Evening Star Newspaper, August 13, 1935, Page 18

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1935. COLDS are no respecters of rank. The butcher, the baker, the candlestick-maker cough in chorus. The banker and his bootblack sneeze a democratic duet. No other single sickness steals as much time and energy from the American people. . . . Why? Science doesn’t know all the answers—yel. But olne good answer is the'drinking glass. A common glass in kitchen or bath can carry one cold through a whole household. A carelessly washed tumbler at the corner soda fountain can infect a neighborhood. Thorough sterilizing takes more minutes and equipment than most fountains can afford. A hasty swish in soapy water may dissolve visible dirt, but it doesn’t disturb the millions of germs left by the lips of a long line of customers pre- ceding you. These bacteria ride the rim when you drink, expose you to colds and unpleasant diseases of many kinds. Look for the Seal of Safe Fountain Service For this extra health protection, patronize foun- tains that display this seal! (Check the list below for those in your neighborhood.) You’ll reduce your chances of catching cold by removing one possible source. And you’ll have the satisfaction of knowing that no one else has ever used your clean, white, individual cup —or ever will. These far-sighted fountains provide Dixies for the protection of their patrons and also meet other exacting sanitary standards. Notice, too, that at many fountains the soda drinks and desserts you buy to “carry out” to your home and office are put in Dixie carriers for safe, clean handling. Urge your family and your friends to think before they drink, and to seek the Seal of Safe Fountain Service. Travelogue of an Office Sore-throat From Jane to Dick, to Miss Jones, to the Sales Manager —all by means of a borrowed glass— and every case unnecessary. ¢ Modern offices protect the health of their employees by supplying Dixies, the individual paper drinking cups. They are dispensed singly, used once, and thrown away. Dixies are one sure means of guarding against the spread of mouth ‘and respiratory diseases. Use them regularly in your office, and look for them in theater lobbies, department stores, in stations, on trains. Buy Dixies for home use too. They come in atiractive colors, and many sizes. Petworth Del. Lincoln Park Pharmacy Whitley’s Drug Store Potomac Drug Co. Monastery Soda Fountain o 1564 wmmfn Ave. 1340 Quincy St EOSRER I R asos TION. SHOW THEM THAT YOU APPRECIATE THIS SERVICE. S RVI CE uigley's Prescript hatles C. | i ses g Y CENTRAL SECTION Bernstein’s Drug Store B. H. Hunton, Pharmacist R. A. Ridgway Pharmacy Robin’s Pharmacy University of Maryland 3 + 1912 14th St. 2750 14th St. s.nl!(‘n;n ;“S&:: g«:.c | Wm. A. Boyd's Pharmacy xenta saphl Simmon’s Phu;nlcy SOUTHWEST SECTION. Seco Theater Bldg. 3201 Georgia Ave. Cor. 21st & L Sts. Columbia Pharmacy ALEXANDRIA, VA. 3 \ 700 Upshur St. 1301 E. Capitol St. Virginia Ave., 8th & K Sts. I'IIESE BEALEBS, AT T]]Em 0WN EXPENSE, IIAVE PUT DleE Roscoe D. Pinkett, Druggist Market Drug Co. BROOKLAND, D. C. Quality Pharmacy Plaza Drug Co. TAKOMA PARK, D. C. 7311 Georgia Ave. 200 E St. Mattingly Brothers 18th and Florida Ave. 900 You St. 5522 Conn. Ave. 8th & F Sts. Dairy Fountain Annapolis Pharmacy ‘ Board’s Ph: Sabatini & Battaglini J. A. Simpson & Co. SILVER SPRING, MD. Liggett’'s Drug Stores Bri ' Mt. Pleasant & lrviu Sts. im| ’'s M Ph ightwood Drug Store Simpson’s Modern Pharmacy Cor. 4th & L Sts. Ak L 5916 Georgia Ave. Kinner & Membert 7th & Rhode Island Ave, o T Judd. Draggist Nicklin's N St. at New Jersey Ave. Sth & Flotids Ave. Catholic University SERVICE INTO THEIR SODA FOUNTAINS FOR YOUR PROTEC- INDIVIDUAL Quigley’s Prescription Pharmacy Charles C. Read, Pharmacist 1ith St. at H St. Judd’s Pharmac; 3 B 1762 Florida Ave. St Do Fred L. Lutes 1301 F St. N.W. . Burleith Pharmacy 3rd & Kennedy Sts. , Velline’s Pharmacy ‘Cor. Tth & P Sts. George Mason Hotel Pharmacy 1345 F St. NW. 1834 Wisconsin Ave. s armac; 121 Mass. Ave. Temple Pharmacy :}‘;‘ .,t‘;“g- g e Campbell’s Drug Store m.'.‘;'%“é.fl’u e ~ Van Sant’s Pharmacy Mfg‘&f;“m}g o 1642 King St. y 3 ‘eitch, Pharmac; .W. Cor. Peyton g Sts. Ip97-Otn doe. Ty e iy e et s 3 : Wisconsin Ave. & Ingomar St. 0] Rowri 0 AR VA Columbia Pharmacy e 2 Walter Reed Hospital SOUTHEAST SECTION Everly's Drug Store NORTHWEST SECTION 2nd & Florida Ave. Maxwell & Tennyson, - o eSS, Dahila 8. b e : EXON PARK. VA. Alaska Ave. Pharmac, The Commodore P! arm: ve. 11th nn. Ave. ) 7808 Alaska Ave. o N!orth Cap. & F s&.mm fl;un g',‘.i'éi z Garfield Park Drug Store Kavanaugh's Drug Store Alban Towers Pharmacy L. H. Day & Co. G. Paul Monck, Pharmacist 2 NORTHEAST SECTION 311 15th St. Cor. N. Pershing & Washington Blvd. Wisconsin & Mass Aves. 14th & P Sts. 221 Upshur St. ¥ Home Pharmacy Healy’s Pharmacy Lyon PNlrIP( C:l'nmumty Store Argyle Pharmacy Eagle Pharmacy Morgan Bros. 4th & H Sts. 1932 Nichols Ave. 2626 N. Pershing St. wcor 17th St. & Park Road o Gcor Mfli& W Sts. & P Sts, e—————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————— e e alter Armstrong, Phlrml t eorgia- enned Pharmac; X TR R Gt ‘ . TO0 GOODNESS Ba.ker’uhmflptlonl’hxrmuy lln&'cr's Dru‘ lure : THE SEAL TO THE LEFT IS YOUR GUIDE 701 Kennedy Street 17 Conn. Ave, 14¢h ‘-——-‘**___ —— -——-—‘-‘A‘"“"“‘_ 3

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