Evening Star Newspaper, September 20, 1935, Page 44

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C—6 Homemade Fudge and Carame WOMEN’S FEATURES. =4 WaylIsFound To End Shine In Nose Care Lotion Is Beautifier and Gives Natural Appearance. BY ELSIE FIERCE. (QNE of the things women cry about year in and year out is the per- sistent shine on the nose. Women whose skins are inclined to be moist | Shopping in or oily find that an hour or less after make-up has been applied, lo, the shine has returned, the nose misses | not a single sparkle of light. And by the best beauty standards shine be- longs headward, not on the nose. In the case of oily skin, the only way to overcome the condition is to get at the root. v a change in diet, cutting down on fatty foods, rich desserts, pastries, starches, the excess “fuel” foods. Locally patting with a skin tonic or mild astringent containing 2 small | quantity of alcohol is often helpful. And the finishing preparation has uch to do with preserving a toned- | So many | women have told me that they have | down, groomed appearance. gearched but could not find a lotion that would go on quickly, smoothly, | evenly and stay on. This last Summer a new lotion made Its way to the beauty mart. I found that it really obviated constant mop- ping of the face with a powder puff. After the skin is thoroughly cleansed, cream rouge is recommended. Then use a dampened silk sponge and apply the lotion evenly over the rouge. Apply lightly and evenly and allow to dry for a few minutes before wiping off the excess. The lotion beautifies, im- parts a natural appearance, will not rub off nor streak if it is properly used. It forms a protective film that makes it particularly grand for active sports (for golf or tennis) because in spite of excessive heat or activity it prevents that awful red flushed look It comes in a non-leakable bottle and the directions caution “shake well.” Powder Unnecessary. Powder seems to be quite unneces- sary as this finishing lotion takes the place of powder. It comes in six shades and if you go in for darker | tones for daytime and active sports and lighter shades for evening all you have to do is have two bottles on your dressing table. If you are planning to travel this Fall, be sure to take an effective finishing preparation with you. Cook’s Corner BY MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE. A SEPTEMBER SUNDAY, BREAKFAST. Chilled Honeydew Slices. Ham Omelet. Buttered Toast. Orange Marmalade, Coffee. DINNER. Pineapple and Orange Juice. Baked Chicken. Giblet Gravy. Mashed Sweet Potatoes. Buttered Peas. Bread. Currant Jelly. Radishes. Valencia Cake. SUPPER. Olive and Cheese Sandwiches. Hot Chocolate. Grapes. VALENCIA CAKE. 15 cup butter 15 teaspoon salt | 1 cup sugar 23 cups pastry 3 egg yolks flour 85 cup orange 3 teaspoons baking Jjuice powder 1 teaspoon lemon 3 egg whites, extract beaten Cream butter and sugar. Add yolks, | Juice, extract, salt, bour and baking powder. Beat two minutes. Fold in whites. Bake 20 minutes in two layer cake pans in moderate oven. Cool end add filling. FILLING. 23 cup sugar 1% teaspoon salt 8 tablespoons flourl teaspoon lemon | 1 egg yolk juice 23 cup orange 1 tablespoon but- | juice ter 2 tablespoon grat- ed orange rind Blend sugar and flour. Add rest of ingredients and cook slowly until thick | and creamy. Stir constantly. Beat | well and cool. s TOPPING. 1 cup sugar Vs teaspoon vanilla 1 teaspoon vinegar !4 teaspoon 1 cup water almond extract 1 egg white, % cup coconut beaten Coffee. This often calls for | | make-up makes the woman.” | cream comes in a very generous sized Boil gently and without stirring sugar, vinegar and water. When | thread forms as portion is slowly? poured from spoon pour into egg white 1 and beat unmtil thick and cold. Add| Test of ingredients. Frost cake. ! “Something New Under the Sun” in the Cosmetic Line. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Washington Two delightful new lipsticks, an astringent cream for sagging neck muscles and crepey throat, a purse pack of coiffure pins and a stunni actually lasts for over a week. BY MARGARET WARNER. O QUOTE from one of the leading columnists on matters of interest to women, “Clothes may make the man, but her These | days a lipstick has become the most indispensable part of make-up, for | even those with naturally beautiful | skin who do not have to coax the semblance of a lovely complexion with | lotions and powders, do feel that| to accent the lips, even a little, adds that touch oY completeness to the | toilette that is demanded by present ' standards of smartness. | And so every one is interested in | new means of procuring a lasting | and well-blended color for the lips| as well as attractive new containers for their lipsticks. We have found | two new and lovely lipsticks which are sketched above. The black stick with the gold crown top contains a marvelous indelible color that will, keep its morning freshness through the day if properly applied. Put it on generously and firmly, then allow it to set for a few minutes afv.er‘ which take off the excess with facial | | tissues and finish with a thin coat- | ing. You will find this a satisfactory | method of producing a lasting effect | with your lipstick. The second stick is made expressly for evening It comes in ivory with silver base land a band of simulated jewels at| the top—your choice of rhinestones, | rubies, emeralds or sapphires—and will make a charming addition to your evening bag. Lovely for bridge prizes, too. ONE of the most distressing things for a. woman te discover is that her neck is loosing its firm, youthful contour and that wrinkles and flabby muscles are beginning to appear. Something must be done about it | immediately, for if taken in time this condition may be arrested and definitely remedied. One of the well- known makers of beauty aids has come to the rescue with a new astringent throat cream which is the answer to all these annoying symptoms. This e jar which will last quite a while as it is to be applied as a thin film. After being massaged in thoroughly it is left on all night. This cream is fairly expensive, but surely it is worth a lot to have a beautiful throat that you don't have to keep hidden under high collars and fur neck- PATTERN 5255 Soft, cuddly animal toys are the favorites of nursery-age youngsters and wise is the mother who realizes how easily and cheaply such toys can be made. No need to buy new material for these. ; the left-over scraps of calico, chintz or other novelty cottdns are adequate and so colorful. With only two simple pieces required for each toy, not counting the ears and elephant’s blanket which are separate, the stitching and stuffing are completed in no time at all. ‘Then watch the merriment when you bring out long-eared Peter Rabbit, the terrier that's smart as a whip, and the elephant “just like we saw at the circus!” In pattern 5255 you will find a transfer pattern for the animals shown, directions for making them and material requirements. To obtain this pattern send 15 cents in stamps or coin to the Woman's {Editor of The Evening Star, . ng ruby red nail polish that —Sketched In Washington 8hops. | i YOU like to have your finger nails gleam with a lustrous ruby red, IF | there is a particularly good cream pol- mixing in well. ish that will give you just this effect and will not crack or chip off for a week to 10 days. It has been tested out and found to remain in excellent condition even when subjected to gen- eral wear and tear by a very busy woman. It also comes in other smart colors. * % %X X ON'E of the handiest little gadgets is | the new suede case containing 12 coiffure pins to slip into your purse. ‘These bobbie pins occupy a minimum of space until a stray lock or pstticu- larly stubborn strand demands a re- straining influence. The coiffure pins come in colors to match black, brown, blond or gray hair—and their soft, dull-finished texture blends so per- fectly with the coiffure that it is hard | to detect their presence. You will find these pins in any of the department | stores where you may be shopping. * ok % % THXS week one of the large cosmetic houses has been making a special introductory offer of a jar of special | double boiler. | stiff and add the sugar to it very D. C, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1935. Is May Still Be Used as Ba < Even in Modern Times Masculine Sweet Tooth Demands Satisfaction Candy-Makifig Parties Should Prove Popular Innovation for Kitchenette Housekeeper. BY BETSY CASWELL. AYBE the kitchenette house- keepers—especially if they are gay, hospitable business girls just out of college, will be interested in a few simple candy recipes with which to tempt the sweet tooth of current beaux. Back in the old days, the girl who | made the best fudge was pretty apt to get all the Sunday after- noon masculine callers. Now, of course, trends are very different, but I have found, upon inquiry, that the gentle- men of college age and shortly thereafter, can still be pre- vailed upon to erijoy a bit of homemade candy. Naturally, when you come home from the office, there is not much pleasure in facing the task of broil- ing and moiling over a hot stove. An clectric chafing dish is a comfort in this case, and the refreshments may be prepared right in the living room, Betsy Caswell | with all the guests taking a hand, if you so desire. However, there are many types of candy that require lit- tle or no cooking, and may be whip- ped up in just a few minutes before changing your dress, and re-doing your face after your return from the day’s work. For instance, there is a wonderful fudge that is simplicity itself to make: UNCOOKED FUDGE. squares unsweetened chocolate tablespoon butter egg white pound. confectioner’s 4X sugar tablespoons evaporated milk tablespoon vanilla Melt the chocolate and butter in a Beat the egg White gradually. Add the evaporated milk, and blend thoroughly. Gradually add the melted chocolate and butter, and beat until evenly colored. Add vanilla, Smooth out on a buttered pan and mark in squares. Chill for 30 minutes and then serve. MARSHMALLOW CARAMELS. 113 cups sugar 1, cup light corn sirup 1 cup milk 14 cup cream 2 tablespoons butter 1 tablespoon vanilla Marshmallows. Mix all ingredients together, except Dorothy a little of the mixture tested in cold water forms a hard, chewy ball. Re- move from fire and add vanila. Cover the bottom of a greased pan with the caramel mixture, and sprin- kle well with marshmallows, cut in quarters. of the caramel. When cold, turn the block of candy out of the pan in order to cut more evenly. Cut in squares with a large, sharp knife. MARSHMALLOW PECAN BRITTLE. Melt two cups sugar in a frying pan over slow fire. Add one-half cup pecans, halved, and fifteen marshmal- {lows cut in quarters. Pour into a buttered pan, cool and break in pieces. WEEKLY KITCHENETTE MENUS. MONDAY. Pepper Pot Soup Welsh Rarebit Mixed Green Salad Cut-up Fruit Coffee. TUESDAY. ‘Tomato Juice Cocktail Grilled Lambs’ Kidneys Succotash Hot Biscuits Pineapple Sherbet Tea. WEDNESDAY. Oyster Stew, Pilot Biscult Cold Sliced Ham Raw Vegetable Salad Orange Layer Cake Coffee. THURSDAY. Fruit Cocktail | Poached Eggs in Spinach Mashed Potatoes Avocado Pear Salad Tea. FRIDAY. Tomato and Clam Broth Crabmeat Baked in Ramekins Lettuce, Watercress and Cucumber Salad Lemon Jelly with Cream Coffee. SATURDAY. Cheese Souffle | Baked Tomatoes, Stuffed Green Peas and Carrots Chocolate Eclairs Tea. SUNDAY. Cream of Mushroom Soup Broiled Chicken Asparagus on Toast Steamed Rice Peach Ice Cream Wafers CofTee. Pickles . If you wish advice on your indi- vidual household problems, write to Betsy Caswell, in care of The Star, inclosing stamped, self-addressed en- | vanilla and marshmallows. Cook over = velope for reply. Dix Says Man and Wife Must Be Equals in Their Home Life. happiness as for hushands and wives to regard each oth- N | every time he degrades her by making | her practice arts and wiles to get some texture cream which is being given er as human beings, cut off the same |of the money she has earned by her with every $2 purchase of any of the preparations put out by this company. A consultant from the New York of- . fice will gladly give you information | about the various creams and lotions and help you with your particular problems. The special texture cream | is fine and fluffy and is excellent for the dry, sensitive skin. As tomorrow | is the last day of this offer it would | be wise for you to take advantage of | it immediately. For information concerning items mentioned in this column call National .;»:M. Extension 342, between 10 and | a.m. | Moderation Is Necessity, For Mid-Life Cross-Roads Time Is Period of Comfort and Easy Ways. BY JAMES W. BARTON, M. D. "FOR those who aspire to make the period known as middle age | comfortable, fruitful, and happy, the keynote of conduct must be ‘modera- | tion” In matters of food and exer- | cise, work or play, the middle-aged must conserve their powers. Even in such common matters as sunshine and fresh air, one can go to extremes, like the nudists and sun bathers; and in | the maiter of food it is notorious that ‘we cannot be trusted. Faddists often eat too little, or a one-sided diet; bui most commonly we overeat.” I am quoting from an editorial in the British Journal of Physiology and Medicine. Middle-age is the cross roads in | life. We can determine that we are not going to grow old and so go about our work or play as if we were still youthful. This is of course the idea that it s better to wear out than to rust out and most of us will agree that it is better to live until we die (really live) than it is to decide that we are old, already dying in fact, and so rust out. But the cross-roads can be met in the spirit of the editorial quoted; that is moderdtion in all things. ‘What does moderation mean? Moderation mesns that in the mat- ter of sleep or rest we take an extra hour in bed each night whether we sleep or not, or that during the day we snatch a few minutes’ rest by lying down, completely relaxed. Gladstone knew how to rest for a few minutes at different times during the day, and Edison, although he got along on four to six hours rest at night, always had a couch in his workroom on which he could relax at times during the day. ‘That body of yours will enable you to really “live until you die” if you use moderation at the period of mid- die age. i | wives. wives who make marriage a hell on | bolt of cloth as themselves, stamped with the same patterns of likes and dislikes. own work as cook and housekeeper. And look at the debonair way in | which men ask women who are fol- a low flame, stirring constantly, until | Cover with another layer | WOMEN’S FEA Sleeves are Important However, in This Case the Dress Is by | BY BARBARA BELL. LEEVES are important in any number of the new Fall de- signs. Very often the rest of | the dress is just a simple lit- | tle thing which derives its sole claim to attention by extravagant sleeves. Sometimes they are large, gathered at armholes and cuffs, and there are all sorts of variations on this theme. Cuffs extend to the elbow, in some models, and then, again, are left out entirely, the sleeve terminating be- tween elbow and wrist. A great many of them are raglan, or extend far up the shoulder line. Many will be em- | broidered or trimmed in some fash- | fon. as the season progresses, em- | phasizing the larger silhouette. ? In this frock the sleeves are an in- O OTHER one thing would do | cup begging a quarter. please sir. for teresting part of the design, although so much to promote domestic | a poor woman, and that she hates him | the dress is by no means subordi- nated to accent their smartness. They are long and puffed softly at the wrist and are a part of the little | yoke which manages the broad- shouldered effect, which is another good thing to watch in the new clothes. The neckline has mounted Strangely enough, they rarely seem | lowing successful careers to give them | to the base of the throat in this de- able to do this. They do not think of each other as brother and sister. On the contrary, they assume that !up in order to marry them. No man | who was winning fame and fortune | doing the work God called him to do sign, the soft, rolling collar and huge bow really giving the effect of just a touch more height. which is they belong to different species of | and in which he found perpetual ex- | good. The blouse is buttoned from animals, with no more in common than the carnivorous lion and the grass-eating sheep, and with as dif- ferent habits and points of view as a mountain lion and a deep-sea fish. This brings about many of the disasters of marriage and causes hus- bands and wives to inflict grevious wrongs upon each other. And it ex- plains why so many good men and | women are such bad husbands and Doubtless most husbands and earth to their mates could plead in extenuation of their crime that they did not realize the wrong they were committing. They knew that they themselves could not stand the bru- tality, the tyranny, the injustices, the little cruelties they were imposing upon their husbands and wives, but they thought that the husbands and wives were so different that they would not resent ill-treatment. * x X %k S AN illustration of this you can take the fact that men universally believe that women enjoy being slaves, and that they like to be bossed about as if they were morons who did not have enough sense to decide any sub- ject for themselves. Every man Kiiows that the thing that is most precious to him in all the world, the thing that he would fight and die for, is his personal liberty. He knows that lLie would be perfectly miserable if he nad to ask any one’s permission to buy a new necktie, or go to see his mother, or join a club. ‘Yet men who really love their wives and want 0 make them happy im- pose this servitude upon them. There are plenty of married women whose husbands are jailers and who have no more freedom of action than if they were locked up in a cell. Their aus- bands buy their clothes for them, go over every item on the grocery bill, open and read their letters and settle every matter that comes up in life according to their taste and not their wives', It is the same way about money. ‘The average American husband isn't stingy to his wife. He is generous to her. But it is like pulling his eye teeth for her to get an allowance from him. And this is just because %e can’t understand that financial inde- pendence is as necessary to her self- respect as it is to his. He couldn’t endure to go to even the most liberal of fathers every morning and ask him for car fare and cigarette and lunch money. He would loathe him- self if he had to flatter and fawn and resort to wiles and skullduggery in order to weedle a new suit of clothes out of father. * ok ok ok citement and joy would be willing to give it up and retire to private life just to please a woman who wanted all of his time and interest. But & man doesn’t hesitate to ask a woman to scrap her career for him, to throw away all of the long years of work she has spent in perfecting her- self for it, and to shut the door on her ambitions. He thinks she would rather budget the grocery bill than handle a big deal, and that she pre- fers the sound of sizzling pork chops to the applause of the multitude. And in no other way can you ex- plain the philandering of husbands except that they think that wives don't resent their unfaithfulness as husbands resent their wives’. Ne hus- band forgives a wife for the things that he expects her to forgive him. He expects her to shut her eyes to little affairs for which he would drag her into the divorce court. * ok ok % Ol"‘ COURSE, no man would stand for his wife running around with a handsome young sheik making him | an object of pity or a laughing stock to all who know him, but he doesn’t see why his wife should make scenes over his stepping out with a platinum blond flapper and spending on her the money that is needed for the children’s shoes, And wives have as little understand- ing that their husbands have the same reaction to things that they have. A woman, for example, never thinks of her husband loving his children as much as she does, or else there would be fewer women who break up their homes and tear their children out of their fathers’ arms for inadequate reasons. Women do not understand that men are just as heart hungry and crave as much tokens of affections and words of appreciation as they do. ‘Women do not understand that men get just as tired as they do and have Jjust as many nerves, and that they want to be petted and babied out of their tantrums, even as they do, and that the way to get along with them is to treat them just as they would like their husbands to treat them. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1935.) Style Trend. Latest fashion dispatches from Paris report that many of the smartest women in_ the French capital are rinsing their hair to ‘match their gowns, no matter what the costume color may be. The hair is not dyed, but merely washed with the color, so that it may be easily rinsed off when UT it never occurs to him that his | the wife is humiliated into the ground when she has to rattle her little tin | the bloused effect. Godets make for | front fullness in the skirt, and for the slightly wider though still straight silhouette. There are o many fascinating new silks! Smooth surfaced ones, so love- ly, but so hard to describe. Nubbly very | | neck to waistline, gathers furnishing | No Means Subordinated. crepes, frosty looking silks, some with metallic threads woven into the sur- face! The newest silks and satins are almost as heavy as the rayons, | which is a point in their favor, for | their weight makes them adaptable to | the new styles. Some crepes and | satins are deeply crinkled, others are | riaged, not severely, but in a rippling. unstudied way. There are failles about, and sheers with basket-weave surface or small dots woven in the ! fabric. Silks are excellent for this design, the collar and bow of some | contrasting color, or perhaps of lame, | or velveteen. | Barbara Bell pattern No. 1755-B is designed in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 and 40 Corresponding bust measurements, 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40. Sizes 16 (34) re- quires about 4% yards of 39-inch ma- terial and ':-yard for contrast. Every Barbara Bell pattern includes an illustrated instruction guide which is easy to understand Barbara Bell Fall available at 15 cents. to The Evening Star. pattern book Address orders N BARBARA BELL, WASHINGTON STAR. Inclose 25 cents in coins for pattern No. 1755-B. Size....... B L (Wrap coins securely in paper.) | [ Address .. Card Names Letterheads and Degrees Answers to Queries on Various Phases of Good Taste. BY EMILY POST. i"DEAR MRS. POST: When husband died eight years I went into business and lost my identity as Mrs. John Jones and be- came Mary M. Jones and have built up my position under this name. I need visiting cards and business cards both and am at a loss to know what to order, because Mrs. Mary is a social taboo and also I can't very well use Mary without any suffix.” Answer—The usual solution both in business and a profession is “Mary M. Jongs” and then in parenthesis below rs. John Jones), or Mary M. Jones, Inc., would solve the dif- ficulty. All the women of social position in New York who have gone into business have called themselves Mary M. Jones. Socially you are, of course, still Mrs. John Jones, and that is the way your visiting cards should be engraved. “Dear Mrs. Post: Perhaps I mis- read an article you wrote on correct forms for marking stationery. I thought you advised that Mr. may my ago letter paper, but when I ordered paper for my husband recently the young woman who showed me sam- that ‘Mr.’ must not appear.” Answer—“Mr.” should never be pre- fixed to his name on a letterhead. It is permissible when necessary to write Mr. in parenthesis in order to explain such name as Sidney or Leslie, POOR LITTLE ' CANARY @ KILMITE RINGS— 10c per pair in G. C. Murphy Sc and 10c Stores Pity your canary if he is _not protected by RINGS against mites. blood- ucking vermin which eaken canaries and silence their singing. be prefixed to a man’s name on his | ples, which you have approved, said | | Marion or Shirley, Carol, or any other | particular name that may equally | well belong to a woman. Such in- | formation is, of course, only preflxed‘ | to his signature when writing to a stranger who has no way of knowing | whether he is & man or a woman. | | To one who knows him, or knows | about him, this information is un- | necessary, and therefore Mr. is in-| correct. | | “Dear Mrs. Post: You have written | that The Hon. is not proper on a; letterhead. May I then take excep- | tion to your inconsistency in allowing | Dr. (physician) and banning Dr. | (Ph. D) and allowing The Rev. Also, why do you approve of Miss (in parenthesis, of course) prefixed to an unmarried woman's signature? Simply | Elizabeth Blank with nothing else implies that she is Miss Blank.” | | Answer—I would agree with you | about Miss were it not for the flagrant | misuse of Mrs. Mary. But why con- ventions of taste follow the rules they | do I don’t know, further than that | they always have. The titles, The Hon. and Dr. (of philosophy) are | | always given by other people to those | | who hold them, ‘but are not put on | | the letter paper or visiting cards of | | people of fastidious taste. A physician, | | on the other hand, must make use | of his title in order to be licensed | | to practice, and it is customary that | | a clergyman always use his title. (Copyright, 1935.) - Ram Worth $2,595. A ram was sold recently in Sydney, Australia, for the world-record price of $2,595. BURT’'S “Child Delight” ): Shoes ] Famous for s . fitewear— ,\.,"\;' comfort— =< economy More often outgrown than wornout $3 to 4.50 Our careful fitting checked by || an X-ray machine. Care of feet is better than cure Park at Capital Garage—Our Expense 1343 F Street TURES. it fpr Beaux ActiveLiving Is Demanded For Growth Worth While Duties Associated With Responsibility. BY ANGELO PATRIL L]FE is action. Only the sleeping and the dead are still. Nature has ordained that every thought that crosses the threshold of the mind shall be expressed in action, or a penalty paid. That penalty is exter- mination. “Work out your salvation or die,” is |the law. If you have an idea, do something about it. If you have a wish, work it out. Keep moving or pass out. Little children are born active. A | 2-year-old child can tire a hcusehold of adults in half a day. This constant activity wearies older people and they keep saying, “Hush! Be still! Stop that! Go out if you must make that noise. Can't you ever be still?” After a few years of this a child begins to k‘li!'ve that the right way to live is the still way. If he is still he will be called good and that is highly desirable. There is a happy medium here as everywhere, Useless, pointless activitv is a waste. Slumber in the noonday of life is the end of all hope. Some- where between there is safety, promise and success. It is the business o! teachers and parents to find that place where waste leaves off and | growth through activity begins. Teach little children to do some worth while thing in the house every day at a fixed time. That teaches re- zponsibility and the need for service | Teach the older ones to work out their plans, hopes and wishes, and 50 tect the value of the ideas and their own po at the same time. When a boy says, “I wish I had a | wagon; I could haul the groceries in- | stead of carrying them," don't rush |to buy him one. Tell him that you think it a good idea and ask what ke is going to do about it. Give him the | idea, right at the start, that he is | the one to do something about his | own_wants and his own schemes. If | he learns that all he has te do is | wish cut loud and you bring the an- | should he act in the mat- action is his salvation. Sell- help is the road to self-development and success | ©One day Carl. a child who never | waited upon himself if he could help | it, complained that the man in the | sweet shop was selling chocolate pers | that had been cut for the ‘Carl liked his cholocate. “Well ‘do you expect me to do about it?" said his teacher, unfeelingly Carl told me about it. “Too bad,” said I. “what are you going to do about it?” “I thought I'd tell you, id he. “Well, you did,” said I, “but ne will keep on selling you cut chocolate bars just the same, won't he?” Then he tried the yard teacher, who said, “I've got plenty to bother me without your troubles. Attend to them vourself why don't you?” After a few days of futile grunting Carl called a meeting of chocolate bar lovers, told them what he thought aa felt and suffered. They formed a com- mittee and made Carl the head. He had to go to the shop and make the man understand that he would sell no more chocolate bars to them un- less they got full measure. 1 never saw a boy struggle so to avoid acticn in his own behalf. Once havirg caught the idea, he worked on it and gradually got into his stride. Self-activity is the law of growth Nobody can grow for anybody else. Either one grows in activity or onre passes out in silence and oblivion, Keep the children geoing forward, helping themselves, helping each other, growing alive and happy. Bumper Crop Gives You 25% MORE SUNKIST ORANGES FOR YOUR MONEY! 2 LARGE OLASSES A DAY : | ;. POR VIGOROUS MEALTH i Todey dealersare giving special savings because of § California's bumper crop of sweet, juicy Sunkist Valen- clas| Rich in all four protec & (vitamins ¥ digestion, build your alka- 3 rve. Drink fresh orange jvice twice @ starting now. Copyright, 1935, ‘% California Fruit Growers Exchangs % e i

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