Evening Star Newspaper, September 23, 1935, Page 27

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WOMEN’S FEATURES. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1935. WOMEN’S FEATURES. #% B—11" Poultry Guide Enables Housewife to Determine Season’s Best Buys Words Offer| |Shopping in 2 Washington CO]OI', I ower( Moderately Priced Casual Coat Season’s | AndEmotion Reading Called Most Important Subject *‘ in School Course. BY ANGELO PATRI. EADING is, in my opinion, the most important subject in the course of study. If a child can read, | really read, he has the key to all kaowledge. If he cannot read, the door to knowledge will be closed; against him, and that is a situation sad to contemplate. Calling words is not reading. It is/ just what it says it is, calling words. Children can eall words glibly, and “with expression,” and still be unable to read. I have known them to get into high school under that handicap. A word is a symbol, a sign, as it stands on the page. It is a sound as it is spoken. Now a symbol and & gound have to have meaning before they can be anything except a sign or & sound. How is a child to get mean- ing into them? I think by experience. Experience gives meaning to words, lends them emotion and color and | power—gives them real values. The | richer the experience the greater v.he“ | | values. Children in the lower grades must learn to call words accurately, to learn how to get at the pronunciation of new words. These are the first steps. Along with them we try to help the | children to get meaning out of their | word calling by letting them havei stories to practice on. Children ex- perience things that are about them, | £0 names are good words to start with. | They experience people and animals | after things, so they must have a place. Then come the words that tell about doing, aud these, too, find & place in the stories. A good story for | beginning readers then has to do with | people, animals and things in ncnon.} Pictures help to give meaning to the | words, o the reader must have good | pictures. For the first three years the children learn to read and the technique is in the foreground. After that we begin insisting upon the child's getting much more meaning out of his reading, and that cide of reading, its true reason, becomes more and more important, di takes up more and more of the reading BY MARGARET WARNER. Green fleece wool with straight line details; brown and beige belted model with plasd lining; novelty woolen with Barrymore collar. lessons until the pupil is an independ- ent reader who reads for instruction, information and pleasure. That means he is well on his way toward self-edu- cation, It is usual for children who go to gchool to read readily enough what the teacher gives them. When a child fails to learn to read it is an indica- tion of some basic difficulty and should be a call for immediate help. The first thing to do is to test the child’s vision. | Examine nose and throat and mouth and test speech power generally. After that if the difficulty still remains, gearch the brain centers for the trouble. This work is not the work of the classroom teacher, but that of the skilled specialist trained for the work Is it a mistake to drill a child who has deficiency in reading until the | tests have been made and the direc- tions received from the expert. ing a word louder and louder and over and over will not help a child who has a basic reading defect. It wastes his time and energy, wearies him to extremity, exhausts the teacher, and all to no purpose. Take the child who has a reading deficiency to the expert psychologist whose pleasure and privilege it is to help such children and do not make their lives miserable by drilling them aimlessly. Reading is too important a subject to be overlooked if there is any way of curing a deficiency. (Copyright 1935.) The Old Gardener Says : Mildew often ruins the appear- ance of gardens which contain a large number of phlox plants. It is possible, however, to control mildew reasonably well by dust- ing the plants every week with dusting sulphur. It is important to use the very fine sulphur ob- tained at the seed stores and not the coarser kind sold by the drug stores. It is equally important to cover both the lower and the upper surfaces of the leaves. This can be done by using a bel- lows or one of the new dusting guns which has a device for throwing the contents upward. The careful gardener will make a point of picking off phlox blooms before they go to seed. Otherwise he will have some un- pleasant colors in his garden next year. (Copyright, 1035.) | Say- | | THERE are coats and coats in the shops just now, but the coats that are most popular with the greatest number of people are the moderately priced sport coats that will serve for school, co'- lege, business and all-around casval wear. They are made of sturdy ma- terials in tweeds, herringbone stripes plaids and many novelty weaves in | bright and neutral colors, usually cut with raglan shoulder and sleeves full through the elbows. For the most part they are warmly interlined, and some are made of extra heavy ma- terial with a plaid reverse side o that | they are lined with silk only to the waist. The majority of these coa‘s are unbelted, but among the more ex- f pensive ones you will find many with leather belts that are very smart. ‘The points to look for in these coats are the collars, which show great di- versity; the pockets, which may be vertical or diagonal set-in or of the large patch variety. In many coals the backs are cut straight, but in as many others they have a center seam, and the material is on the bias, pro- ducing the fishtail back that swines out in loose ripples. This is always effective in plaids and checks. k% s 'HE three coats sketched show three different necklines and other details of interest. The center | coat is an all-purpose coat that knows how to “take it” and has the plaid reverse side spoken of above. Jt is well tailored and warm and is al- ready proving itself a popular num- | ber at a budget price. | The coat at the left in the sketch | is of green fleece wool with wide! sleeves and square cut lines. It has a center back seam and is lined throughout with matching green crepe. The brown and tan mixture at the right specializes in a Barrymore collar and big wooden buttons be- | | tween the slot seams outlining a | graduated panel at the front; some- | | thing to make you look tall. | * ok k% FTEN the useful casual coat comes with its own short jacketed suit to wear beneath it. These three and four piece ensembles are, of course, | higher in price, but they give you | much more for your money. A very | | beld plaid coat which combines gray, black and dark red, has a jacket suit | of wine red. This sort of thing gives you many possibilities of change. | One that can produce still more First Choice. Sketched in Washington Shops. Foreca st for Autumn Indicates Good Supply Of Low-Price Turkeys the Greatest Nu During t! BY BETSY CASWELL. OW about keeping a “poul‘ry calendar” to aid you in mar- keting and in planning menus several days ahead? ‘This may sound a bit odd, but.in reality it i3 a very practical idea. Certain types of poultry are plentiful in some months and scarce in others Cold-storage sup- plies are usually greater wuen fresh supplies are smallest. This knowledge will enable you to buy fresh poultry if you so desire when it is in sea- son, and to kncw when you have to make use of the cold-storage variety to obtam just the type you wish for lunch or dinner, The drought that wrought such havoc with the 1935 meat supplies dealt a little lighter blow to chickens and their ilk. Although poultry prices have risen considerably, they have never actually been neck and neck with pork and beef in the race for top money. This year's poultry sup- ply is apt to be only fractionaliy lese¢ than last year's—and you know the answer to that question in the other meat lines! Your poultry calendar might be lined up somewhat as follows: JANUARY. Chickens—Stewers, roasters, capons. ‘Turkeys. Geese, Betsy Caswell FEBRUARY. Chickens—Stewers, capons. MARCH. Chickens—Stewers. APRIL. Chickens—Stewers. MAY, changes is an outfit consisting of five pieces—a long monotone tweed casual coat with matching skirt, a short t lored jacket and skirt of checked ma terial and a plaid woolen scarf. Here you can use the long brown coat with the checked skirt, or the short checked jacket with the plain brown skirt and have all sorts of a good time until you will have your friends guessing whether you really have two skirts to your suit, or whether they just could | not remember what you wore the last time they saw you. A bright, snappy three-piece suit | has a checked coaf using dark blue, | yellow, white and orange over a | Jacket suit of dark blue. A coat with lots of gay color is a plaid of soft brown, soft green and white with a deep, flufly collar of white wolf. An- | other arresting coat is a wide herring- | bone effect in black, white and red with collar of badger and a black leather belt. These bright novelty | effects are unusually attractive and | will be popular at the foot ball games a little Jater on in the season. * ok % ox N ONE shop they have a rack sand- wiched in between the coats that is filled with those smart man- tailored suits that business girls 'sxmply adore to wear all through the year. They say that they can hardly keep the rack filied, they sell them out so fast. These two-piece suits are certainly ideal for the office or for | general daytime wear, with their care- | fully tailored details of collars and pockets, and there is such a variety of materials and colors to choose from, as well as styles. The gob suit is quite outstanding with its vertical breast pockets in addition to little lower pockets, and this comes in navy blue too, as well as other mixtures. There are three types of backs to the | jackets, the bi-swing, the knife pleated | and the plain back, and there are single and double breasted front clos- ings. With plenty of tailored blouses and & heavy casual coat you will be ready for any sort of temperature that | you may find, for you can add or | subtract until you are perfectly com- fortable and look well all the while, | All of these tailored suits are priced | at $16.95. I forgot to say that they | come in camel’s hair also, with a| more sporty touch than the other materials. For information concerning items mentioned in this column call N tional 5000, Extension 342, between 10 and 12 a.m. Let your linens express your personality—be individual! with single initials or monograms in them in cutwork or satin stitch. Or combine both in a monogram to make a'rich decoration! In doing cutwork, the initial cut out after bars have been formed. Three different effects in cutwork are explained in the detailed #f you like—the smartest shops are showing this. In pattern 5444 you will find a tra! bets, one 2! inches, one 1% inches and one % inch (the dimension indicates the size of the letter); information on the correct placing of initials; illustra- tions of all stitches needed; material sz TO Obtdin this pattern, send 15 cents in stamps or coin to the ‘Woman's Egitor of The Evening Star. Mark them this distinctive design. You can do the background can be cut away or. directions., Do your initials in color nsfer pattern of three complete alpha- requirements. Cook’s Corner BY MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE. DINNER FOR FOUR Meat and Vegetable Goulash Reheated Mufins Plum Sauce Head Lettuce Relish Salad Medley Baked Pudding Coffee MEAT AND VEGETABLE GOULASH. 3 tablespoons 2 tablespoons fat or gravy chopped onions 1 cup diced 24 cup diced cooked cooked meat potatoes 1, teaspoon salt 2 cup cooked 14 teaspoon pepper peas % teaspoon 12 cup cooked, celery salt carrots 15 cup milk Melt fat in frying pan. Add vege- tables and cook 3 minutes. Add rest of ingredients. Simmer 10 minutes, MEDLEY BAKED PUDDING. 1 cup diced 1 teaspoon a peaches vanilla 2 cup apples f 1 cup stale cake l/..::;,l,):o 5 crumbs 1 cup hard bread, crumbled %2 cup sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon Mix ingredients and pour into but- tered baking dish. Bake 25 minutes in moderate oven. Serve cold. Celery stuffed with shrimp salad can be used for giving variety to the appetizer tray. Ship Building Gains. Shipbuilding in Norway is increas- ing rapidly. Chickens—Stewers, broilers Ducks. JUNE Chickens—Stewers, broilers. Ducks. Squabs. JULY. Chickens—Broilers, fryers. Ducks. Squabs. AUGUST. Chickens—Broilers, fryers. Guineas, Squabs. Ducks. Dorothy Guideposts Along Aid Girl in C CORRESPONDENT asks: “Can a girl tell before mar- riage what sort of a husband or not she will be happy?” Not absolutely, for as an old friend of mine once said to me: “Husbands are the most undiscovered nation of people there is,” and no woman can tell beforehand what dangers and difficulties of character and disposition she will meet in the strange land she is starting to explore. There will always be surprises for her, no matter how carefully she has tried to sur- vey the unknown terrain. Always she will come across arid deserts of lack of understanding and sympathy that she had not dreamed of existing, volcanoes of temper that she had not suspected, and where she had expected easy going she will find hard sled- | ding along a rough road filled with the | {¢ gloteq for the doormat role. pebbles of little aggravating ways and habits. But for all of that, and despite the fact that no marriage is quite the colossal conglomeration of attrac- tions and breath-taking thrills that it is advertised to be and no husband quite comes up to a girl's dream, still and all any woman who keeps her wits about her can form a pretty good idea of how Romeo, the lover, will stack up as Romeo, the husband. * K kX A MAN does not deliberately put on a show for a woman, as & woman does for the man she wants for a husband. He thinks that just as he is he is the answer to any maidens’ prayer, and this gives her an opportunity not only to judge what manner of man he really is, but also to figure out his possibilities as a husband. Now, if I were a girl picking out a husband, the first thing I would note about the boy friend would be whether he suited my taste or not. It doesn't make so much difference what sort of a man a husband is as it does whether he is the sort of husband you like. So I should consider above everything else whether I was satis- fled with him “as is,” or whether I thought I would like him after I made a number of drastic changes in him. Altering a husband is as unsatisfactory a job as altering a hat. Somehow they never turn out right and always look like heck. I wouldn't kid myself into thinking that I possessed some occult power as a miiracle worker, so I wouldn't marry a drunkard expecting to reform him, or a broken reed, expecting him to turn into a sturdy oak that I could cling to, or a lazy loafer expecting him to suddenly become a go-getter. I would pick out, to start with, a man who didn't need to be made over. One who had strength and character and who could support a family and who would baby me instead of me having to mother him. * x k% NEXT. I would pay particular at- tention to & man's disposition, be- cause that is what a wife has to live with and is what makes her happiness ‘Women are always com- plaining about being so surprised and disappointed at finding out that their husbands are cold or unappreciative, or stingy, or grouchy, or what not. But, my heavens, why didn’t they find a man will make and whether | Chickens and Ducks Hold the Limelight for mber of Months he Year. SEPTEMBER. Chickens—Fryers, roasters. Squabs, Ducks, OCTOBER. Chickens—Fryers, roasters, stewers Guineas, ‘Turkeys. Ducks, NOVEMBER. Chickens—Roasters, stewers. Geese. ‘Turkeys, Ducks. DECEMBER. Chickens—Roasters, stewers, capons. Geese. ‘Turkeys. Ducks. This does not mean that you are| actually unable to procure the kind of | poultry you wish at almost any season of the year. With the possible excep- tion of the more luxurious geese, tur- | | keys, guineas, etc, you may be able |to purchase what you wish in any month. But the chances are that it | | will be cold storage or that the cost | will be nearly prohibitive, so that if | you are fussy about those things it | is better to stick to the chicken or duck, or whatever it is that is most plentiful in local markets at the time. | & % i INCIDENTALLY I have been told on good authority that this year tur- keys will be found among the less ex- pensive meats. There is said to be at this time a greater number of tur- keys in cold storage all over the coun- | try than there has been for years, and so we may look forward to a good turkey dinner oftener than usual this ‘Winter. Milk-fed poultry commands higher prices than the regular farm-raised variety. The meat is tenderer and | more delicate, but for those who have to count the pennies in the food | budget very closely the ordinary chick- en will do just as well! The old fanaticism against cold storage poultry is rapidly disappear- | ing, I am glad to say. As a matter of fact, when certain classes of poultry are out of season the cold storage va- | riety of that class is to be preferred. | Fresh Summer fowl is often inferior to fowl dressed and stored during the | Winter months. Roasting chickens after the month of January are not | | half so tender and fine as those stored in the early Winter. | So literally you can “pay your money and take your choice.” But it is well to know how to govern that choice. Dix Says Friendship’s Path hoosing Mate. this out before marriage? doesn't hide his nature. A man I knew a girl once who broke off her | engagement to a most eligible young man bzcause she saw him beat a dog almost to death for not coming at his call. “That is the way he would treat me if I were in his power.” she re: flected. “He is cruel and tyrannical. | He will expect his wife to cringe be- fore him or jump when he speaks to | her, and as I don't care to be brow- | beaten and terrorized for the next 40 years I'll have none of him.” | Every man gives every girl he goes | with & thousand tips as to how he will | treat his wife. . Is he selfish? Does he | consider his own pleasure before hers? | Does he drag her to see the plays and | the pictures he wants to” see instead | of the ones she would prefer? His wife He | will trample over her and kick her out of the way when she interferes | with his pleasures. . She will never be anything but an upper servant to min- ister to his comfort. He will eat the white meat of the chicken and leave her the back, and spend his holidays playing golf while she wheels the per- | ambulator. . * ok Kok Is HE niggardly even during courting days? Does he always say how much cozier it is to stay at home than it is to step out? He will make a hus- band who will make the first of the { month when the bills come in & day | of crucifixion for his wife. Is a man critical? Does he tell you that your dress is too gay, or you use too much {rouge and lipstick, or that your | bridge is rotten? Pass him up unless you enjoy being hammered to a jelly. Is a man always taking offense and having to be jollied into & good | humor? If you marry him, you will | have to qualify for walking on eggs, which is a tiresome and difficult busi- ness. And if & man is a philanderer and has a “way” with women, you don't need any Sherlock Holmes to deduct the fact that whenever he is out of your sight he will be chasing younger and fairer ladies than you, and you will be eating out your heart with jealousy. Oh, it isn't so hard to tell what sort of a husband a man will make. He will be just like he is, only & little more so. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 19i5.) My Neighbor Says: Carrots should be taken out of the ground before it freezes and stored in sand in the cellar, To keep coffee from cooling ‘when made by drip method place pot on an asbestos plate over a low flame or in very hot water until water has filtered through cofTee. If the centers of small cucum- bers are scooped out they make attractive cases to serve different shellfish salads in. Leftover chicken, fish and meat mixed with gravy or cream sauce and made into cakes that are browned on both sides make a delicious luncheon or supper dish. (Copyright. 1935.) For Festive Occasions k3 | “Dress-up” Frock for the Young Girl. BY BARBARA BELL, OESN'T matter how casual a young girl is about the clothes she wears on the campus; how old and scruffed her favorite sports shoes are. Doesn't matter that her pet sweater is faded from many washings, and that the hat she pulls over her hair is a sight to behold! When she dresses for the week end, for an occasional holiday or a faculty tea she is as particular about her appearance as her debutante sister. Her clothes must be just right, simple, but with a certain sophistica- tion and decidedly chic. The sort of dress she most often chooses for her excursions into the larger world is of bright silk or of soft, gayly colored wool. Her accessories re extremely important. This season she loves belts and has lots of them | to vary her frocks. She likes little round collars that give her an angelic expression and big sleeves which carry | out the naive effect. Today’s dress is just what the young | girl likes for the more important occa- sions. She selects slate blue—pretty trying for the older woman—but she is sure it is becoming to her fresh young face. She wears with it a suede beit, dregs of wine, fastened with the big silver hook and eye that Schiaparelli uses. Or she may choose the same frock in rust, most popular of all the colors this season. With it she wears dull green or tawny brown. Seams in front and back of this Former Ugly Duckling Is Lost Type 'No Excuse Today for Girl to Lack Ability to Win Beauty. | simple bodice form a broad panel and ! four inverted pleats in the skirt carry the lines to the hem. Sieeves are | quite large at the top, set in in raglan shion, with darts to accentuate the | shoulder width. They may be three- | quarter length, finished with a cuff | or wrist length, in modified leg-o'- | mutton style. The rather wide, round | collar is fastened with a single button, ’ and our young friend will dig around button counters for hours to find just the right one for the purpose. Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1706-B is designed in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Corresponding bust measurements 30, 32, 34, 36 and 38. Size 16 (34) re- quires 4'; yards of 39-inch material and % yard for contrast. Every Barbara Bell pattern includes an illustrated instruction guide which is easy to understand. Barbara Bell Fall pattern book available at 15 cents. Address orders to The Evening Star. i BARBARA BELL, Washington Star. | Inclose 25 cents in coins for | | pattern No. 1706-B. | NAME cceecemccccenceanaae, - | Address ocooecccanann-. (Wrap coins securely in paper.) (Copyright 1935.) State Names iIn Addresses For City Mail BY EMILY POST. "DEAR MRS. POST: Please tell me | whether you, like other New Yorkers, write simply New York on an envelope, with no further expla- nation of its whereabouts? I think the practice is very presumptuous. | and it would be just as sensible for | others to omit the names of States | following other large cities.” Answer: I agree that it would be just as sensible. Chicago. St. Lou Detroit. Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston would certainly be enough for these and all the other great cities. When there are several cities of the same name, then their States are ob- viously necessary. Or when the cities are smaller than the leading ones. Writing New York only once is not presumptuous; the repetition of the same name is the height of sense- lessness and waste effort. It would be still more senseless to add the State when writing in these cities or their environs. I don’t, however, ap- prove of town, because a letter missent is lost. when I want to answer a letter I can't, because I have no idea (if the postmark is blurred) where the sender lives. “Dear Mrs. Post: Recently we had a death in our famfly. ‘Che other day when returning home from a walk my mother found a visiting card in the mail box, left by & woman who is & member of our church but with whom only my brother has more thgn formal acquaintance. What should .| he signs th. name Johnr: Squills. Sometimes in my own case | mother do? There was no message of any sort written on her card.” Answer: Undoubtedly she left the wrote nothing on it. Although not really necessary, it would be polite | for your mother to write on her own | visiting card, “Thauk you for your ! sympathy,” and mail it. the correct form for the professional cards of the president of an educa- tional institution—who is also & doctor of divinity Answer: The Rev. John C. Elder, D.D. and underneath, in small type, President of Blank University. “Dear Mrs. Post: Should a doctor of | medicine write M. D. after his sig- nature on professional letters? Aunswer: Ou his office paper, which {should have his name and degree, But | even so there is no impropriety in his signing his name John Squills, | M. D. when he writés to strangers To those who know him personally he would, naturally, omit M. D. 3 | A skin of luxurious | softness ... a com- plexion of fascina- ! ting charm ... No | “rubbing off” or streaking. .. This re- fined, ivory - toned beauty will com- mand admiration. White - Flesh - Rachel and Orieatal-Tan B e e At that very first WARNING SNIFFLE .. .Use this unique aid for preventing colds, especially designed for nose and throat where most colds start. Used in time, Va-tro-nol helps to avoid many colds. VICKS VATRO-NOL REGULAR SIZE 30¢ . 'S DOUBLE QUANTITY 50¢ [ card in sympathy, even though she | “Dear Mrs. Post: Will you suggest| BY ELSIE PIERCE. DECADES 8go there really and truly was such a thing as an ugly duckling. Born with straight hair or crooked nose, or as the teeth formed they became buck. There wasn't much to do zbout it and there was no dis- counting or calling attention away from the far-from-perfect features, Women &idn't have the style sense, the make-up and color sense, and above all that sense of grooming that goes such a long way to glamour. If your skin happened to be coarse grained heredity was blamed; if you were inclined to be too heavy, well, | wasn't it & family tendency for gen- erations? ‘Today, inherited or not, the handi- caps are shaken off somehow. It takes grit, an unshatterable stick-to- itiveness. Ugly ducklings transform themselves into creatures that posi- tively “stun,” cause knowing eyes to blink in amazement. My own eyes have seen it over and over again, On lecture tours I've had young girls come to me—girls you wouldn't tarn twice to look at (or maybe you would—they were so far from the lovely picture girls should be). A few months later (perhaps on my return trip) they'd come again. What a magic change! There really is no excuse today for a girl not looking lovely. Either she is not sufficiently interested to learn how she can make the most of her- self; or, having learned, is not suffi- clently sincere to apply the lessons It's sheer laziness and she who is so lacking in will power deserves to re- main in the background. Look at the Movie Stars, Look at the materia' young girls have to draw from. First, the shining examples of the movie stars—precious few of them actual beauties to begin with, yet what they have made of themselves! It seems to me that those born not-exactly-beauties have it all over those to whom Nature is kinder. There's an element of spur and challenge in overcoming any little handicaps. Take your cue from the movie stars Work for beauty. Develop your per- sonality. Work off the pounds or add them. Cultivate a flair for the in- dividual (which does not mean the bizarre, mind you:. Know how to apply your make-up. know what col- ors suit you best. Know the type of coiffure that will set you off in a crowd. Know how to minimize your worst features, how to recognize and capitalize on your good points. All you need is the desire to do it—and the will! | —_— BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. UCH of our modern life runs | along on the basis of rules or | regulations. As time goes on, this | regularity will, in all probability, in- crease. While regulations are necessarily | important for the ordering of a com- plex society, they produce a certain | type of personality which makes reg- ularity annoying. Laws, rules, regula- tions, along with haunting fears and | devastating prejudices, all find a sep- arate niche in the mind. The av- erage mind is & set of compartments, many of which fail to harmonize. Set ideas and set reaction patterns tend to create notion-tight sections—any one will exclude the others. The net result is a personality split off into sections. The man | thus regulated cannot be himself at all times. Perhaps you have noticed that some of your friends are non- predictable—non-predictable in the sense that you cannot from day to day say just how they will be feeling, or how they will act. If you happen to experience this sort of thing in one of your friends you may safely put it down that the compartments are not all in tune for the time being. (Copyright. 1935.) _— e Salmon and Corn Fritters. Drain and flake one can of salmon, then add one-half can or one cup corn, cne-quarter cup tomato ketchup, two to three tablespoons flour, two slightiy beaten eggs and one teaspoon salt. Mix thoroughly and drop by heaping tablespoonst in a skillet, the bottom of which is well covered with hot fat. Fry to & golden brown on both sides. Serve as main course for luncheon or supper. | | | Color Magic | for every ! Faded Fabric 41 Brilliont, Leng-Lasting Coelors — - | AtDrug ond Netien Counters —15¢ | i I pARK & TILFORD, i

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