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B—12 MAGA ZINE PAGE. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Attractive Frock for Child BY BARBARA BELL. | HIS 1935 version of a well- | dressed child shows her wear- ing the daintiest of sheer cot- ton, styled with the light touch | of the new mode. For all its puffed and ruffled ap- pearance, the model is as simple as | a pretty dress well can be. The front and back are cut i one piece from | shoulder to hem, with shaped insets | for fullness at the respective centers. | Puffed sleeves, shirred into a contrast- | Ing band, give the dress an air of | youthful picturesqueness. Ruffled necklines are favored in | fuffy dresses of the thin type. In this | design, the ruffling is shaped ever so slightly and then gathered. The edges, | of course, are roll-hemmed, or pico finished—the former is preferred. | Bome designers add a whipped-on | edging of narrow Valenciennes,. or | tatting, if the material in the dress warrants a special trimming. The nicest little panties imaginable accompany this dress. They are in one piece, cut bias. The leg openings are narrowly hemmed. and the top. finished with a deeper hem, has an elastic run through. As to materials, this season we are | on the peak of an entrancing cotton | revival. The lawns for children have not been so pretty in years. Nor have | the dimities, swisses, organdies, print- | /3805 ed voiles, linens and novelty juvenile | prints. Colors are equally interesting, and | for little people very important. Blues, | pinks, yellcws, soft greens, peach, | geraniums and the elusive shades of | hyacinth are among the popular choices. | Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1480-B is | designed in sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Size 4 requires 2!, yards of 36-inch material; 3 yard contrast for ruffle. Measurement includes panties cut las. Every Barbara Bell pattern includes 2n illustrated instruction guide which | MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Sliced Oranges. Dry Cereal. Top Milk. Soft Boiled Eggs. Canadian Bacon. Graham Muffins. Ccflee. LUNCHEON. Cheese and Spinach Timbales. Baking Powder Biscuits. ‘Washington Pie. Tea. DINNER. Mushroom Soup. Baked Pork Chops. French Fried Potatoes. Creamed Onions. Coleslaw. Steamed Apple Pudding. Coffee. GRAHAM MUFFINS. One egg, vne cup sour milk, one teaspoon sode, one tablespoon sugar, a little sale, a piece of lard about the size of a walnut, one good cup graham flour. Bake in quick oven. TIMBALES. Two cups cooked spinach (canned is all right), three eggs, two-thirds cup milk, two table- spoons butter, one-half teaspoon salt, few grains pepper. Chop spinach fine, beat egg yolks, add milk, ‘melted butter, cheese sea- soning and stir while heating. Mix nalf of cheese sauce with the spinach and fold in stiffly-beaten egg whites. Fill buttered timbale molds with mixture, place in a pan of hot water and bake in a moderate oven until firm. Turn out on a hot plate, garnish with slices of hard-boiled egg and pour balance of cheese sauce around the timbales. Sprigs of parsley make this attractive. INDUS look upon Benares as the most holy city in India. It is the home of about 200,000 Uncle Ray persons, and close to a million Ways of India. pilgrims visit it each year. With 1,500 temples in the city, the visitors are able to go where they can honor the Hindu gods. They flock to the temples and they also bathe in the Ganges River—which runs past Benares. It is their belief that waters of the river will wash away their sins. ‘When many persons crowd together in water they are likely to exchange germs. Bathing in the Ganges has been blamed for the spread of cholera in India. The capital of India is Delhi, and among the other large cities are Cal- cutta, Bombay and Madras. Close to 1,400,000 persons live in Calcutta, the largest city in India. Nine-tenths of the people of India dwell on farms, or in villages. It is a country of farms and farmers. There are vast rice fields, and rice is of great importance as a food. Millet and wheat are other great food crops. The people of India number about | three times as many as those in the United States, but they live in a country less than two-thirds as large as the United States. It is correct to use the name “In- dians” when we speak of the people of India. We may call them the D. C, MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1935. Dorothy Dix Says Have You Ever Thought of the Difference Between Couples Who Merely Love Each Other and Those Who Add Liking? “J For there are many married couples who love each other, but there are comparatively few who like each other. There are plenty of hus- bands and wives who would die for each other, but who find it impossible to live together in peace and amity. Love may have in it both attraction and repulsion, but friendship is sheer congeniality, so lucky the couple that, in the slang of the day, can call each other Friend Husband and Friend Wife. OHN has not only lost a good wife, he has lost his best friend,” said a man in speaking of a woman who had just died, and I thought, “What a beautiful tribute! What a rare one to pay to a wife! How happy they must have been!” ONE of the strange phenomena of matrimony, at which we marvel continually, is why so many husbands and wives who apparently hate each other with a bitter and venomous hatred stay together. They fight like cats and dogs. They never speak to each other except to offer an insult or say something that stabs to the quick. They show a diabolical ingenuity in torturing each other. They broadcast each other’s every fault and weakness. And yet, with divorce court handy around the corner, they never ask for freedom from their spouses. With fofty trains a day leaving the station for far places, they never become wife and husband deserters. With tickets on sale for Reno, they never buy one. THE explanation is that, while they are enemies, they are still lovers. Their tastes and habits and points of view are so antagonistic that they are kept in a perpetual squabble. They get on each other’s nerves, but there is between them some bond of attraction that holds them together in spite of the misery they cause each other. This is why it is never safe to agree with the wife who is telling you what a brute and villain her husband is, or to join with a man in his criticisms of his wife. The very parties who have been asking you to sympathize with them for having got the world’s worst husband or wife will turn on you and rend you limb from limb. IT ISN'T because they are afflicted with the martyr complex, or that they possess such a high and noble sense of duty that they are impelled to fulfill the obligations they have assumed at any cost to them- selves that makes men and women endure unhappy marriages. It is because, while they don't like each other, they love each other. The drunkard, the grouch, the tightwad still have allure for their wives, even while they complain of having to fish them out of the gutter or wheedle them out of their ill humors or corkscrew pennies out of them. The virago, the nagger, the spender still have charm for their husbands, even while they tremble before their wives' tempers and cower under their henpecking and rage at their extravagance, THE only happy marriages are those in which liking is added to loving and in which a man and woman can be not only husband and wife, but friends. How seldom this happens is one of the greatest of tragedies. For it takes the joy out of the most beautiful relationship in life and turns marriage into cinders, ashes and dust. All about us we see this sad spectacle. Men and women working together to make & home, to bring up a family, but getting no happiness out of it. Lonely, disgruntled, bored, because they are not friends. GO INTO the average home of an evening. Husband and wife sitting up as silent as mutes. Nothing to say to each other. Driven in their desperation to listening to all of the drivel that comes over the radio in order to hear the sound of a human voice. Watch the average couple at any place of amusement. Are they chatting together and showing they are out for a good time? Not at all. They look as if they were doing penance, or else they are quarreling over the play or the movie or the menu. But when a husband and wife are friends they are never bored, never lonely, never dull, never lacking for good company, because they find the companionship they like best in each other. Every pleasure has a keener edge because they enjoy it together. No danger of the married couple who are friends, and who like each other’s faults because they are just John's or Mary'’s little ways, falling for gigolos or being vamped by platinum blondss Their marriage is foolproof and strangerproof. <For the tie that binds is felenlebip. U0 DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright Litle Benny BY LEE PAPE. OP and ma was going out to play bridge, more for ma's sake than for pop’s, and he was still reeding the paper and ma said, My lands Willyum, patience is rapidly ceesing to be a vir- tue. If you dont get ready immeditly we'll be late and those people will think we’re awful. You know how important the element of time is to bridge players, and there you sit like a statue of peace and plenty. My goodness dont you ever worry? she said. Why should I, I can always find somebody to worry me, look at you rite now, for instants, pop said, anc ma said, Well I must say I think that's a very selfish viewpoint. I cant say that I'm a socialist about everything, but I do say that everybesdy should do their own worrying, she said. Count me out, pop said. I never in- tend to worry. Even when I have one foot in the grave I'm not going to worry if the other one is a little bit late. Wich reminds me of a good epitaff for my toomstone. It will go | something like this: Here lies the genial Willyum Potts ‘Who smiled his way through life, He ony saw the brightest spots And left his worries to his wife. Now Willyum what a way to tawk when we're both blessed with the best of health and awt to appriciate it and be properly grateful, ma said, and pop said, But the ony way to be sure of a | decent epitaff is to write it yourself. Now this one mite be even better: ‘) Here lies old Pottsie, Willyum P. | As merry a sole as.there could be, When asked how he lived to a hunderd and 3 | He gave Dont Worry as the recipee. | Now Willyum I wont listen to any more, do you hear? ma said, and pop said, Have you stopped worrying about being late? and ma said, Yes, my | goodness, yes, and pop said, Then let’s 8O. Wich they di Sonnysayings BY FANNY Y. CORY. Nature’s is easy to understand. This pattern appeared once before in this column. Because of its popu- | larity, we are repeating it for the | benefit of readers who did not see it. | BARBARA BELL, ‘Washington Star. Inclose 25 cents in coins for Pattern No. 1480-B. Name ... Address .....ceeescesennninnns (Wrap coins securely in paper.) (Copyright, 1935.) Bedtime BY THORNTON A Lesson in Life. HIS is one of the lessons that life teaches us. Johnny Chuck | learned it the day he took Peter Rabbit's dare and| climbed high up in a certain | tree. He climbed so high for one not much accustomed to climbing that even his cousin, Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel, advised him not to climbl higher. This was enough to make | Johnny do that very thing. It made | him obstinate. You know how that is. Let some one tell you that you don’t dare to do a thing, or that you are crazy to try to do it, and that is the | very thing you make up your mind | to do. | So Johnny Chuck first took Peter’s | dare and then refused to heed Happy | Jack’s warning. He left the trunk and | crawled out and up along a big branch until he was so high above the ground that Peter Rabbit would have refused to believe that it was Johnny Chuck up there had he not seen him climb there. He was higher than he himself would have dreamed he could climb. He felt very proud of himself. | It was wonderful to be so high. He hadn’t supposed that any one could | see so far and see so much. | “It isn't for nothing t>at I belong | to the Squirrel family,” thought he. | “I wish Polly Chuck could see me now. I wonder if she is awake yet. Happy Jack said I couldn’t climb out here, but here I am. He is jealous. | ‘That is what he is, jealous. He doesn't like to think that I can climb. He | used to make fun of me because he | thought I couldn’t climb, but now he won't do that any more I guess. I'm glad Peter Rabbit saw me do it. Now everybody will know it. My, it is & long way to the ground. I don’t like looking down. It gives me a funny feeling.” “What are you holding on so tightly for?” demanded a scornful voice just mbove him. He looked up to se¢ Happy Jack sitting up on a limb, not holding on with his hands at all. “You're not a real climber, you know, even if you managed to get up | there,” continued Happy Jack. “A| real climber wouldn’t be clinging to that branch the way you are. Let's | see you jump across to that next branch.” “I don't want to go on the other branch,” retorted Johnny Chuck. “You don’t dare to jump across!” Jjeered Happy Jack. | This hurt because, of course, i was | true. Johnny pretended not to hear it. | He began to think of getting back to the ground. It was fine to have climbed so high, but after all, he didn't feel at home here. His home was on the ground. He looked down. ‘Then he began to wonder how he was to get back there. And right then he learned much of life’s lessons, that having begun to climb, it sometimes is easier to keep on climbing than-to try to return safely to the starting point. And another lesson he learned—that it is better to look up than down. He began to back down, an inch or | getting down. Stories W. BURGESS. two at a time. He hung on for dear | life. Now and then he would slip a little and his heart seemed to come right upsin his mouth. Happy Jack | grinned at him. “That’s no way to go down a tree,” he said. “Go down head first. That is the way to do.” And to prove it he | nimbly ran part way down. | “I wish I had been satisfied not to climb quite so high,” thought Johnny | 3} § ke “IT ISN'T FOR NOTHING THAT 1| BELONG TO THE SQUIRREL FAMILY,” THOUGHT HE. | “I din't once think about It is all very well to climb up in the world, but the higher one climbs the farther one has to fall. | 1 guess, perhaps, there is such a thing | as climbing above one'’s proper level. I certainly will be glad to get my feet on solid ground again.” (Copyright. 1935.) Yolly Pally A Little Chat on English. BY JOS. J. FRISCH. ruefully. JEAN COULD NOT SEE HER SISTER (N THE CROWD SHE WAS TOO SMA ANY GIRL 15 WILLING TO STRING ufig«fim A FLAT TIRE IF HE HAS H. A—Who was too small, Jean or her sister? Sentences that have two meanings should be changed to make them clear. If Jean was too small, say, “Jean, being too small, could not see her sister in the crowd.” If the sister was too small, say, “Be- cause her sister was too small, Jean could not see her in the crowd.” N | your stock of memories of other events NATIVES IN FRONT OF A TEMPLE STAIRWAY. true Indians. Natives of North and | South America were called Indians | by mistake when white men came to the New World not quite 4!2 cen- turies ago. The skins of the natives of India are of brownish color. The shades run from deep, dark brown to light brown. In part, the people arose from the same stock as those of Europe. Long ago, Aryan invaders crossed the mountains to invade India, and conquered those who were living there. The invaders made their homes in the country they had ‘won. For travel section of your scrap book.) If you want the free leaflet, “Ques- tions and Answers About Europe,” send a 3-cent stamped, return en- velope to me in care of this news- paper. UNCLE RAY. (Copyright. 1935.) Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS Memory Illusions. 'HILDREN often experience some | BY LILLIAN Short-Eared Owl. Asio Accipitrinus. NE good look at this hunter and you are convinced that O he is alert and likely to prove highly interesting upon further acquaintance. He is | independent, too, for he left family | traditions behind him and established | new ones utterly contrary to those of | owldom. Instead of living in hollow trees, he sought the prairies, meadows, marshes |and even open fields. He flies so close to the ground, when chasing his dinner, that he has often been mis- taken for a partridge. He is a day hunter. You will admit this is a de- parture from owl ethics, indeed. So your next visit to his haunts will, I hope, be rewarded by a sight of him. The short-eared owl is common difficulty in distinguishing what they fancy might happen from what | actually does happen. Truth-teaching | parents are at a loss to know what to make of some of the stories their children relate. But if they will only-‘ study the situation carefully, these‘ same parents may discover the origin | of the story in some other story pre- viously read or related to the child. The same thing often happens among adults trying to “tell t'he truth and nothing but the truth” in the court room. You nfay actually have seen the main events in question. But with the passing of time your imeg- ination fills in the details you either overlgoked or had no way of discover- ing at the time. So when you come to tell your story, you are easily mistaken. The reason is simple. Your mind is always striving for a complete pic- ture. You unconsciously draw upon for the details you are called upon to describe. The testimony of a single eyewitness to almost any event is at best a prob- ability. The veracity of the witness has nothing to do with the case. The most truthful person in the world will imagine the details of a situation, and | then mistake these images for memo- ries. When you mistake an image for a memory, you have what is known as a memory illusion. (Copyright. 1935.) Marmalade Teas. Make baking-powder biscuit dough rather soft and force through & bag and rose tube upon s buttered bak- ing sheet. The biscuits should be quite small to allow for the increased size in baking. Make a depression in the top of each one, in which place & teaspoonful of orange marmalade and | bake, i over the United States, and cousins are found throughout the world. All are most valuable allies of the farmers. In the north Mme. Short-Ear se- lects a site for the nursery about March. She may choose a depression in the ground near a hummock and have Mme. Heron for a neighbor. She may decide to appropriate a dwelling belonging to woodchuck, ground squirrel, or any other home for that matter, and once she has taken The Debunker BY JOHN HARVEY FURBAY, Ph.D. GENERAL GRANT SLAVE- HOLDER. AND AN IT IS very strange that Gen. U. S. Grant, the Union leader in the Civil War of the United States, was holding slaves when the war started and he continued to hold them as per- sonal property nearly to tfie close of the war. Grant did not pretend to be opposed to slavery and himself said that he “was never an abolitionist, nor even what could be termed pro- tagonist of anti-slavery.” (Submitted by Prof. D. R .T., Chattanooga, Tenn.) (Copyright. 1835.) Children COX ATHEY. session, she fights for it by clicking her bill so flercely that the rightful owners depart. { 'There will be from four to seven | white eggs in the leaf-lined nest, and later downy-coated babies will be de- | manding food. They are wide-awake {infants, and snappish, too. Though they will accept all you bring them, they never show any affection for you. | | With devoted parents to feed them day and night, and protect them | from fright as well as foes, owls are However, the parents do not let their offspring remain dependents too long, and when the children have been given lessons in cruising low over a hapless insect or baby mouse, they are given to understand they must hunt or starve. The only.speech the marsh owl possesses is a squeak much like that of a moeuse. The flight is silent, the wing beat steady. The hunter takes his prey to a perch to eat, possibly to whack it on the head first, if it hap- pens to be a large, lively fellow. As the eyes of owls are fixed im- movably in the head and both di- rected forward, the owl, in order to see, must twist his head to get a view of his surroundings. Were you ever told that owls twisted their heads off? Watch an owl turn his head and when it has gone as far as ad- visable, it is snapped round in the other direction. So fast is this done, you may be fooled into thinking you will see a fatality if you stick around, but close observation will set you right. Use your water colors on this {l- lustration, so you can identify your owl at once. The face disk is almost white, with tiny black . freckles, eye patches black, and eyes a lovely yel- low, coat a dusky brown, feathers edged with yellow, underparts whitish, breast with broad streaks of brown. The tail is barred with bands of buff. Bill and claws are dusky blue-black, feather leggins are buffy. (Copyright. 1935.) - Pointed paragrap}m: If you would get up with the lark you must go to bed without one. Many a man’s excessive cheek is | due to the toothache. If love would only remain blind after marriage—but what's the use? From a theatrical point of view a divorce without publicity is worse than marriage. A hypocrite is & man who acts dif- ferently when he knows some one is watching him. Any young man knows that it is more satisfactory to get a smile from a girl than it is to get the laugh. A man seldom speaks lightly if he stops to weigh his words. It's a good thing to avoid people who consider you a good thing. One way to get rid of unpleasant people is to begin giving them advice. In a case of emergency it is some- times advisable to reward the man who hedped you to emerge. Men sometimes become wiser as they grow older, but they seldom be- come less foolish. Most “amily skeletons refuse to stay in the closet. Be sure that you have an aim in life before pulling the trigger. Wise men may fool others, but the fool fools only himself. A mién who is satisfied with his job never reaches the top of the ladder. Some men waste a lot of valuable time explaining their actions. A large portion of our standing army does a stunt on the street cars and buss‘e: di . ‘When it comes to a quick parting the fool and his money are a close second to & woman and her secret. This is the land of the free, but anything worth having is seldom offered to us in that way. My poor Muvver say the only sign ob Spring her has seen is mud instead ob snow tracked inter the house. ‘When I gives her these pussy-willers I bet her eyes will shin (Copyright. 1935.) How It Started | | BY JEAN NEWTON. In a Trice. in no hurry to make tHeir own living. | WE ARE all familiar with this brisk phrase, which means quickly, or in an instant. It is the latter defini- tion which supplies the key to the in- teresting history of this expression. Trice is of Spanish origin. We have it from the Spanish tris which is sup- | | posed to be the imitation of the sound | made when glass breaks, which, as everybody knows, happens in a flash. | The word tris, in Spanish, there- | fore, came to mean instant, the Span- ish phrase “en un tris” being prac- tically identical with our own English[ in a trice, both being used in exactly the same sense. | Among its earliest recorded uses is| by Shakespeare in his “King Lear.” | act 1, scene 1, almost three and a half centuries ago. (Copyright, 1935} | P | | Dog Trapped for Week. After being trapped for a week in | a well near High Wycombe, England, | a dog has been rescued and revived. WOMEN’S FEATURES, Who Are You? Romance of Your Name BY RUBY HASKINS ELLIS. THIS is a name of French deriva- tion originating with the family of Gervais, seated in Bretagne at a | Gervais very early time, The name was also spelled Gervasius and we find a record of one Richard Gervasius living in Normandy as early as 1180. Another record mentions Jean Gervais, who lived in France in 1400. This is a well-known name in Can- ada and the United States, some of the variants being Jervis, Gervis, and Jervais. Those early representatives of the name in North America were of French extraction, but came directly from Great Britain, | where members of the family had settled. Nathaniel Jarvis was born in Wales, came over in command of a ship which had operated between England and the Isle of Jamaica. He :ved in Boston, where he became a mer- chant and an influential citizen. He was afterward jomned by two of his brothers from England, one of whom remained in Massachusetts, but the other established his home in Con- necticut. (Copyright. 1 Conquering 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 1924. These articles are based on the Sims system, which includes the ome-over-one principle which the Sims group of players was the first to employ and develop. Bid and Retaliation. HE other evening a group of my friends were playing rub- I ber bridge, and the following hand was dealt #10-x-X VK-x-x S A-K-x &»Q-J-x-X AK-Q-J-x-X N $10-9-%-X-X " o WA- *x *Q-J- XX wx A9-x-X Q-x *x-X & A-K-10-X-X-X The bidding: West Pass 2 So. Pass Pass Pass Pass (3) 1. A gambling bid, pure and simple 2. Lying back fiendishly 3. Oh, well, it can’t be down more than one or two tricks. East naturally attacked the diamond suit. North managed to sneak the queen of hearts in and took six clubs, a heart and two diamonds. After- ward there were a few remarks made by West in a distinct tone of asperity “Why,” demanded West, “hadn’t East led spades?” East pointed out that he only held a doubleton ace and that North, after all, had bid no trumps. and what was he anyway—a star gazer? The atmosphere became slightly frigid, and congealed even more when North began to chuckle. The upshot of the whole matter was this hand: AJ-x ¥Q-10-x-X-x S A-x-X *K-x-X AA-K-x- ¥x-x €10-x-X #K-J-0-x #Q-10-9-x 3 *A-J East had been waiting for a hand on which he could make a bid similar to North’s. The above collection of queens and kings seemed to answer My Neighbor Says: A large piece of blotting paper placed on the closet floor will absorb moisture from wet rubbers that may be placed in the closet. A mixture of one part vinegar and two parts linseed oil applied with a soft cloth to suit cases and bags will clean and polish them. (Copsright, 1935.) DR. LYON’S TOOTH POWDER ® 1007 Cleansing Properties Twice that of tooth paste B Contains No Grit or Pumice Cannot possibly scratch the softest enamel B Outlasts Tooth Paste 2 to 1 will clean and polish teeth so quickly and leave them so gleaming white—as POWDER. That is why your dentist, when cleaning your teeth, as you know— always uses powder. Asitis onf;'othe powder part of any dentifrice_that cleans, & dentifrice that is ALL POWDER—just natu- rally cleans best. > Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder is ALL POWDER—100% cleansing pro] erties. This is more than twice t! cleansing properties of tooth pastes. Dentists _everywhere recommend Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder, because— teeth simply cannot remain dull nn,d film coated when it is used. Dr. Lyon’s THERE is nothing known that Dr. LYON'S WHITENS TEETH AS 7 # cleans off all stains, and K:lishes the teeth in a rmless and practical way that leaves them sparkling—many shades whiter. Free from all grit or Bumme, Dr.Lyon'sTooth owder cannot_possibly scratch, or injure the softest enamel. Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder keeps your teeth REALLY CLEAN and clean teeth mean—firm, healthy gums and the least possible tooth decay. Powder Jeaves your teeth feeling so much cleaner, your mouth so refreshed, TooTH POWDER NOTHING ELSE CAN | the requirements. He opened it up boldly with one no trump. West, who had a couple of other little counts gainst East. overbid his hand in an I-don't-care” manner and bounced into three no trumps. South, an in- nocent victim of circumstances, opened a low heart. Since the club finesse worked, that was East’s ninth trick; four clubs, four spades and one heart | Of course four spades is wrap up | s0 East wasn't so smart as he thought | he was at the t i (Co | Beets With Mint Sauce. | Let two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, one teaspoonful of sugar, three cloves and half a cupful of butter come to the boiling point, then drop in 11 cupfuls of small, cooked beets and cover and simmer until the flavor is absoroed, which will depend um‘ the age a tenderness of the be: ‘When ready to serve, sprinkle with finely chopped mint leaves. This is an excellent variation of mint flavore ing to serve with lamb §\ Make ¥ HAPPINESS a Habit Wouldn't you like to step up the amount of enjoyment you get from life? The knack of keeping fit is largely a matter of regular habits. Your happiness may be hampered by common constipation due to in- sufficient “bulk” in your meals. Did you know that your grocer has a natural cereal food which cor- rects this condition? Kellogg’s ArL- BraN, eaten regularly, supplies generous “bulk.” Also vitamin B and iron. The “bulk” in ALL-Brax is gentle —and safe for normal individuals. More effective than the “bulk™ in leafy vegetables, as it does not break down within the body. Two tablespoonfuls daily are nsu. ally sufficient. Chronic cases, with | each meal. If not relieved this way, | =ee your doctor. | Isnt this natural food much bet- | ter than taking patent medicines? Serve it as a cereal with milk or cream, or use in cooking. Get Kel« Jogg’s ALL-BrAN at your grocer’s. Tt contains much more “bulk” than part-bran _products. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. i i \ r | ‘ Keep on the Sunny Side of Life @o as your Dentist does- when he cleans your teeth and your breath so sweet and pure. Once you use powder you will never go back to tooth paste. People by the thousands are changing daily. Dr. Lyon’s Tooth Powder is not onl{ doubly efficient, but it costs onl, hall ag much to use. Even & package lasts twice as long as a tube of tooth paste.