any one woman can do properly. It takes all of the strength and brains she has, and she makes a mistake when she superimposes another job on that unless. as I said, it is starvation if she doesn’t DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1933.) GOOD TASTE TODAY BY EMILY POST. Famous Authority on Etiquette. Separated Parents of Bride. | wedding gifts be displayed in my bed- Y dear Mrs. Post: My par- | Fo0m?” ents are separated but not| Answers: (1) If your mother is will- divorced. I live with my | ing to acknowledge the separation, the mother, but I meet my invitations are sent father once in a while at & | (‘“Mrs. John Ja:lu.}’n :;tr Ehllmr:. ‘}l::lrey restaurant and lunch with him. I am Jones.”) But if the estrangement is not JOLLY POLLY A Little Chat on English. BY JOS J FRISCH DAD IS A FOXY PERSON. HE GHT MOTHER SUCH RARE 3D R. R—The use of the “and sign” (called ampersand and pronounced AM-per-sand) is confined principally to firm names, as “John Jones & Co.” lin “rare and dainty china-ware” | “wash and dry the dishes,” etc. NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY. Bumble Bee. Bombus sp. UMBLE bee queens have deep bass voices. In the insect chorus they are heard and recognized easily. The voice may be musica’. but it is ac- cepted as a threat among many of us. We hastily clear the way and have little inclination to question her high- handed traffic methods. She is, in spite of her fearful dagger |a mest important member of the in- sect society in her relation to man. | Without her, we would not have the fragrant clover or numerous other flowers. She carries a heavy cargo of pollen to flowers, vegetables and fruits. Clovers, would not be able to exist | withcut her. There are many species of bumble | bees and some are very small, whilc | others are extremely portly. All of | them wear heavy plush coats Summer and Winter .and they have hair leggins | Their fur is beautifully marked in pa:- terns of black and yellow. Between | the large compound eyes there ar~ three tiny ones. The antennae arc | very short. but bees have exceeding!' | long tongues. Four great, strong wings carry the bee zumming over the flelds, and be- cause of them she is able to take very long trips. On her hind legs she has a fine pollen basket. You can see the golden g heap-i high, just before she t2..° All W.nier lorg the queen sleeps In May, when the cwakens. hungry and gaunt, the ande 5 to be deeply concerned about establishing her fam- [ fly. As far as I have been able to fina out, she is not at all fastidious about the dwelling she selects. It may b: an abandoned home of a field mouse. ir fact, any home that is not in need of too much repairi Moss and grass are brought in and the mother queen now goes forth to gather pollen and | nectar. She brings in enough to make a good-sized loaf of pollen. She kneads it carefully and when it is the size of a marble she lays four or five tiny eggs on the top of it. Mounting her loaf of pollen she broods her eggs and in five days they hatch. The little grubs dig into the pollen and in their wee burrow eat their fill. Then they spin & brown silken wrapper and rest. Later they cut their way out of the waxen cell |and are wee bumble bee daughters. From now on the queen mother lays | eggs. The old cradles are cleaned out and new omes made. The bables are fed, pollen and nectar gathered, and | house repairing is done by the daugh- ter T8, In the late Fall there will be many sons. The young princess bees wed | Ordinarily the word “and” is used, as; WOMEN'’S FE ATURES. B—11 A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBER' ON March 4 this year, just a few minutes before Jack Garner left | the House, where he had served for 30 years, wtr:w“ over the Senate, he ’mldellll speech of farewell. { It wasn't very | 1ong, but he made ‘one statement i which seems al- {most prophetic | now. | ‘Turning to Bert | Snell, the Re- ublican leader and is friend, he said: “In some ways it is to be regretted that in the incom- ing Seventy-third Congress, you will not have quite as |large a following | as you have had in this one. The best proportion for the House is a majority of 50 or 60 on one side.” “Cactus” Jack's implication appar- ently was that his Democratic breth ity, would sometimes find that their big majority would be anything but a com- fort. And that's what has happened from time to time. ‘There are just too many Democrats in the House to make for smooth sail- ing all the time. | Thus you see a man like Jeff Busby of Mississippl, serving his sixth term, carrying on a one-man revolt that has the effect of delaying progress. Busby's complaint is that the time | permitted for debate on the various |en, with such a preponderant major- | T PLUMMER. | bills is unequally divided. In other | words, he argues, why should the Re- publicans, numbering around 117, have as much time given them as the 0- crats, who number about 3137 The leaders try to placate him, but fail. He brings into play s powerful weapon — makirg the point of no quorum. It takes 30 minutes or more to call the roll of the House. | Then there’s the instance when the | Democratic leaders had made plans to | tighten up the rules of the House by | abolishing the 145 rule, providing that 145 signatures to a petition could force | a vote on legislation, and substitute for it the so-calied 215 rule. A rump caucus of Democrats opposed to the change was called. "op“"" long before word came from the high command that there would be no at- tempt at present to change the rule. { There have been other instances, all of which impressed the Democratic | leaders that while, as partisans, it was 'a fine and beautiful thing to gather as | many of the brethren into the fold as ! they did last November, making them | stand hitched is another thing. Sweet-Sour Pickles. Slice 6 large sour pickles very thin and place in a covered crock or bowl in aiternate layers of pickles, 4 cupfuls of white sugar, and 3 tablespoonfuls of mixed spicer. and to this add 3 table- spoonfuls of water. Cover well and set in a cool place for several days. These are ideal sweet pickles, as they are in- expensive and can be made any time of the year. RELIEF neuralgia, neuritis, headaches, periodic pains, and other dis- comfort. Their speedy reliel of almost any pain is due to the speed with which these tablets dissolve. There are no harmful ingredients; mothing to depress the heart. No known medicine works quite like Bayer Aspirin for the awful head and face pains of neuralgia. The tablets made by the Bayer process have a peculiar efficacy in relieving neuritic pain. This has been demonstrated again and again. Genuine Bayer Aspirin is safe, uniform, dependable; never hesitate to take it whea any sudden ache or pain of cold threatens your comfort, The speed of Bayer Aspirin tablets makes them invaluable in cases of severe suffering. They are always safe; doctors endorse their general use for The weaki he st The Whole Great World s Tin. that may know as Fish Hawk, had | come hurrying home on swift | wings in respcnse to the screams | suae }:xgm l‘;ow Ccl‘\la(tz-r(-r the Re‘dfln Squir- | elsewhere, rel had been disco-ered climhbing the - great pole on the top of which was . .ing high, he could see for a long distance, for Plunger’s eyes are of the going to be married in September. My public, father has no objection to my fiance, but says that I am too young. (I'm 19.) 8ince he has never come to anything I have wanted him T to come to—high | walk school or college { commencements—I send invitaticns in names of Mr. and Mrs. John Jones. (2) Your mother can give you sway by saying | |“I do” from where she stands in the | | front pew. (3) It will b2 proper to | choose an old friend of the family to | with. Or it is equally proper | that a bride walk up the aisle alone. | (4) Yes. (5) In New York he sends | ! that he may have his own things for as long as he wants thl;legz even}lin com- 1 d v A ny with other children. e can- Dest. iSuddenly he checked his fiight. Y learn this if adults forcibly take Henng &ne shore of that cove, he his toys and present them to other had ngticed a sUll form sitting on & children, making strange and disturb- ead tree well back from the water, | ing poises at him meanwhile. He must om which the cove and much of | learn to be unselfish by fl.st havins and just before the cold weather sets in, the nurses will drag their charges from their warm beds and let them freeze to death. The drones are pitched out head first and .are too numb from the cold to know what the cyclone is all about. ey The queens are the only ones to “I WOULD LIKE TO GET MY | CLAWS IN THAT LITTLE RED THIEF,” SAID HE | the Plunger home, and hcw he had es- caped by a frantic and despegate jump to the ground as Mrs. Plunger had all but_caught him. ! ss,” said Mrs. Plunger in con- hat he won't try it again in | a hurry. In this she was right. Chat- terer had had such a narrow escape | that the fright of it would not soon be forgotten. Plunger was out of scrts. “I would lke to get my claws in the little red thief,” said_he. “I ought to be over at the Big River fishing this very min- ute. Breakfast will be late, my dear, and all on account of that good-for- nothing meddler. The river was very smooth, and you kncw that means that it is easier to see the fish, but now the wind js making a ripple and it will not be so easy. Hcwever, I'll do my best to get you a breakfast at once.” With this Plunger once more headed for the Big River. But that breakfast for Mrs. Plunger, not to mention his own breakfast, was not to be obtained as soon as he had hoped. When he swung out over the Big River it was to I = My Neighbor Says: Grapejuice sauce blends well with baked, spiced or cottage pud- s. ‘To wash the leather on fur- niture, add one tablespoonful of vinegar to each cup of warm water required. Wash the leather with a soft cloth which has been wrung out of this solution. Wipe dry with a clean cloth and pol- ish with a cloth which has been dipped in one egg white beaten and mixed with & teaspoontul of turpentine. -Polish with a fan- nel cloth. It your popover -mixture is Jumpy, when you add egg to the flour, continue to beat with egg- beater, then add the milk, a little at & time, continding to beat until all is thoroughly mixed. ‘To remove machine-ofl stains, rub with & MNttle butter or lard and wash. with warm water and s08p. (Copyrisht. 1933.) | Eagle. the Big River could be seen. - | ger quled El;lu]nxer's heart. e | ing gle!” he exclaimed 1 his breath. “The old Whlbe-h‘::(di:a robber! He is sitting there, watch- | ing for me to catch a fish. He knows ' that on & morning like this I fish in that cove, and he is just waiting. He | is too lazy to do his own fishing, but would rob me. If I were only his size he wouldn't do it Well, no fishing in that cove this morning. I'm not going to catch his breakfast for him, even if I must go hungry myself. I'il 80 off down the Big River, where he can’t see me, and try my luck there. So Plunger changed his course and continued on down the Big River. A few miles more or less really made small difference to him, for he is a :glwdld fiyer, as are all members of e hawk family. It was well for' Plunger that he couldn’t hear King E.aslc chuckling as he sat on his perch. ‘Plunqe‘r sees me.” muttered King “He was headed for this cove, but now he has changed his course, He isn't going to fish here this morn- 1:"}! He is going down the Big River, ught to know by this time when he fishes he has to pay trflt:?x‘:: to me, and he can't get out of it. He bas a nest over in the Green Forest, | and Mrs. Plunger is sitting on egu' That means that he will fish for ner, as well,as for himself. I wonder how he expects to get back there with a fish without bemng seen by me. If he were sensible he wculd come over here, | catch a fish for me, and then get his | own breakfast and Mrs. Plunger Presently King Eagle spread those great wings of his and began to climb |up in the blue, blue sky. Up, up he | wenti urzg} hehwl.: hardly more than s speck. en 00, hea e e, ded down the (Copyrisht, 1933.) NEW DISCOVERY TAKES OUT STUBBORN SPOTS AND STAINS Harmless as Boiling Water s, sheets, M&::'ul::l'l white - or dresses—f an amasing dis- covery by RIT chemists. Simply drop a White RIT wafer in boiling water, put in the white goods you want to restore, stir with a lttle R 3 ven ‘wa stays mh-lw Marvelous for removing mildew, yel- washing, ink spots, faith that others will not de of his toys. He may do as ie pleases with them. It is his pleasure to share them with others, and to enjoy ‘the praise and the like pleasure of play- ing with other children’s toys in their homes. ; The lone child becomes unhealthily devoted to her things, and as her right | to them is never questioned excepi when a visitor arrives, it isn't to be wondered at that sometimes she resents their even being looked at. Provide special toys for visitors, and let the child discover that there is pleasure in exchanging and sharing toys. Some children have no sense of own- | ership. They would gladly bestow the grand piano upon visitors, were it not, for the protests of the mother. Such| children must be taught the difference | between giving away things that are truly theirs—and valuable toys or pos- sessions which it would penalize the parents to replace. We must under- stand, too, the motives for their gen- erosity, and provide the children with | other means of being popular with | companions. i | with me? know he will not come to my wed- ding. And now my questions: (1) ! Shall I issue the invitations in the name of Mr. and Mrs. K. or just in the name of Mrs. // K. (2) Who will give me away? Mother? (3) Who will walk up the zisle of the church Emily Post. 1 have no near male relative. (4) If I have threc attendants, will two ushers be sufficlent for a small church wedding? (5) Does the bridegroom send the flow- ers to the bridesmaids? And the bout- onnieres to the best man and ushers? (6) I live about a square from the church where I will be married. Is it necessary to provide cars to bring the guests to the reception at our home? (1) Of whom is the receiving line com- ? (8) Who sit at the bridal table for the reception supper? (9) Can the bogtled ly, anteed to be as good or better than any Ver- mouth sold at a hi & Fils such TODAY AT Just Arrived from Torino! GIACOBINO & ROSSO ITALIAN VERMOUTH carry a complete line of Bonnal Corgiau. as Three Star French Brandy, Apricot Brandy, Crem: de Menthe, etc.; also Bonnal's Frencl Dry Vermouth and Grenadine. Magruder, Inc. M and 18th Sts. N.W. Phone District 8250 Fs hlished 1875 boutonnieres, but the bride's bouquet as well as the bridesmaids’ flowers are considered part of the wedding dec- localities and I don't know the customs of your city. (6) Cars for you and your mother. and your bridesmaids only. (7) You and the bridegroom and your maid of honor and your two bridesmaids receive in one line. Your mother and your mother-in-law receive at the door of entrance to the room in which you receive. (8) best man, ushers. (9) Yes, but take the bedroom furniture out and put in tables covered with white tablecloths. (Copyright. 1933.) i Dried Beef Shortcake. Prepare hot baking powder biscuits |3 inches in diameter, split and butter |them, and fill with freshly creamed dried beef. Serve with small green onions sliced and dressed with vinegar, pepper and salt. | Ask for it gives 20 10 3 greater rotection! Hlustrations and text copr. 1933, Kotex Co. T'S patented—this new Equalizer in Kotex—so that it cannot be duplicated. It gives you greater pro- tection with less bulkiness; greater comfort and ease at the same time, And all the former advantages are retained. Ends are not merely rounded, they are “phamtomized.” Softness, absorbency, disposability, the fact that it can be worn on either side with equal protection—these are features you need and want. Buy Kotex with Patented Equal- izer, assured of such safety and comfort as you heve never before realized 8 sanitary protection orations and supplied by the bride's family. This rule differs in different | Bride and | bridegroom, maid of henor. bridesmaid, | hibernate and they sleep in a sheltered place until the coming Spring. (Copyright. 1833.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Fresh Strawberries. Farina With Cream. Ham Omelet. Graham Gems. offee. LUNCHEON. Creamed Halibut. Buttered Beets. _Toasted Gems. Cottage Pudding. Chocolate Sauce. DINNER. ‘Tomato Juice Cocktail. Boiled Fresh Shoulder. Baked Macaroni With Cheese. Browned Potatoes. Tomato Salad. French Dressing. Butterscotch Ple. Coffee. (Copyright. 1833.) Tea. the new Equalizer KOTEX Come and See M Doug And baking in rs. Zimmer Make hnuts And other delicious dainties in her weekly demon- stration in our modern electric kitchen— Tomorrow—Wednesday—at 2 P.M. Using Both Self-rising and Plain the latest type @ Electric Range In these demonstrations you can ask questions, suggest things you want t o see baked—get the bene- fit of Mrs. Zimmer’s experience—and learn of the superior merits of this wonderful Washington Flour —and the practical efficiency of this last word in G. E. Electric Ranges. Flour Free for you to try Samples of both PLAIN to your home if stration for the first timo and SELF-RISING will be e attending the demon- .. National Electrical Supply Company E. C. Graham, President 1330 New York Avenue