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B—14 WOMEN'S FEATURES. THE EVENING STAR Children’s Distress Signals Don't Ask, but Look for Reason for Non- committal Answers. BY ANGELO PATRL “QIT down, Honey.” & “I don't wanna sit down." “But you must sit down. You can't | stand on a chair. Nobody stands on | chairs. Sit down.’ | “T don’t wanna sit down.” ‘Of course you do. Now sit down like a good boy.” “No. I don’'t wanna sit down.” “Why don’t you? There is no earth- Ir reason why you should not sit down. Do as I tell you this minute. Why do you act 502" | “I don't wanna, I don't wanna, I don’t wanna — Louder and louder his vells rose, and his mother, losing Rl patience, hastened to stop his noise and make him sit down. But she stopped short, looked at her howling &on in astonishment and finally man- aged to say, “For pity’'s sake, couldn't you tell me that?" Evidently he couldn’t. His vocabu- lary, or his power over it, had not been sufficient to allow him to explain that Runty, the beloved terrier who shared his joys and sorrows was curled up st asleep on the chair. He couldn't sit on a Runty, now, could he? Being a bare 3 years old and confronted by such a dilemma he last his place and fell back on the phrase, “I don't wanna.” Many, many times children of all ages, in all stages of growth fall back on that phrase to express or to cover their difficulties. “I don't want to go to the party, mother”; “I don't want to Join the club™; “I don't really care about going to camp this year” are the signals of distress that children fly when faced by situations that they find difficult to put into words. The girl who says that she does not Wwant to go to the party has a reason, and she is hiding it. She may not want to go because her dress is not right, because the boy she prefers is taking somebody else or perhaps she ing and Attenti Shopping in Washington The Midseason Demands Careful Groom- Heavy Rains, on to Coiffure. BY BETSY you, say the nutrition experts. | nate the two important vitam | apples.” As every ome knows, tomatoes | now look at the blamed things! | ‘The Bureau of Home Economics of the | Agriculture collects production fig | ures on tomatoes all over the country, | | and reports regularly upon their grow- | | ing and market- . ing conditions — 50 important have they become in the national diet | ary scheme. Thi Year's prospects | are for a total crop little larger than last year's, according to the Bureau's latest report. Along with this infor- mation, they pre- sent some inter esting facts about * | the tomato and | its peculiarities® “Tomato prices are as erratic as the | ! proverbial March winds, according to W. A. Sherman of the Bureau of Ag- | ricultural Economics. And for good | reason. Few other vegetables are so at the mercy of the elements. Comes 2 row of hot, dry days and tomatoes develop bad sun scalas, with an ac- companying drop in quality and price. Bring on some heavy rains and the result may be big cracks in the to- matoes and prices plummeting down- ward. “One week tomatoes may be 50 to 75 cents a basket and the next $2.50 Or the shift may be into reverse. A # | Betsy Caswell, “Sophisticate” is an easily arranged and gen- |jump trom $150 10 250 in a few days' erally flattering coiffure designed by a newcomer time is not at all uncommon. And the jump in. price may be entirely legitimate, because of the improve- Will Damage the Crop O MATTER how you pronounce them—tomatoes are plenty good for | do with it—but the letters “C” and “A"” have, because they desig- DAY, A 51;NDays And Tumble _fie Value |Bargain Hunters May Profit by Batches Bought at Low Cost Only If Practical. CASWELL. The sound of the “a” has nothing to ins found in the formerly feared “love were once regarded as poisonous—and United States Department of 3 juices, especially when tomatoes are | in season locally. Then, too, tomatoes have a good supply of vitamin A, which is lacking in the citrus fruits. | x ok k% | “JUST supposing & person were de- | pending almost entirely on to matoes or tomato juice for his day's! quota of vitamin C—then how much should he get a day | “Nutritionists hestitate to answer that one specifically. Tomatoes make one of the most valuable of our sources of vitamin C, these scientists will say cautiously, but—— | “Tomatoes (as well as citrus fruits) differ in vitamin C value, depending | on variety, on whether they are cooked or raw, and if cocked, how, whether | they have been held open to the air for some time after being sliced or after the can is opened. To be spe- cific: Some tomato varieties develop more than three times as much vita- min C as do others. And variations within & given variety are also great Green tomatoes have almost as much of this nutrient as do ripe ones. And those picked green and ripened off the vine by the commercial ethyelene treatment develop practically as much as do vine-ripened ones. Ripe toma- | toes stored as long as 20 days lose | pracucal' no vitamin C so long as they are firm and free from decay. “In spite of all these variables, it can be said that a medium-sized fresh tomato, if it has an average amount of vitamin C, should supply & person with his day’s need of this vitamin. That's dislikes the girl who is giving the party. Any one of these reasons is hard for her to tell because they either reflect some failure of he: own or make some reflection on someboay else, and her training has made her Tepress such expressions. A grown person might find words to cover while revealing painful thoughts, but children have no such power. When one asks “Why" one gets a noncom- mittal, “Oh, just because.” Don't ask. Go around a bit and look to see what lies in the way. Wait & little. Let the matter drop for the moment and by and by, when tne mood is right, talk casually around the subject, feeling your way to tne child's confidence gingerly, lest the door close tighter. Explain away the fears, lend courage where courage is needed. Stimulate the desire for share- ing and doing and being all that otner healthy children find good. Clear the way for the child's co-operation by set- fing his mind at ease first, then Arranging anything material that to Washington who has a background of experience in the smart shops of Pari O OFTEN at this time there is a general “let-down” in one's ap- pearance. Summer clothes have lost their best lines through fre- quent laundering, white hats are no longer snowy white, Summer shoes are rather “sad-looking,” faces are tired, and permanent waves are not what they used to be. It's time to snap ba and get ready for Labor day and the next season Those straggly ends of hair on the neck, that too bushy look under the hat, should receive immediate atten- tion, for it takes a well-groomed head to look smart in the new Fall hats. The arrangement of your hair can make or ruin your whole appearance. It is really such an easy matter now-a-dayvs to have a few extra curls put in where needed, and it takes such & short time, besides being so very inexpensive that there is no ex- nified appearance, combined with softening effect about the face is very flattering The physical features to whicl he pays most attention are the forehead and chin, working in each case to bring out the best points and over- balancing any weak spots. The style shown in the photograph above is one of his favorites, which he calls “So- phisticate.” It is an easily arranged and natural-looking coiffure that is quite generally becoming to all types. The large shadow waves over the fore- head are softer than smoothly brushed back hair and the soft pufls will be just right under one of the new Fall turbans. a that ko ¥ YOUR permanent wave is in good condition, or if you are renewing it. one of the most popular hair styles of the year is a center part, with the cuse whatever for bad-looking neck- lines. Using that as a starting point, | you will probably also need a little reshaping at this time—mavbe a couple of inches off of the ends will improve matters wonderfully, for hair does grow so rapidly at the back of the neck. and if it is too long it is more difficult to achieve a pleasing contour &eem 1o be in the way. But don't insist upon explanations, reasons, words. Just go and look to aee what it is the child is protect ing with that phrase, “I don't wanna.” The Old Gardener Says: ‘ Garden makers snould be par- ticularly careful to keep the bird bath filled at this season. A few hours of August's hot sun and available supplies are evaporated and the gardener's feathered friends suffer. On hot days the baths should be filled more than once, for birds are just as ap- preciative of cool water as are human beings. The gardener should remember that birds do not like deep water or slippery surfaces. A bath should not be deeper than five inches in the center and not more than a quarter of an inch at the edge. A stone in the center on which the birds can perch between plunges is appreciated. The gar- den maker who is thoughtful of the birds will find that his efforts are more than repaid by the quantity of insect pests they will devour, (Coprright L ‘T"HIS brings us to the always-inter- esting subject of hair arrange- ment. and to the ideas now being em- ployed by Dimitri, & newcomer to | Washington, with & background of |much experience in Paris. He has an attractive salon, where he turns lout good-looking coiffures, suiting |them in each case to the individual. |He favors & neat. easy-to-keep ar- | rangement that will look as well when you have combed it yourself as it |does when you leave the salon. He | believes in adding inches to the short |girl by making puffs and curls on |the top of the head, and subtracts |inches from the too tall girl by a {lower arrangement with a more fluffy styling. He likes to see a brunette | wear a sophisticated and sleek coif- |fure in contrast to the blond, with whom we are more apt to associate curls and puffs. He is equally suc- cessful in pleasing the woman with | gray or white hair, giving her a dig- 1937) A few swift stitches are all that this charming motif requires. The entire eloth, spread, or whatever you wish, uses only the one motif, so when you have learned that, it will be & simple matter to speedily complete the article. It's an excellent design for innumerable places—bedspreads, chair set, luncheon eloth, runner, buffet set, or dinner cloth, to mention a few. ‘The pattern envelope contains complete, easy-to-understand illustrated directions, with diagrams to aid you; also what crochet hook and what ma- terial and how much you will need. To obtain this pattern, send for No. 436 and inclose 15 cents in stamps or coln to cover service and postage. Address orders to the Needlework Editor of ‘The Evening Star. hair waved softly back and the ends turned up. not in separate curls or counting as medium a size of which it would take four tomatoes to make a pound “There’s some vitamin C loss in canning tomatoes, either whole or as Juice, but not enough to worry about Tomato juice made from ripe whole fruit contains practically as much vitamin C as the tomatoes from which it is made. And homemade tomato juice s quite s valuable as the com- mercial product * % % “()NCE canned, tomatoes and fo- mato juice show no appreciable vitamin C loss during storage, even when storage is at room temperature for several months. And reheating upon opening doesn’t much affect the nutritive value either. “Therefore when prices of the fresh fruit warrant it canning tomatoes brings very satisfactory results. And dietetically it is advisable to put most of the tomato supply “straight” or in juice form, rather than as pickles or conserve. The latter foods are at- tractive and desirable accessories to ment in quality of the tomatoes, due to weather conditions. * ok ok % ARGAIN-HUNTING would do well to consider more than price in their tomato buying For instance, one market may be ad- vertising its tomatoes 25 cents a pe cheaper than another marketing cen- ter a block away. But the spread in price may be fully justified. There may be more waste in the cheaper basket, the finish on tiie tomatoes may be inferior, the flavor poor. Maybe they are cracked and have to be used at once to prevent spoilage. Of course, the poorer quality basket mav be quite as usable as the more expensive one It all depends upon what disposition the buver wants to make of the to- matces. Is she going to can them es tomato juice? Then the required trimming may not be great enough to cancel the price difference and the cheaper basket may actually be the saving it appears “Tomatoes march shoppers * * hand in hand GUST 16, 1937 WOMEN'S FEA TURES ato Prices Drastically Affected by thq Whims of the Elements Smart_A_fternoon Frock This Charming Model Just the Thing for the First Fall Days. BY BARBARA BELL. ET your first Fall dress be some- thing as feminine and charm- ing as the design shown today. Note the new girdled waistline achieved here by lifting the bodice very high at front and keeping a normal waistline at back. This version of this new silhouette is very easy to wear and very flattering. The bodice is shirred into the corselet and has a pismmmne BARBARA BELL, The Washington Star, Inclose 25 cenis in coins for Pattern No. 1359-B. Size _ Name through with the citrus fruits every ringlets, but brushed up and left to diet plan worked out by the nutrition- g0 its own w Just above the brushed-up ends For formal evenings the same hair may be combed high on the forehead. with soft ringlets brushed back over the ears at the sides, and again set in natural-looking curls at the nape of the neck. A good permanent can al- ways be made to do double duty when you need it. If you like to fuss with your own hair and try out new effects, vou would probably enjoy a wave-setting lotion that dries in one-third of the | usual time. It is quite a time saver,| cheaper drink, for prices often run} and in addition to that it has an anti- v. The upper part of the hair is held in place by bobby pins ists—for families of ever income level. These two foods are the good old vitamin C stand-bys—the bulwark of a good diet as far as this vitamin is concerned. “But don't get the idea from this that tomatoes and the citrus fruits are equally valuable vitamin C sources, the nutritionists will warn. They are not ordinarily equal, weight for weight Juice from red ripe tomatoes, on the average, has about half as much of this valuable nutrient as does most fresh orange or grapefruit juice. But even %o, tomato juice may prove the less than half that of the citrus fruit | through the scalp. Brush from back | septic effect and is said to improve the appearance of the hair. It is en- tirely free from flaky deposits and may be used as effectively on dyed and bleached hair, both of which have & tendency to become very dry and brittle. | This lotion helps train newly sc- | quired permanents and may be used | to overcome extremely dry and kinky conditions, bringing more gloss and sheen. Dorothy HE main thing that is * ok Kk % matter with the feminine WE MIGHT remind you that if and that is 'rrsnonslble you are looking forward to hav- | most women's nerves, ing a permanent wave before going | health. peevishness, fretting and nag- away to college this Fall it is a grand | §ID8 is that they are never satisfied the sex for time to do a little Teconditioning of | With the station in life which it has | your own. Be faithful with the old | Pleased God to call them, as the hairbrush and use it religiously every | Praver Book says. night and give yourself some hot-oil 3 treatments. Here's a lesson in hair | Life is just one struggle after brushing from an expert on the sub- | Another to them—to have dates; to Ject, be admired; to get married; to hold Grasp the brush firmly near the | their husbands; to be beautiful: to back, then bending from. the hips | Tetain & boyish figure: to dress like & extend the head forward; this allows | Dint from Paris; to keep up with the the blood to circulate more freely |Jones: to be the president of their clubs; to keep young, and so on ad infinitum. The first real rest that the average women ever gets is in her coffin. Why we should say of our deceased friend “how natural looks,” none of us know, since it is the first time we ever saw her with a calm and peaceful expressin on her face. hair line forward over top of head, then take small strands from top of | head and brush out from the scalp. This loosens the scalp and stimulates circulation. Let the brush sweep across the scalp, as well as the whole length of the hair, so that every strand goes through the brush and fis | left clean, soft and silky. Wipe brush | on a towel after each strand is brushed. This acts as a dry shampoo as well as a scalp treatment. - Also wash your hairbrush fre- quently, using any good soap and ‘warm water. Swish the brush up and down—never let it soak in suds. Rinse in plenty of cold water and allow it to dry in the sun or fresh air, resting on jts side, and not with the bristles | down, | My Neighbor Says: Evergreens should be set out the first of September. Do not plant in cold soil. Soil should be warm enough so that roots will begin to grow immediately and continue to grow for 3 or 4 weeks. Now, of course, all of this discontent and striving has doubtless made for progress, and women wouldn't have been sitting pretty on the top of the world as they are now if they had just been willing to take things easy and stay put where they happened to land. If Grandmother Eve hadn't got tired of a steady diet of citrus food and done some apple eating, we would still be lounging around in the Garden of Eden drinking orange juice instead of cocktails in night clubs. Which would have saved us a lot of work and worry, but which would have assuredly cut us out of a lot of good times. * ox ok X BE THAT as it may, no one can deny that it is women's constitutional inability to accept things as they are that is at the root of most of their unhappiness. Take marriage as an example of this. No sane woman be- lieves that a marriage license is a guarantee of perpetual bliss. She has seen too many miserable wives, too many quarreling households, too many divorces not to know that a husband is just as often a liability as he is an asset. But she seldom gives up the husband chase until incapacitated by age. To clean a white raincoat, cut up 2 ounces of good yellow soap and boil it in a little water till dissolved, then let it cool a little and stir in half an ounce of powdered magnesia. Wash the raincoat with this, using a nail brush for the soiled parts; rinse off the dirty soap and dry with & clean cloth. When putting hot foods through food ricer, rinse ricer in warm water and foods will stay warm and lumps can be more easily removed. (Coprrisht, 1937.) a woman who, realizing that she has no allure for men, says to herself: “Well, what of it?” -"And goes about filling her life with interesting work, (Copyright, 1987.) friends, amusements and rejocing in Take Life as It Comes to You, That Is the Only Way to Find Happiness. in- | she | Yet how delightful life can be /Iorl a meal, but their nutritive returns, aside from calories, are negligible. “Raw tomato juice has a char- acteristic and interesting flavor, which commends it to some people. One should use only red ripe tomatoes and should chop them fine before putting them through a sieve. If a juice en- tirely free of pulp is desired, the to- | matoes must be put through cheese- cloth “By this time next year some fairly accurate estimates of tomato con- sumption may be possible, for the tomato was one of the foods recently checked upon in a Nationwide food- purchasing survey made by the Bureau of Home Economics in co-operation with other agencies. Dix Says | her freedom to do as she pleases and | spend her money ax she likes. | And looks! Another perpetual headache to women. Think of the women you know who make them- selves old before their time trying to keep young. Think of the women who | endure all the tortures of semi- | starvation year after year trying to ward off every ounce of fat. Think | of the agony that women go through who waddle about on stilt-heeled shoes three sizes too small for them. Think of the inquisition suffered by women who are baked and stewed and | pounded and scraped in beauty shops, | trying to acquire a peaches-and-cream | complexion and naturally wavy hair. And weep. | * ok ok ok ND how much anguish and how many gray hairs millions of women could save themselves if they would just make up their minds to stay within their own class instead of trying to break into one above them. | The “400” are no more intelligent, | no better educated, no more interest- ing, no wittier or wiser than are the “500" or the “600.” Why women should break their necks and im- poverish themselves trying to know the people who don't want to know them and who look down upon them is one of the unfathomable mysteries | of feminine psychology. Yet many women are afflicted with this snobbish mania and they literally ruin their lives and wreck their fam- ilies, dressing beyond their means, entertaining beyond what they can afford in attempting to keep up with the rich, who only invite them to their second-rate parties, How much more happiness these women would get out of life if they would just live within their budgets and go with the people who could afford what they could afford, instead of wearing themselves out running after millionaires and pretending to be rich. For there is dignity and fun in riding in your own flivver, but none in thumbing a ride in somebody else's Rolls Royce. Better is a chop you have paid for than a feast for which you will be dunned. Much is to be said for accepting | life as it comes to us. There is a lot of peace under the white flag of surrender, but women don't know it. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1037.) » becoming low neckline. waist is further shirred very full to give a wide look at the shoulder. gores inset at front to give a flaring hemline. crepe or newness. Make Barbara Bell pattern No. designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 and | Corresponding bust measurements 30, 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40, requires 41, yards of 39-inch material and 2! yards of ribbon for bows and 40 belt Every Barbara an {llustrated instruction guide which is easy to understand. I in black satin for The slender accented by sleeves Address . The skirt has two this dress in a soft dramatic tographs and 1359-B is Barbara Bell See what clever Size 14 (32) new ette! Bell patiern includes new pattern book things done with longer waistline shorter skirts do to the silhou- Dozens upon dozens of fashion questions are answered for vou in this Order tel Just 1927.) out. | your copy now for 15 cents. (Copyright (Wrap coins securely in paper.) Thirty-two pages of fashions, pho- sketches whole story of the rew fashions in the pattern book for Fall. fashion has what the 1 you the Wedding Problems S il ved Go From Church to Reception Unless Otherwise Stated, | BY EMILY POST. | I)EAR MRS. POST: We are to & wedding in church and to the | reception How after the ceremony at the church will We afterward, (1) 0on we be expected at the reception? are not close friends of either of families. (2) The bride has given friend ] Am I to expect the us individu and is my hust (3) At the whom do we shake hands with firet (4) What do we (5) What permission to take a with us who is a widow, usher to escort the church aisle to follow alone? and what do we s say to the bride and g do we say when lea (6) Dn v think I should call on the bride mother after the wedding? We bot now the bride and the groom, anc know the groom's parents, but ha never even met the of bride parents Answer: (1) If the time of the ir tion to the house is half an h after the time given for the ceremo every one is expected to from the church to paying any time. On accasion nvitation the name a time several hours after that set for the ceremony, then one is ¢: the time set. This, howe usual as to be scarcely worth ment ing. (2) If two ushers greet widow takes the arm of one a take the arm of the other, an husband f able) one 1 the same moment it take his arm and the wi the arm ‘of your husband your husband e: bride's mother w door—perhaps alone, or the mott a hands w name has not 1 man on duty for “I am Mrs. Hen people in 1 g0 immediat the ho attention to an to rece ected at are g “How do you dn." If nn one elze ente immediately nd vou i oduce the widow and explai he bride told you that 1m bring h Pe: ps faYy som pleasant about the bride looks, and then sat pleasant to the groom'’s mot the groom ing nearby and say somet about The standing some distan they are in the same a sep- arate one, the procedure is the same as that in greeting shake hands with the or kiss her—and him them at all well. Congra and wish her happ or them both happiness. (3) You need not look for any g00d - by but if the hostess (the bride’s mother) is not talking with any one and you pass near her as you go out. vou nat urally shake hands and say ‘'Good-b: it was a beautiful wedding” or some ich remark. (6) You should your cards on the bride's mother after the wedding. When 1 it is always more polite to ask Brown is at home than to merely han in vour cards at the door and turn away. beh about ers are stand- e away W e parents. You bride and groom, too, if you know Jate him, ess, or ¥ou with one to say leave (Copyright. 1937 ) Cotton Favored in Paris. | 30 minutes. Cook’s Corner BY MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE. BREAKFAST MENU Chilled Tomato Juice Ready-Cooked Wheat Cereal Cream Poached Eggs on Buttered Toast Cofree LUNCHEON MENU Egg and Ham Salad Spiced Apple Sauce Tea Bread Sugar Cookies DINNER MENU Rice in Ring With Creamed Mushrooms Buttered Spinach Biscuits Honey Head Lettuce Relish Dressing Chilled Watermelon Coflee HOME-MADE TOMATO JUICE. 12 cups 1 teaspoon tomatoes granulated 2 cups water sugar 4 celery leaves 6 whole cloves 14 cup chopped 2 teaspoons salt onions !2 teaspoon 2 bay leaves paprika ‘Wash, but dornot peel, the tomatoes. Cut into quarters. Add rest of the ingredients. Cover and let immer for Strain. Reheat the juice and let boil for 3 minutes. Pour into sterilized jars and seal immediately. EGG AND HAM SALAD (Other Cooked Meat May Be Used.) 24 cup diced 2 tablespoons cooked ham chopped sweet 2 hard-cooked pickles eggs, diced 13 teaspoon salt 14 cup diced 1s teaspoon celery ‘paprika 1% cup diced 13 cup salad cucumbers dressing 1 tablespoon minced onions Mix and chill ingredients and serve in a bowl lined with shredded lettuce. SPICED APPLE SAUCE. 4 cups sliced 113 cups granu green apples lated sugar 115 cups water 1 lemon slice 3 teaspoon 2 orange slices cinnamon Mix apples with water and fruit slices. Allow to boil quickly for § minutes. Add rest of the ingredients and let boil until apples are soft when tested with a fork. Serve sauce warm or cold. This kind of apple sauce is especially good served warm with roasts or chop: TIES . PERFECT HOME DRY CLEANER 10¢.30¢.50¢ BorTLES ALL DRUGGISTS MUET! SHOE WHITE will nof rub Cowtains In 13 of Mutti Nome Dry Cleaner Whlrens. borte 25% % teaspoon nutmeg | Peach Sherbet. (Automatic refrigerator method.) 25 cup sweetened condensed milk 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 tablespoons melted butter. 13 cup water. 1 cup crushed fresh peaches 2 egg whites. Blend sweetened condensed milk, | lemon juice, melted butter and water | Add peaches; chill. Beat egg whites | until stiff and fold into chilled mix- | ture. Pour into freezing pan. Place |In freezing unit. After mixture is about half frozen remove from refrig- | erator. Scrape mixture from sides and | bottom of pan. Beat until smooth, but not until melted. Smooth out and | replace in freezing unit until frozen | for serving. Serves six. LOST. BRACFLET. fen different colored carved like scarabs® lost Priday. G si. be- tween | g Reward. ~Enochs. Natl or Lorton, Va.. 160 stones and _20th Branch 68, 1-F-4 2, c CAT. large. salmon colored. male, Vicinity of JRiverdale, Aue. 9. Reward. Berwyp | FOUR SUIT CASES on Saturday mo; on road betwecn Baltimore and Penn If found please return or notify 1514 st.n... Liberal reward. Phone North Nts | LCST OR STRAYED. tan cocker spaniel | (male) about X months old. in viciniiy 50 block of Camerson st Alex. Va. Liberal reward. _Alex. 503-J PARTY WHO FOUND _yellow-gold _wrist | watch Saturday in the Holly Shop. Please call Met. 9360 % POLICE BADGE No. Police. Reward for retu ave. ne or No. 1 Precinct RED CAP. with white feather: lettering on cap. Le Chapeau Dept., Salon 14. D. C. between Legion convention. Mayflower, and PATKIng lot. Reward. West 0682 SCOTTY. female. in Chevy Chase, small, black with some gray. Reward. Cleve- land 6385, YPECTACLES, with white-gold fr: Finder call W. 8. Carter, . 7100 Conn. ave. ame. with- Wisc. 16¢ SPECIAL NOTICES. I'WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY myself. ANDREW ve. Bethesda. Md AM NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS contracted by any one other than myself personally. STANLEY A. WALTER. 4th &t x.w. Washington. D. C. 18 PEACHES ARE RIPE AT QUAINT ACRES, Silver Spring. Colesville pike. Route 29. | onix 5 miles {rom the District. Open daily 18 o.m PLAINFIELD ORCHARDS. Tree-Ripened Peaches. Out Ga. ave. 5 miles, turn right. Rt. 182, W. W. MOORE. Sandy Spring. Md 16 A DEAL FUNERAL AT $75 Provides .am¢ Don’t waste nsura DEAL, with 25 years coln_8200 CHAMBERS world. Complete funerals up. 81x chapels. twelve parlors, . hearses twenty-five undertakers tants Ambulances now only $3. 1400 aasi Chapin st nw. Columbis 0432 817 11th st_se Atlantlc 6700 PEACHES! PEACHES! Hiley's and Geo. Belles; last cha White Free Stone peaches. J. P. WORST. 2 st of Ashton. PUGH, 129 St. Elmo IR® money experience. Oven till 9 p.m. ’ = Metropolitan | 3 i o debts contracted for by any one other than | n | TINNERS —Combination tinner a nce for | PARIS (® —Mrs. Donald Balcom, | the’ former Millicent Rogers, is going in for cotton in a big way. She has a sprigged cotton suit in her S wardrobe, the jacke which gather under the chin of folding back. Her beach t clude a sleeveless dress in dark hii | cotton printed over with tiny | in & lighter shade of blue. Both are Schiaparelli models. ———— HELP MEN. expeTIeneed. hearts local publicat Apply Room 100X BODY work week BOY ng: 'm Capitol CARPENTERS Apply commissinn elgh Hote! job year piumh with experience at 417 Fas ve driving permit first-class. _Ca 113 Garfield ! Shepherd at st Silver American and ass drive-in r noand good Box 170-J. Star COLLECTOR part time reliable man | COUNTERMAN A AND Permane: DETAIL REPRESENTATIVE maceutical concern. contact Washington, D C and Bal 26 tg experienced eading pha hysiclans more. Md preferred Acr Box FENDER AND experienced. L n.w | FORD MECHANIC BODY METAI Evans-Palmer, Inc WORKFR 14th anc must be Ford trained . Lee D. Rutier HOUSEMAN. white. over 50 tools. city reference: room salary. Ring bell. 1116 Gth st nw | MAN. willing worker. special work for | local company; some sales experience. Box 1-M. Sta handy with board. sma MAN. 35-30. tactful and aggressive. tn take charge of seles and service in restrict- | ed territory. Unlimited oppo: | sonnel manager. %th floor, 1 MAN. outside sales work; permanent pn- sition; pay good to start. Box 23R-D, [istaraitt MECHANIC (o operate_Weaver front-snd | machine experienced. Evans-Palmer, Inc ., | T41h and L sis. n.w MEN to distribute advertising ; a.m. Tn: | day. 939 D st nw. PLUMBER-_First-class fobbing hand, with | car. 1361 Wisconsin ave. n.w PRESSER. white. experienced. for Ige. ho- tel: ‘must'know repairing. Call Mr. Mar- cus. Natl. 8510 | ROUGH PRESSERS and silk pressers, | perienced: steady work, good pay. Premier | Cleaners and Dyers. Inc.. 633 H st | SALESMAN. high-grade clothing; _also | capable of selling men's furnishings. Preqe erick’s Men's Wear. 1435 H st n w SALESMEN (34), married. for insurance WOrK Salary and commission Apply manager, Met. Life Insurance Co., 1308 H st. n.w. TAILOR for men’s clothing. one capahls of also selling same FPrederick's Men's Wear._ 1475 H st. n.w TILE SETTERS. Apply _Buckingham Apartments, Arlington, Va.. eorner G| rd. and Pershing drive. ]fll"h! & mator for roofing department. y’ T i Eberly TIRE CHANGERS and Good pay and steady wo | men. 3446 14th st. n | VEGETABLE MAN for curb market stand: must_know the business thoroughly: gond Salary. Apply Charles Pisner, 1420 7th nw st “(Continued on Next Page.) 1o vers, white. rk for experienced w