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'B_10 Wrap-around BY BARBARA BELL. RAP - AROUNDS become news all over again when \/ \/ we look over the Spring house-dress collections and see how modish this stand- ard design looks, made up in a bright percale and finished at the neck with prettily shaped collars of white. Our pattern for this model is sim- ple enough for the average sewer to complete in a day. Note the double front, manipulated to give long lines to stout figures. The under side of the dress is secured to the top one by the same button that keeps the belt in place (right side). A simpli- fied closing is always welcomed by housewives, who must change their clothes -frequently during the day. Another grand thing about wrap- arounds is that they open flat, and can be ironed quickly. New cottons for house dresses in- clude—besides gay percales—no end of interesting seersuckers, poplins, shirtings and broadcloths. All of these fabrics come in solid colors and in prints. Among the seersucker weaves we find one of lawn that is dainty enough to transform the simplest dress into MAGAZINE PAGE. House Dress a masterpiece. Crinkled surfaces, having spread their influence to in- clude cottons, are meeting with fresh recognition in this particular group, because of their crease-resisting qual- ities. Little more than a good press- ing is needed to keep them looking fresh. Barbara Bell pattern, No. 1560-B, is designed in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52 and 54. Size 36 re- quires about 4% yards of 36-inch material (long or short sleeves), 1 yard of 36-inch material for collar (seamed in the back). Every Barbara Bell pattern includes an illustrated instruction guide which is easy to understand. BARBARA BELL, ‘Washington Star. Enclose 25 cents in coins for Pattern No. 1560-B. Size.. (Wrap coins securely in paper.) (Copyright. 1935.) Strengthen B ack Muscles BY LOIS LEEDS. ANY readers write and tell me that their backs feel so weak that they cannot sit or stand erect for any length of time without discomfort, ‘This is natural, because, if the back muscles are weak and flabby, it is well-nigh impossible to expect the other large muscles to respond to even the simplest exercise. But I still maintain that correct posture, whether sitting, standing, or walking, will help these indoor workers, as well as the home woman, to keep the back mus- | cles and the other muscles in the body strong. | Indoor exercises are desirable, even | for young girls who take part in open- air games and sports, for they serve to strengthen and straighten the back, expand the chest, keep the shoulders straight and the abdomen flat, and | give a graceful, erect carriage. For | women who have given up active out- door sports, they are very essential for the maintenance of good health and supple, youthful figures. They prevent that heaviness of hips, waist and abdomen, ungainly carriage and increase of fat, which are apt other- wise to develop. The following exercises should be carried out every day, not now and again, when one thinks of them. Here is a good shoulder and back exercise: (1) Stand erect, with hands resting on hips. Fill the lungs with air and con- tract the abdomen. Then bend the body slowly to the right and left sides alternately. Repeat 5 to 10 times. (2) Stand with feet 2 inches apart. Raise arms above the head. Then bend the body from the waist to each side alternately. This exercise strength- ens the muscles of the side and back, and reduces a large waist. Repeat the exercise 10 to 20 times. (3) Stand with feet together. Ex- tend the right arm in front of the body and the left arm behind, both being on a level with the shoulders. Then swing the body round until the Jolly Polly A Little Chat on English. BY JOS. J. FRISCH. W. L—“Housewives” is the correct form, not “housewifes.” Housewife, in the sense of a woman who manages domestic affairs, is pronounced as spelled. When the meaning is a re- ceptacle for small articles used in sewing, housewife is pronounced huz-iff. Send a return envelope for the Jeaflet “Was and Were,” ' left arm points forward and the right backward. Repeat a number of times, This exercise strengthens the abdom- | inal muscles and expands the chest. (4) From reclining, face-downward position, with hands clasped behind the back, raise head and shoulders; also raise and twist the shoulders. Next raise the legs singly and then together. Repeat for several minutes. (5) Lie on the back, head on a pil- low, fingers interlaced over abdomen. Raise up to “bridge” position with weight on head and feet, then twist the shoulders—the left down and the right one up; then reverse, twisting right shoulder down and the left shoulder up. Repeat 10 times al- ternately. (6) Sit on the floor, feet together, legs straight, hands on the floor and body leaning back slightly on arms. Raise hips as high as possible. Make several attempts to raise still higher. Lower and relax, then repeat. This is an active spine-strengthening ex- ercise. (7) Lie flat on floor or on & chair, face downward, arms extended over- head. Slowly raise both feet and the arms and arch the back well. When the back is stronger make the move- ment snappier. Keep the head up, too. This is a valuable exercise for the spine and back muscles. (8) Lie on left side from hips to feet, left hand on floor below shoulder. Raise hips until body is in a straight line. Then raise hips still higher, sev- eral times; lower hips to floor; repeat several times. Change over to right side and support the body with the ' right hand. (9) This requires two people, one, A, heavier than the other, B, sitting back to back on the floor. B sits on the floor with knees up, hands clasped on neck and chin touching knees. A sits with knees bent up, hands behind neck and spine erect. B leans back, pushing hard against A’s back. A re- sists the movement. Hold the position a moment, then relax and repeat. G. V.—Have the mole with its hairs removed by a physician. In a case of this kind it is possible that a slight | scar would remain. The percentage | of return of superfluous hairs removed ; by electrolysis is small. The expense depends on the number of hairs to be treated. The treatment, is not harm- ful. Some find it more painful than others do. The upper lip is the most sensitive place. LOIS LEEDS. (Copyright, 1935.) Crab Canape. Flake one can of crab meat. Melt half a cupful of cheese in one cupful of thick ‘cream sauce highly seasoned. Add the crab meat. Cut some rounds of bread and saute them in butter. Spread the erab meat mixture on these, sprinkle with grated cheese, add a little paprika and place under a broiler until the cheese melts. Serve hot, garnished with cress and slice of lemon. —_— Hot Spiced Cider. Heat one quart of cider to the boil- ing point, then add four whole cloves, four whole alispice, three sticks of cinnamon and one cupful of sugar. Cook for 15 minutes. Strain and serve L hot in pewter or crockery mugs, / THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1935 Dorothy . Contract BY P. HAL SIMS. Mr. Sims is universally acclaimed the greatest living contract and auction player. He was captain of the renowned “Four Horsemen” team, now disbanded, and has won 24 national champion- ships since 192¢. These articles are based on the Sims system, which includes the one-over-ome principle, which the Sims group of players was the first to employ and develop. Double or-Overcall. HEN a player carefully con- siders the possibility of bad adverse distribution before making his bid, he is apt to get a worse result than the player who leaps in blithely where angels fear to tread. This duplicate hand came up for a lot of discussion after a recent tournament. The players who overcalled East's opening heart bid with two clubs hotly defended their logic. After all, South was vulnerable, whereas East was not. Had the vulnerability been reversed, all admitted that they would have dou- bled. But, as it was, South was not at all sure that he wished to push the bidding to three clubs unless North held club support. Naturally, the six- card suit must be shown first, because it is clearly evident that South is go- ing to be forced to ruff hearts after the opening lead. A double will al- most surely elicit a diamond response from North—and then where are you? Up at three clubs. No, said the over- callers. It is far better to bid two clubs and then, if North bids dia- monds, or if East bids some more hearts, you have another suit to show at the two level—namely, spades. And North, continued the overcallers, should not be afraid to give South a little help, if he holds as much as two kings. After all, a vulnerable over- call shows a strong hand. “I want to know whether my part- ner holds four spades,” said Alfred Moise, jr., firmly. “The only way I can find that out is by doubling the opening heart bid.” There is logic in that statement, certainly. It is simply unfortunate that most of the teams that doubled ended up playing the hand in three diamonds; unfortunate from the point of view that four spades is not extremely difficult to make. Not that the hand should ever play in four spades. Heavens, no! But there is no reason why a contract of three spades should not be reached. One of the overcallers was well on his way toward that spot, but his part- ner lacked duplicate courage. The bidding went: One heart, two clubs, pass, pass (and believe that instead of passing North should have bid two diamonds. This is a moot question, however). East doubled, South passed and West bid two hearts. When the bidding got around to South he bid two spades. Once more this bid trav- eled around to East, who ventured three hearts. South had to give up. East was permitted to play the hand at three hearts. Although “Sonny” Moise was on the side of the doublers, he said afterward, and I agree with him, that it was simply inconceivable for North not to bid three spades after South’s strong bidding. & x-x ¥ 10-x-x 4 A-J-9-8-x-X & J-x & A-x ¥ K-9-X-X-X-X W+E 4 10-x-x » x-X % A-K-Q-10-x-X-X There is a new prevalent psychic bid in use at the New York bridge clubs. It is so common and so recog- nizable that it has almost attained the dignity of a convention. Not that the above hand is an example of it. No, indeed. The South hand tried out an entirely different type of psychic, and it worked. (Copyright. 1935.) Mr. Sims will answer all inguiries on con- tract that are addressed to this newspaper with self-addressed. stamped envelope. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Bananas Dry Cereal With Cream Soft-boiled Eggs Bran Muffins Coffee LUNCHEON. Meat Cakes Baked Macaroni With Tomato Buttered Cabbage ‘Whole Wheat Biscuits Hot Gingerbread Tea DINNER. Cream of Potato Soup Casserole of Pork Baked Stuffed Potatoes Green Beans Asparagus Salad, Mayonnaise Dressin; Bacon g Apple Cobbler Coffee BRAN MUFFINS. Mix together (do not sift) 1 cup bran, 1 cup sifted flour, % cup sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 4 tea- spoons baking powder. Beat egg well, add 1 cup milk and 1 tea- spoon melted butter. mixtures into dry ingredients. Put into muffin pan and bake in gas oven at 375 degrees for 20 minutes. Grease pan with lard and then flour it. 1] g 8 Dix Says Answer to Parents Who See No Reason Why They Shouldn’t Quarrel Before Children. EAR DOROTHY DIX—I am a 16-year-old boy. consists of four members, my parents, my myself. My parents have have been quarreling ever since I can remember. Our family and young brother been married nearly 18 years and Mother in- sists that she is being neglected by father and every once in a while deliberately starts an argument with him, who is working his head off to support us. Mother complains that she is “withering away"” and tells me that when she was a girl she was the life of every party. Men, she says, wouldn't let her alone, but when she married and had children, all was changed. And look at her now. I have heard both sides. My father says he can't understand how a woman can be so mean as to fight with him all the time, espe- cially just now, when he is struggling so hard to make a few dollars for his family. Because mother always men only reason she picks these fights is because he tions it, he thinks that the has failed to take her to the theater and give her a good time often. Miss Dix, as an obedient son, what can I do to relieve this terrible situation. Mother says there is only one way out—divorce. But when people have been married for 18 years, it seems a horrible thing to-end all in divorce courts. Mother says the only thing she has to live for is her children, and that if it hadn’t been for us, she would have divorced my father long ago and married the right man in her youth. I think my father is fine. What can I do? WORRIED SON. ANSWIR»—I print this letter in the hope that many husbands and wives will see what suffering they are inflicting on the poor little helpless victims of their lack of self-control. This unhappy lad has de- picted better than I can the agony of a sensitive youth, who is forced to be a witness to his parents’ quarreling. His nerves are torn to tatters. His heart is broken by being forced to take sides between them. Disgruntled husbands and wives seem to think that their quarrels are personal affairs, that they have a right to say whatever they please to each other and to stage as many harrowing scenes as they like before their children. They would say it was none of the children's business, factor in a child’s life. But it is. How parents get along together is the most vital TH!Y are poisoning the child’s whole life. They are not destroying its present happiness, they are wrecking its future. They are shatter- ing its nerves. They are warping its outlook. They are inflicting upon 1t neuroses that will handicap it to its dying day. And there should be something done to fathers and mothers who, for the selfish pleasure of gratifying their own spleens or because they are disappointed in marriage in some way, take cut their dissatisfaction and frustration by quarreling before their children. . * * * D!An MISS DIX—A friend of mine is engaged to marry a fine girl, one of the best ever, As the man makes only $22 a week and is the sole support of his mother, it is planned that they should all live together when they are married. But the mother thinks the girl is not good enough for her son and they have had some hot words, with the result that the girl refuses to go to live with the mother as they had planned. I have tried to convince the girl that she should overlook what his mother has done, but she says that she could never be happy with the mother and the mother would always try to boss her. Should the man give up the girl and stay and let the mother get along the best she can? with his mother, or marry the girl X, Answer—Page Solomon. No one with less wisdom than he could possibly solve the problem, because there are so many angles to the subject. It involves the question of whether youth or age should be served; whether the rule of the good to the greatest number should apply, what right we have to take our own happiness before that of others, and whether it is the duty of a child to sacrifice itself to its parents. And I don’t know the answer to a single one of these questions. Who Are You? The Romance of Your Name BY RUBY HASKINS ELLIS. i fh \i 4 McCall Ttm McCalls, formerly written Mac- Coll, meaning literally “the son of Col were settled for a long time along Loch Tyne, in County Argyle, Scotland. They are a branch of the Clan Choola. This family has been a prominent one in America and is today well rep- resented in various sections. Ances- tors fled from Scotland because of religious persecutions and settled for a time in Ireland. The emigration of McCalls from Ireland to America started about 1730, when many mem- bers of this family sought homes in the Western World, most of them landing in Pennsylvania. A number of these hardy Scotch-Irish, Presby- terian McCalls settled in the Cum- berland Valley, near Shippensburg, Pa. Some members of the McCall fam- ily felt the urge to move south. Fran- cis McCall is considered the founder of the McCall family in America and | his descendants established homes in Pennsylvania, Virginia and North Carolina. His son, Charles McCall, applied for land in Georgia in 1784 as a Revolutionary soldier of South Carolina. He was granted 200 acres in Effingham County. He becarze a very influential man in his community and in the political life of his adopted State, (Copyright. 1935.) Nature's BY LILLIAN Pickerel Frog. Rana palustris. N MAY you will find the pickerel frog mothers laying their eggs in the ponds and shallow waters of the meadow marshes. The ir- regular jelly mass may have as many as 3,000 eggs. At first the upper half of each egg is a deep brown above, creamy white below. They change very rapidly and soon the jelly mass will spread out and flatten. In a day or so you can see the yellow-brown tadpoles, and if the temperature is right, the fourth or fifth day sees the taddies clinging to their jelly blanket before they let Sonnysayings BY FANNY Y. CORY. mad at each other—they say “If you please,” an’ “May I trouble you—" ~{ Children COX ATHEY. go and wiggle to the waterweeds near by. You can take a jelly mass home and watch the tadpole story day by day. Remember “pollywogs” are hungry little fellows and must have food. They may thrive on the diet and change into frogs by July or August, or they may not “grow up” until September. If conditions are poor they may delay the change until next Spring. Pickerel frogs are very common | throughout Eastern United States. They are often mistaken for leopard frogs that are found on the great plains of the West, as the two look so much alike to one unacquainted with the colors and their arrange- ment. The spots are squarish and when one takes a leap into the water you will get a glimpse of bright gold under his hind legs and the posterior of his body. His ground color is always brown instead of green and he has no large external vocal pouches. When he croaks the region back of his eyes under his ear and his sides expands greatly. His song sounds as if some one were tearing tough cloth. His mate is the larger of the two and she is silent. ‘When this frog steps out of his mud blankets he is very dull in ap- pearance, and the spots are hardly discernible. A few hours in the bright sunlight and his coat is one of the handsomest in frogdom. It has a brilliant metallic luster. The gold and bronze glisten in the sun and the large, wise eyes and white throat identify it to you as a pickerel frog. ‘When gnats, moths, flies and other " (Copyrisht, 1935.) Hfll‘n Creale. Select one and one-half e-half to -1 =T it TTH L i .o R Uncle Ray Belgrade, Yugoslavia. ON THE eastern shore of the Adri- atic Sea, across from Italy, is Yugoslavia. In a sense, Yugoslavia is & new country. It is composed, in large part, of land taken away from Aus- tria-Hungary after the close of the ‘World War; but it includes Serbia and other land as well. Yugoslavia is a kingdom, and not long ago we heard of the death of its ruler, King Alexander. He was shot by an assassin, on & visit to Prance; and for a time there was fear that the event might lead to war. Newspapers in Yugoslavia were loud in their cries against Italy and Hun- gary; for some citizens believed that A GLIMPSE OF BELGRADE. “plotters” in those countries had brought about the shooting. The trouble was -patched up by the League of Nations, and there is hope that 111 feelings will pass. Belgrade, the old capital of Serbia, is now the capital of the whole n: tion. The meaning of the name is given as “White Castle,” or as “White Town.” The many white (or once white) houses in the city may ex- plain the name. Resting on a high cliff is an old fortress or castle, which has been a center of defense when Belgrade was attacked. This fortress, later turned into barracks for sol- diers, was once of white color, but it is now “maroon with age.” Belgrade is the home of people of many races and religion.. It has grown very swiftly during the past 14 years. A recent estimate places the Ppopulation at close to a quarter of a million. Among the long-time resi- dents are Turks, who dwell by the riverside in plaster houses with red tile roofs. The story of Belgrade goes back 1,700 years, to the time when a fort built near the place where the Danube and the Sava Rivers join. Since that time there have been so many changes in “masters” of the city that it almost makes us dizzy just to read the list. Among those who have held power at one time or another are Celts, Romans, Huns, Goths, Franks, Bulgarians, Greeks, Hungarians, Turks, Austrians and Serbians. In the World War the Austrians and Germans captured Belgrade. It is now back in the hands of the Serbians. Prince Peter, an 11-year- old boy, took the name of King after the death of his father. ‘The people of Belgrade make their living largely by trading, weaving cloth, working with iron and making boots, shoes, soap, glue and pottery. (For travel section of your scrap book.) Seven Wonders of the World! Do you know what they are? Would you like to know more about them? If , write to Uncle Ray to ask for his ‘Seven Wonders” leaflet, and inclose 8 3-cent stamped enwvelope, addressed to yourself. UNCLE RAY. (Copyright. 1935.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS Crabbed Age. 'XPERIMENTAL psychology is de- demolishing one foolish notion after another, especially pet notions about the mental nature of human beings. To take an example: Since the World War there has been a lot of talk about this being the “young man’s age.” The glories of r tend to exalt youth. Estimates about the abilities of young men, their capacity to learn, their leadership, and so forth have been linked up with their ability to withstand physical hardships. Psychologically speaking, there never has been a young man’s age, nor is there likely to be one. Every age has been an “old man’s age,” and every age to come will be the same. It stands to reason that nothing but experience, and that extending over a relatively long period of time, can really equip a man’s mind for the business of making adjustments to life. Relatively few men are at their best in the 30s, although there are a lot of good and wise men of that age. You will find more and better men, so far as mental abilities go, somewhere in the 60s, and even later. All this despite the ravages of general physical incapacities. Experimental psychology has proved beyond all doubt that the average man at 45 is just as plastic mentally as his son of 15. He learns the languages just as readily, and if anything, a little better. Such psychological facts mean something. The mind does not harden with the arteries, nor does it become twisted, merely because its possessor develops curvature of the spine. (Copyright, 1935.) The Debunker BY JOHN HARVEY FURBAY, PH. D. WOMEN’S FEATURES, You Can Be Beautiful As Told to Virginia Vincens BY KATHLEEN BURKE, O MUCH of what you are and what you look like,” said Kathleen Burke, whose cinema career started with the discovery of her clear, brown, panther-shaped eyes, “de- pends on what you eat.” strengthen this statement, she leaned over the table at a certain well - known Hollywood restau- rant and plucked a slim young| carrot from & dish of cracked ice and began munching on it just as most of us eat our celery. “I was born loving spinach, e too, and hating — gyinjeen Burke. pastry” she added, which, of course, accounts for the litheness of 5 feet 6 inches of graceful stature. “I really think that food—oh, and 10 hours of slecp—makes one have a serene disposition. Dieting makes me too thing in the face. Exercise, par- ticularly hill climbing, keeps my hips in a proper proportion. But eating on schedule, and eating the simple things, keeps me feeling fit.” - “The wrong food,” she explains, “or too much of it makes me literally fatigued. I feel dull and draggy after eating it.” I noticed then the excep- tional creaminess of her skin and the glowing undertone. Her brown eves | 14 have the gleam and sparkle of radiant youth. Out of 60,000 girls who en= listed in & movie contest she was “the one who got the job.” One in 60,000. Her pet hobby is perfumes. The strange, elusive scent she invariably Wears seems lem of her rather . No wonder it belon to her! Only her husband knows mg: secret—or the recipe. He mixes per- fume for her, and he prefers an odd jungly odor, in which he uses musk and—well, the rest he won't divuige, But it suits not only Kathleen Burke, but her husband, too—which makes it quite perfect. The only other thing that could make them both happier is to go around the world in a sail- boat. Kathleen would get enough sun= baths, then, she admits. She has a remedy for tiredness which she eagerly advocates for every one. “It's so simple that when I am working I do it frequently. Just wash your face. Oh, five times a day. With warm water and then cold. No one will believe how it relaxes you,” she said as she passed up the white bread the waiter offered her—evidently it was not on her list of proper foods.” “There’s a certain beauty, I sup- pose, to energy,” Miss Burke mused upon the matter. “It is an individual problem, which probably works out differently for every one. I do think every one should experiment and find out the amount of food, sleep, work and exercise which keeps one feeling fit. That's the first duty you have toward yourself.” (Copyright. 1935.) Modes of the Moment Bedtime Eflsfe/ knitwear brightens the latest beach modes +or those who follow the sun. oLiana Wloasins ez (255 Stories BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. LITTLE grumbling often re- lieves the mind, and it does A no harm, especlally if you do it when alone.” You know how it is with an engine that has too much steam; the safety | valve suddenly pops open and lets a | lot of that steam escape, enough of 4 - B “HEAR THE OLD GROWLER!” SAID REDDY FOX TO MRS. REDDY. it to relieve the pressure. It is just so when you get to thinking too much of things that are not to your liking and svidenly begin to grumble. By the time you get through grumbling you are likely to feel a lot better. Buster Bear was feeling out of sorts. Yes, sir, he was feeling decidedly out of sorts. And because he was feeling | s0, he was doing a lot of grumbling and growling, not to any one in par- ticular, but himself, and I have no doubt that he felt better for so doing. You see, the trouble was that real | i cold weather had held off unusually long and this had upset Buster com- pletely. Things were not as they | should be, not at all. He wanted to go to bed and he didn’t want to. That | j is to say, it was time to be abed, but | he didn’t feel sleepy. And the worst | of it was that the longer he remained awake the poorer condition he would grumbled Buster Bear. then I catch a Mouse, Mouse to such a big fellow as me? It 1sn't even a bite. No, sir, it isn’t even 2 bite. In the Fall I got reasonably fat on beechnuts and acorns, but those are gone now, or so nearly gone that it is only here and there that I can find one, and then it is nothing but a teaser to my appetite. I can’t keep still. I just have to wander about, and I am walking off what fat I did have. Winter either comes too soon or it doesn’t come soon enough, and I don’t know which is worse. No, sir, I don’t. If it comes to soon, I don’t have time to get as fat as I should, and if it comes too late, I am no better off, for I walk off the fat I have stored up. Now if I could only have caught Bobby Coon I had him treed, it would have growler!” said Reddy | . “You would think i “I don’t believe there is a thing the matter with him, but that he isn't getting enough to eat. It isn't to keep warm that he goes to sleep for the Winter, but to keep from starving. If he was out and about every day, 8s we are, he would have to have food and plenty of it, because he is such & big fellow. But that is just the time of year when there isn’'t much of any food, for with the ground frozen and covered with snow he can’t dig out roots and he can't find acorns, and there are no fruits, and there is little meat that he can get. It is a mighty good thing for him that he can sleep as he does. There have been times in past Winters when I have wished that I could go to sleep that way and forget my troubles.” Mrs. Reddy paused to look after Buster who was still growling and grumbling as he shuffled along rather aimlessly. “I've always wondered,” said she, “why Buster should have been given the habit of sleeping through -the coldest weather while most of the rest of us have to hustle to get enough to eat and keep warm. I never before thought of the matter of food. There really isn't anything for a Bear to eat in Midwinter, is there?” ot enough to keep him alive, any- way,” replied Reddy. “I guess he realizes it right now, to judge from his grumbling.” ATWOOD GRAPEFRUIT TREE-RIPENED WHOLESOME DELICIOUS Mix This Better Remedy, at Home Needs No Cooking! Big Saving! pleasantly surprised wh-n you make up this simple home mix- ture and try it for a distressing cough. It’s no trouble to mix, and costs but a trifle, yet it can be depended upon to give quick and lasting relief. Make a syrup by stirring 2 cups of nulated sugar and one cup of water or a few moments until dissolved. No cooking needed. Get 214 ounces of Pinex from any dru; ut it into & pint bottle, and fill up with your sugar syrup. The pint thus made gives you four times as much cough remedy for your money, yet it is more effective than ready-made medicine, Keeps per- fectly and tastes fine. This simple remedy has a remark- able three-fold action. It soothes and he the inflamed membranes, loosens the germ-laden Tghlegn and clears the air passages. Thus it makes breathing easy, and lets you get restful _ x is a compound of Fine, in concentrated form, f: a healing agent for throat mem- branes. It is guaranteed to give rompt relief or money re- funded. or Coughs