Evening Star Newspaper, March 9, 1937, Page 30

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B—12 WOMEN'S FEATURES. THE EV NING STAR, WOMEN’'S FEATURES. itecture - Baldness Requires Massage Circulation Needed to Counteract " Scalp Ills. BY ELSIE PIERCE. ONE of the leading scalp specialists of this country explains that while dandruff is admittedly public enemy No. 1 of scalp and hair health, poor circulation also contributes in some degree to between 55 to 60 WASHINGTON, D. C., Local Woman Stresses Need < TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 1937. American Arch Easter Party Frock of Preserving Magic of Photography Will Capture Beauty For Next Generations Miss Frances Benjamin Johnston Races| Against Time in Her Search for Old Buildings. BY MARY JANE BRUMLEY. 1SS FRANCES BENJAMIN JOHNSTON of the Arts Club has set her- self a glorious goal—she is making safe for the future the architecture of the past. Miss Johnston, whose pictorial exhibit of early American buildings at the National Museum-: has been evoking much favorable comment, thinks it vitally important that early American architecture should be preserved. “One of the most satisfying things about my<» work,” she says, “is that through it I Dawdling || Records Historic Sites Should Not [T Be Allowed |§8, Healthy Children| Rarely Have to Be Hurried. BY ANGELO PATRI “JPRISSY, have you got your stock- ings on yet? Well, hurry. It is time you were ready for breakfast. You will be late if you don’t hurry.” “I am hurrying.” A few minutes pass and no signs of Prissy. “Are you washed yet, Prissy?” display at the library. Later, upon “No'm. I can't get my garter hooked.” “What? You mean to say you are | still putting on your stockings? You are going to be late for school today again. Here. Put up your foot. Give | me those things. Now get along to the bath room. Hold still. I can't wash your face with you turning your | back. I do think that a girl 8 years | old ought to be able to get ready for school on time. Every day you are late. Hurry along to the table.” “I am hurrying.” “Don't talk to me like that. You are mnot hurrying. You never do hurry. I have a time with you day after day. You are going to be late as sure as the world. Swallow that toast and be on your way.” “I am hurrying.” “Oh, dear, it is almost time for the bell. I'll get the car and drive you over. I am ashamed before the teachers to have you late again. Get your coat and hurry.” “I am hurrying. I can't go any faster.” What is to be done with a perfectly healthy child who does not want to get ready on time? Nobody can say Jjust what ought to be done because there is a reason for this dawdling, and that reason differs with the chil- dren in question. One must search for the reason the child has for delay- ing. First, is he really well? That comes first because any feeling of ill- ness will make the doing of any task 8 hardship to be postponed s long as | possible. Have the doctor see the dawdling child regularly, to be sure there is no physical defect at the bot- tom of the difficulty. Letting the dawdler be late for school rarely serves. late. There is some reason why late- ness is comforting to him. Take him to school on time, drive him, help him, push him along and get him there until he learns by experiene that getting to school is inevitable. At the same time, whenever it is possible to let him take the conse- quences of his behavior and be incon- venienced by it. do so. when his slowness costs him some- thing he really wants that he will roused to see the evil of his habit. As long as it costs him nothing he will continue it. There are some experiences too costly for practical advantage. We cannot allow him to lose school. We cannot allow him to place himself in danger. But we can allow him to cheat himself out of pleasures. If there is a trip in prospect and he dawdles, delaying the start—and he can be left at home just as well as not—leave him. If he is late for meals, let him have his meals cold, by himself; and if his pet dish has been eaten, so much the better. There are times and ways that can be used to make him feel the consequences of his own behavior, and these are most helpful in getting him to mend it. But have the doctor see him. Healthy children rarely behave this way. Brighten Dull Room. If you want & spot of color in & dull room, & few blooming hyacinths or tulips will turn the trick. He wants to be | It is only | ings. | | EAR MISS DIX—My grand- son, aged 16, has been in the habit of borrowing small | sums from me with the un- | derstanding that he will return them | when he receives his allowance, but | be never does. When I remind him of it he says he has forgotten it, and | his mother gets angry at me and accuses me of being stingy. Says I should give the boy the money. Be- lieve me, Miss Dix, I am not thinking of the money, but of the dishonest principle of borrowing and never pay- ing back that is being instilled in this boy’s character. What do you think? GRANDMA. Answer—I think you are exactly right and that there is nothing more important than that children should be taught from their earliest infancy to take a responsible attitude toward money and to be punctilious in paying | their debts. It should be impressed upon every child that to borrow and not to repay is just as dishonest as stealing. It is even more despicable some one who likes us. If this were done, we should all be saved from the petty grafting friends and relatives who are always touching us for small sums, or asking us to pay for something they buy when we go shopping, or to settle their part of the bill at a Dutch-treat affair, or buy their tickets for the theater and who promptly and conveniently forget ever to settle with us. Certainly the parents who allow a boy to grow up believing that he can borrow money without repaying it are party to the crime when he becomes an absconding cashier in later life, or is sent to jail for stealing from his employer. He has never been taught to be honest about money. No part of a child’s education is more important than teaching it to handle money. From the time a child is 5 years old it should be given a regular allowance that should cover all of its little personal expenses and We continue to belleve in “sweets for the sweet,” and edibles for the dining room, so we've designed a new luncheon set in fllet crochet that has a bunch of grapes for its decoration. Each place mat, which measures -~ 12 by 18 inches, has one cluster of them, and the table center, which measures about 18 by 22 inches, has two corners filled in the same way. You may make them larger or smaller by using heavier or finer cotton. The patterns envelope contains complete, easy-to-understand illustrated directions, with block and space diagrams to aid you; also what crochet hook and what material and how much you will need. To obtain this pattern, send for No. 439 and inclose 15 cents in stamps or coin to cover service and postage. Address orders to the Needlework Editor of The Evening Star. (Copyright, 1037.) 4 e Children Should Be Taught to Pay Their Debts No Matter How Small. because it is betraying the trust of | Miss Frances Benjamin Johnson has a partic- ular love for photographing beautiful gardens in color, both here and abroad, but her, present in- terest is largely centered on early American build- Dix Says it should be made to live within this allowance. If 1t spends it foolishly it should be made to do without the things it wants the remainder of the week. There should be no begging for nickels and no borrowing. But if it dbes borrow, the parents should see that the debt is repaid to the last penny. When you have taught a child to take care of money, to do without until it has the money to pay for it, to spend wisely and well and to pay its debts, you have laid the founda- tion of an upright character on which an edifice of success and prosperity is sure to be built. * X ok x EAR DOROTHY DIX—I, a di- to women to look before they leave their husbands and not to leap from | the frying pan into the fire, but I raise my voice loudly to those wives who are miserably married and urge them to get divorces before it is too late for peace and happiness. Hear me, you poor creatures. If your gkirts are clean, your standing in a community will not suffer from a divorce. You will also find, to your surprise, that a single woman is more in demand than a wretched wife. Don't be stupid or cruel enough, if you have children, to think any kind of a father is better than none. There is nothing so harmful to a child as a bad parent. Nothing so good for a child as a happy, peaceful home. Don't be afraid to give up your caviar and artichokes if you have to. You don't know how good plain bread and butter tastes if you are happy. So I say to you wretched wives who have truly lived up to your marriage vows: Leap to safety and happiness! A DIVORCEE. Answer—No one will deny that there are many cases in which divorce is & surgeon’s knife that cuts away the cancer that is eating out a woman's life, but no one would be foolish enough to contend that every little pimple or abrasion on the skin re- quired & major operation, or that an arm should be amputated because of a pin prick on the finger. And that is just about what hap- pens in the great majority of divorce cases. . So many wives get tired of their husbands or get bored with them. They sigh for their lost free- dom and imagine if they were divorced they would somehow get back their girlhood and be attractive to men and make a better second marriage. | Or they think that they can have their cake and eat it, too, by forcing their husbands to give them enough alimony to live on, yet not be bothered with having & man about the house. So they make no effort to get along with their husbands or placate them, and they make mountains out of mole hills of every fault. It is these wives, and they make up the great majority of divorcees, who would be well advised to stop, look and listen and then go back home from the lawyer's office before they rush into divorce. If a woman has come to hate her husband, or if he is a brute who abuses her, she is indeed happier without him even though she has nothing but bread and peace. But divorce is no panacea for jealousy, nor for a hurt heart, nor for many of the sorrows a woman has to bear whose marriage does not come up to her ideals. And, when such & woman breaks up her home, often her last estate is worse than her first. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1937.) My Neighbor Says: Blight often destroys aster plants. To prevent this, cover the ground in which they are to be transplanted with a powder made of equal parts of sulphur, arsenate of lead and powdered lime. When cooking a steak smoth- ered in onions, squeeze the juice of a lemon over it before serving and you will find the flavor great- ly improved. Todine stains on linen, if soaked in a weak solution of carbolic acld (poison) and water or in di- luted ammonia water, then washed with tepid water and no soap will be quickly removed. ‘To clean light-colored shoes go over them every week with a small Stiff brush that has been dipped in gasoline. Keep away from fire. Set shoes in the air and sunlight until the odor of gasoline leaves them. (Copyright, 1037.) can recreate for the average American the life of a fading past and can make him realize that this past is part of { his heritage.” The exhibit, which was to have closed February 28, will continue through March 10. the Art Museum, at the University of North Carolina on March 15. Most of us would be appalled at the mere idea of this quick change. But not Miss Johnston! She is accustomed to dash- ing off at the proverbial “moment’s notice.”" Distances don't bother her, either. Her search for historic buildings has already covered a distance equal to traveling three times around the globe! It is interesting that Miss John- ston's cherished plan of preserving early American architecture is an out- growth of her love for gardens and her artistry in photographing them. Although she has done every type of work that a photographer might be expected to do, gardens have always been her hobby. This is not strange, for her first Washington studio was bowered in roses and wisteria. In 1926, when Frances Johnston made her first extensive garden tour of Europe, she was already well known for her color photography of Amer- ican gardens. Everywhere, Old World gates swung wide. For seven months, she wandered across Europe, and at every stop new beauties were recorded by her cam- era’s ready lens. In the words of a famous animal trainer, she “brought ‘em back alive” to America and the legend grew that “Frances Johnston gets what she goes after.” * % % x | ONE series of gardens led to another and eventually Miss Johnston found herself photographing the gar- dens of Virginia. It was then that she first saw the imperative need of pre- serving for posterity Virginia's historic | buildings. Obviously, th vorcee, have read your advice | o ey comd oo all be dragged into a museum and there kept for the education and in- spiration of future generations. What to do? For many weary months, as Miss Johnston went about her work in the highways and byways of the Old Dominion, she preached her creed of preservation. A woman of understanding and appreciation, | who had recently restored a beautiful old estate near Fredericksburg, ap- peared on the scene. She shared Miss Johnston's enthusiasm and commis- sioned her to make a pictorial survey of Fredericksburg, “as an historical record and to preserve something of the atmosphere of an old Virginia | town.” Miss Frances made 200 pictures in Predericksburg. The study extended itself to Old Falmouth and other nearby places. It took three Summers to finish the job, but both ladies felt then that it had been done thoroughly and that the survey gave a faithful picture of Colonial life in that com- munity, Not only were there pictures of the better-known buildings, such as the Mercer Apothecary Shop, where Wash- ington had his office as a young sur- veyor, President Monroe's law offices and Mary Washington's cottage, but of old stores and warehouses, the market yard, dilapidated slave quar- ters and ivy-covered ruins. Such marked enthusiasm greeted the photographs of the Fredericksburg survey that Miss Johnston felt they should be placed where a larger pub- lic could see them. She, therefore, sought out Dr. Lei- cester B. Holland, who had just been appointed head of the division of fine arts at the Library of Congress and first holder of the Carnegie Chair of Fine Arts. “Dr. Holland, who was himself an architect of high rank, displayed a most sympathetic and understanding attitude,” said Miss Johnston. “The Fredericksburg survey was placed on It will open in my offer of a bequest of my ‘photo- graphic estate,’ these pictures formed the nucleus of the Division of Pictorial Archives of Early American Archi- | tecture.” * % % x 'HEN things began to happen. In the Spring of 1933, a grant was secured from the Carnegie Corp. of New York which enabled Miss John- | ston to make a certain number of photographs for the School of Fine Arts at the University of Virginia. There are 1,200 of these photographs at the University School of Architec- | ture at Charlottesville now, where they constitute an invaluable record of a little-known phase of early Virginia history. They are records not so much of the great manor houses as of the smaller homes, the stores and all the simple buildings of the Colonists’ everyday life. A second grant ip the Autumn of 1933 and a third in 1934 enabled the lady of the all-seeing lens to advance her project still further. A fourth made it possible for her to range far- | ther afield—into Maryland and the | Carolinas. One of the finest compliments of | Miss Johnston’s career was paid her |in November, 1936, when she was | commissioned to work in conjunction | with Dr. Verne E. Chatelain of the | Carnegie Institution of Washington on the preliminary survey for the res- | toration of St. Augustine, Fla. Her | work there is halted only temporarily, for she is to return as soon as a defi- [ nite plan for the restoration is estab- | lished. | Frances Johnston is glad that she | need not return to Florida just yet, for | it means that she will have ilme to personally supervise her exhibit at | Chapel Hill. Then, too, it means April in Charleston, S. C. And thai speaks for itself! “Charleston is one of my favorite cities,” said Miss Johnston, “and I | have a lot of work to do there yet.| There are a number of beautiful Geor= gian houses that have never been ‘:dequauly photographed. Then, there are some of the lesser fry,” she added, “which are most interesting, such as | alleys, shacks and fences.” | She chuckled. } have to make any more picturss from | the tops of freight cars or from 10-ton | trucks in narrow passages, but one | never knows just what obstacles will | stand in the way of a good picture.” The chuckle grew into a laugh. “Why, | I even persuaded the vestryman in| | charge of Bruton Parish Churchyard | |at Williamsburg to remove a tree | stump so that I might better photo- | graph the old church.” | * x x % i AN UNUSUAL thing to do, perhaps? | True, but FPrances Benjamin Johnston is an unusual person. This difference shows itself in many ways. ‘Where most people are content with one hobby, she has three or four. We have mentioned the gardens, but might add that she is now looking for a house “with a studio garden.” Another of her hobbies is the col- | lection of rare bits of jewelry. & real privilege to see Miss Johnston’s and dully gleaming silver. of them can compare with her Ori- ental collection, which contains some | museum pieces. | Beauty in any form appeals to Frances Johnston. She feels that it is one of our common possessions. Perhaps this is the underlying reason why she feels so strongly about keep- ing a record of our early architecture and has done so much to make this possible, “I'm just being sensible about the thing,” says Miss Johnston. “But 1 do think that people must be brought to realize that these buildings are fast falling into decay and that we must have a record of them before it is too late.” Making of Glass Beads Early Colonial Industry BY ISABEL TAVENNER. HE story of how glass first came to be made is lost to man, but there is evidence it was made as early as 2000 B.C. in Meso- potamia. Pliny, Josephus, Straba and Tacitus all give us their version of the very first glass making—all, incident- ally, disagreeing. But the making of glassware should be an art particularly dear to the American heart. For a glass foundry was the very first enterprise under- taken by the early colonists, Capt. John Smith himself having been re- sponsible for the founding of two separate endeavors at Jamestown. Unfortunately, neither of these suc- ceeded in operating more than a very short time, but for a while at least one of them made beads which were used in barter with the Indians in return for maize, skins and other necessities. Capt. Smith wrote in his “Historie of Virginia,” “we sent home ample proofs of pitch, tar, glass, etc.” And so glass became the first manu- factured article to be exported from America. How justly proud the gal- lant little captain might have been could a glimpse into the future have revealed what this first tiny effort would lead to! ‘The next venture in making the much needed glass was launched in Massachusetts in 1639—this shortly followed by other ventures in New York (or at that time New Amster- dam), Pennsylvania and New Jersey. The early glass makers all struggled under terrific odds and most of the factories survived only a few years at best. The first man really to impress his personality on American glass making, and to be generally known to present-day antique lovers, was Caspar Wistar—and what a price a genuine piece of Wistarburg brings to- day. Wistar started out in life as & maker of brass buttons, but, with his J son Richard branched out into the glass business about 1740 and con- tinued to make glass until some time after the revolution. * Xk x JDURING the same year that Wistar was working in New Jersey, a very colorful personality, the so-called “Baron” Stiegel, was making very good glass in the little town of Mann- heim, Pa. So eccentric in character was Stiegel that in the American an- tique world he has become almost a legendary figure, with the result that much glass that undoubtedly was made many miles from Mannheim is now called Stiegel. The Revolution did as all wars have done—struck a deadly blow at manufacturing of every kind, and both the Wistar and Stiegal factories paid the price. Some years after the Revolution a very interesting experiment was car- ried on a few miles from Frederick, Md. A German named Amelung came over from Bremen with the express purpose of making glass for the newly nationalized America. He began op- erations on—for those days—a very pretentious scale, bringing across the seas not only his workmen, but all their families, and every one else needed to establish a complete Ger- man colony. There were doctors and bakers, blacksmiths and teachers—he even brought musicians, for who could imagine a German colony without music! But again there was failure. By the year 1820 the depression and hardships which followed the Revolu- tion had been lived through and then began the era of magic-like growth of the entire country and all its manu- facturers. New glass factories sprang up everywhere. The patenting of the pressing de- vice in 1827 wrote “finish” to the early struggles to establish factories for the blowing of glass and brought us the machine-made article of today. A ~ “I hope that I don't| It is| | “trinkets.” There is amber and jade | But none | BY BARBARA BELL. HE latest news from the Paris style show openings confirms the continued popularity of the full-skirted, feminine party | frock such as this one. The tiny ma- | chine pleating for trimming is also the latest style note, and especially attractive on the square neck of this frock. Puffed sleeves like our grand- mothers wore, and a fitted waistline, which descends to a glamorous flare at the skirt hem. Best of all this is a very easy frock to run up, with just three pieces in the skirt. Wear it for Easter parties, and later on with a picture Hhat. Many evening frocks are being made in sheer cottons and printed pique. Barbara Bell pattern No. 1269-B is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 and 40. Corresponding bust measure- ments 30, 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40. Size 12 (30) requires just 4 yards 39-inch material; 4% yards of machine-! BARBARA BELL. Barbara Bell Pattern Service, The Washington Star. Inclose 25 cents in coins for Address ________ z (Wrap coins securely in paper). pleated frill is required for trimming as pictured. Every Barbara Bell pattern includes an illustrated instruction guide which is easy to understand. (Copyright. 1937.) “Sunday Night Tea” Is An Informal Affair BY EMILY POST. i DEAR MRS. POST: I noticed in a recent column of yours that a light supper at about 6 o'clock may also be called a tea. Is this what used to | be called “high tea”? Will you please clarify your statement | Answer—Tea as the evening meal | is really a Victorian term for Sunday | evening supper prepared on the table. | The table is set beforehand with cold food, bread and butter, salad, etc., and in front of the host is a chafing dish, | and beside it whatever ingredients that are to be heated. In other words, it is an ordinary supper without service and no more than one hot dish and one | hot beverage made at the table, or equally weel heated in the kitchen, and | in many communities it has never been called anything else but “Sunday | night tea.” ‘High tea,” on the other | hand, is much more elaborate, al- | though the bare table is also charac- teristic. The menu consists of a va- riety of hot breads as well as hot dishes, in addition to salad and des- sert and usually chocolate with whip- ped cream on top and either coffee or | tea. Both are Sunday evening suppers | but one is simple while the other has | a very bountiful menu. * ok X X DEAR MRS. POST: 1Is it proper to stack the cups, one cup in the other, on a tea table? Answer: When you are expecting a | great many people you can stack as | many as three cups on every three saucers. * ok ¥ % EAR MRS, POST: Are the small after-dinner coffee cups to be used only for the formal custom of serving coffee after dinner in the living room? Will you explain just when this size cup may be used, and whether it may never be used at the dining table? If not, I don’t understand why friends gave them to me when they know I have no service. Answer: You use them whenever you drink black coffee, no matter where. After-dinner coffee is usually stronger than the coffee drunk in big cups. You can drink your coffee at the table after dessert if you prefer. For that matter, it is not necessary to have & maid in order to serve coffee in your living room. Simply carry in a tray with the coffee pot and the cups and saucerr and sugar, and put it down on a low table so that you can lovely sterling silver bureau set for a birthday present, given to me unmarked with the understanding that I should take it in to the jeweler’s myself to order whatever initialing I preferred. The reason I'm writing to you is that I don’t know what to do about these initials. I am not engaged but have met the man I hope to marry, although neither he nor my friends now anything about it. I don’t want to explain this even to the people who gave me the silver, but they are insisting that the gift will not look finished until it has been marked. Is there some way you can answer this? Answer—There is 8 very simple an- swer. Have your own two initials in small block letters set quite far apart and slightly below center. Later on you put a third block initial (that of your future last name) like the top of the triangle, above and between your two present initials. thing you can do, of course, on some- thing so personal to you is to have your first name written out in script. Fuel Saver. An oven meal is often a fuel saver if foods are selected which require the same temperature in cooking. Although such a meal necessitates a longer cooking period, not only may the whole meal be cooked at the same time but a number of foods may also be prepared for meals to follow. It is a good idea to list such menus in a notebook and refer to it from time w0 time. HAS BESS LET { US DOWN AGAIN? FLL GO PHONE HER WHAT | THINK / LADIES EXCUSED NOW WHILE THEY RUSTLE REFRESHMENTS. NOW'S YOUR CHANCE, BESS/ YOU'VE BEEN DYING TO TELL LUCILLE .SUMEI'HI/VG MONTHLY, martyrdom to func- tional periodic pain is out of style! It’s now old-fashioned to suffer in silence, because there is a depend- able relief for such suffering. Some women who have always had the hardest time are relieved by Midol. Many who use Midol do not feel one twinge of pain, or even a moment’s discomfort during the entire period. £ 3 5 Midol brings quick relief which usually lastsfor hours. ‘Theprincipal ingredient in Midol is one which is per cent of all baldness and hair loss. The top of the scalp, the baldness area is as dependent on & normal blood supply for its nourishment as any other part of the body, but it is the only part that doesn't obtaim the muscular exercise to stimulate the blood flow. Why don't we see cases of baldness in youngsters in their teens. Because their scalp muscles and tissues are | limber and supple and the blood cir- culates freely. It is when one grows older that the muscles become hardened and tense Why do men seldom lose the hair on the back of the neck and sides of the head? Because these areas are adjacent to and over major blood streams, Tight and heavy hat bands may re- strict the circulation. Or the general blood condition may be low, cone tributing to hair loss. But massage and brushing are definitely recom= mended to supply the needed scalp exercise. There is a right and wrong way to massage, however. Here is the right way as described by this scalp spe- cialist. “‘Lean over, placing the elbows on knees or low table; then place the fingertips firmly on the scalp and rotate without allowing the fingers to slip. Repeat over all parts of the scalp. Use an upward movement at back and sides to force the blood to the top. Don't rub scalp or hair. Rubbing breaks the hair or pulls it Another out. Holding the head and upper part of the body low when massaging makes it easier for the blood pressure to penetrate to the top of the scalp.” Quadrupeds carrying their heads low never get bald, although their scalps are often more tigh! drawn than humans. That's where standing on your head comes in. Not as silly as it sounds, it allows the blood to flush down into the scalp However, since not many of us in- dulge in the practice of standing on our heads, Ift us at least massage and brush. Remember that baldness is more prevalent with men than women, but massage Wwill not onlv counteract hair loss, but dandruff and dryness and similar scalp ills. My bulletins on hair care may be had for a self-addressed, stamped (8- cent) envelope. The home shampoo, home rinses, brushing and care of the brush are all covered in these bulle- tins. (Copyright. 1937:) '| Manners . of the Moment TT"HERE'S another side to that story about children who act up every time you try to be nice to them. We knew all along there was another side to it. But now we have to admft it publicly because there are so many protesting mothers around the office. And the other side is this: Some women ogle their friends’ children with a ferocity that would terrify a big game hunter. And naturally | when faced with one of this kuchi- | kuchi types, a child either has to run for his life or howl for protection. Then, too, some women are very apt to attempt to kiss the little darlings ... and usually little darlings don't like to be kissed. They have an instinct for spotting kissing women. So when one turns up they crawl under the table or hide in the closet. Children aren't so dumb. Just be sure that you aren't acting like a predatory female out for a little vicarious mother love before you reproach Junior's mother for training her child so badly. JEAN. (Copyright, 1937.) TIME OF MONTH? NONSENSE! STOP ~ BY THE DRUG STORE OH LUCILLE? | COULD HARDLY WAIT TO TELL YOU. I'VE BEEN ABSOLUTELY COMFORTABLE THE WHOLE EVENING. THANKS HEAPS! 1 KNOW | WAS SUNK REGULARLY UNTIL } frequently prescribed by specialists. Don’t let the calendar regulate your activities! Don’t *‘favor your- self” or “‘save yourself” on certain days of every month! Keep going, and keep comfortable — with the aid of Midol. These tablets provide a proven means for the relief of such pain, so why endure suffering Midormight spare you? You can get Midol in a trim _ aluminum case at any drug store. Two tablets should see you through your worst day.

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