The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 19, 1919, Page 8

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By BETTY BRAINERI s and |Red Cross Jumble Shop Mrs. Brooks Honor Guests Mrs. Thomas Nickerson will be hostess at a luncheon on Friday at the Boulevard Inn in compliment to Mrs. Donald Barnes, who has re ently come h to make her home. Dwelve quests will entertained. On Friday afternoon Mra. Nicker gon will give a tea at the Little White House of the Orthopedic * Dureau, honoring Mrs. Barnes, and ‘iso her mother, Mrs. F. W. Brooks. Mrs. W. H. McGrath will preside at the tea tadie Theatre Party and r Dance . M. Kagansky was host at a party on Wednes evening at Moore theatre enter fained his guests Route Yard Inn with a Those who enjoyed his were = Mr. and = Mra] Fretwell, Mrs. Edward P- Wife of Col. Orton, U. 8. A..| “Bertha Collier, Mr. and Mrs. Stirrat and Mr. FE. L. War and later at the supper. . e nee Ined in compliment to Miss Baxter and Miss Virginia at y evening by Mr. and Mrs. | D. Merrill. Their guests were Clara Emory, Miss Mary Lea} Miss Harriet Baxter, Miss| Sheahan, Miss Rowena oe the house » Miss Virginia Merrill, | Frazier, Mr. Bernard Pel-| . Mr. Evan} whose marriage to Mr Fellows. Day will be sol- on June 24, has announced | ‘wedding party. Susan Gllfillam of Austin, will be maid of honor; Miss | i Michaelis, Miss Fina Michael- is, Mise Mildred Nelson of. Kansas | © Giz, Miss Louise Corbin of Port: | Ore, and Miss Osceola House Townsend will be the brides: ‘Mr. Norman English will be the man. The ushers willbe Mr. Wittiam Yerkes, Mr. Arthur “| Original favors @ dinner dance on! her }ousty for members of the club and Mrs. Katharine Kirkwood Ivey will sing tomorrow at the Red Cross Jumble Shop during the noon hour and Mrs. Daisy Wood Mildreth will | be the The hostess he will be F. Munday at Mr ler Engagement Announced | and Mr Vraden: | of n./ George } the engagement rela France Thurmond, U, 8. rtland, Ore. Tau | Dinner Dance | Miss Dorothy Darlington June 17 enter dance Tues ne ¢ Mi pas just w Darline Darlington returned from in the Bast, Covers were laid 18 The table was attractively pointed in pink and blue with centerpiece of orchids and were at each place After dinner the young people ad journed to the drawing room where dancing was enjoyed o school for ap | Out-of-Town Man | group of the younger vet were] Entertained Miss Ruth Norton entertained at| breakfast Wednesday morning at) home complimentary to Mr.| Roger Mead, of Denver, Col. Mr Mead was best man at the Butler-| Harrington wedding. He left Wednesday for his home. Luncheon at Sunset Club Mrs, C. M. Perkins was hostess! at a luncheon yesterday at the Sum set club, with covers placed for 11 guests. Later the party attended the lecture of Dr. Alfred Martin, which had been announced previ their quests. Person Mr, and Mrs. Alexander McEwan | will move to the Country club the } end of the week to spend the sum- mer. Mr. and Mre. Wiltam Hl. Mande and daughter, Miss Edith Maude, are registered at the Waldorf.Astoria in| New York. eee Mrs. Claude M. Seeley and aman son, Joe Bill, will leave the first of and Mr. Arthur Lewis. eee ce for Daughter d Guest ‘Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hudson Rax- have issued ivitations for a to be given in honor of their ‘ . Miss Harriet Baxter, who ha _, returned from school, s Miss Virginia Shea- ‘ on the evening of June 27, at Sunset ctud. Tea | shtfully attractive tea was this afternoon by Miss Doro- at her home, honoring | formerly lived in Se ‘but is now in Berkeley. eee Club Tea Tennis club was Scene of an attractive tea at Mrs. R. D. Merrill was hos- this afternoon, Mrs. John W. and Mrs. Wallace Green Coi- presided at the tea table, as by Miss Mary Lea Fisken, Emily Jerome, Miss Beatrice Miss Virginia Merrill, Miss Baxter, Miss Eulalie Mer and Miss Virginia Sheahan. eee e Elephant Shop “Miss Anabel Trent has arranged Gouble program to be given to- at the White Elephant Shop the noop hour. Two Japanese Mr. Seyiro Tatsumi, a tenor, Miss Adele Lar Piegue, a s0- Prano, will contribute their talents. Mrs. J. E. Savage, a mezzo so- will sing and Mr. Milton Sey will play the accompaniments. o- a Bridge at Rainier Club _ Mrs. John Claude Moore enter. “ at the Rainier club this after. Ee. at bridge. Six tables were at eee Will Observe Dominion Day Mrs..C. T. Boyd, president of the Woman's club of Seattle. is making preparations for celebrat- ing July 1, Dominion day, details of ‘which will appear later. oe D. A. R. Picnic ‘The Rainier Chapter of the D. A. R. will give a picnic at Camp Lewis on Sunday, June 22. Ali members invited to be at the Y. M. ©. A hospital grounds not later than O'clock. All interested call Fast ‘ _ “BAYER CROSS” ON GENUINE ASPIRIN BAT aR R | “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” to be genuine must be marked with the y “Bayer Cross.” Always buy unbroken Bayer package which tains proper directions to safely Headache, Toothache, Far- Neuralgia, Colds and pain. 3 dy tin boxes of 12 tablets co#t but Ma few cents at drug stores—larger 4 also. Aspirin is the trade of Bayer Manufacture of Mono- aceticacidester of Salicylicacid the week for Burlingame, Cal, to| join Mr. Seeley, who is already there. ‘They will take a cottage. Mr. W. E. Boeing leaves Friday for an indefinite stay in Caltfornia. eee Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Petty and famity moved last week to the Country club for the summer. Mr. Lawrence Pelly has just returned home from Arizona. eee Mise Antoinette Black, who has been attending Vassar College, re turned home Wednesday evening and |is with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tt. Black er. Miss Aroline| Bucher, Miss Black's roommate, re- turned with her and will be her guest for the summer. eee Mre. H. C. Truesdale of Minneap- olis, who ts visiting her cousin, Mr. A. C. Henry, and Dr. Aurelia Rhein. hardt, president of Mills College, who arrived in town Wednesday to visit Mr. and Mrs. HH. C. Henry, will leave today for a motor trip to Mount Rai- nier over the week end as guests of Mr. H. C. Henry. eee Mr. Temple Fay is at Camp Idle wood, Scroon lake. New York. He is the doctor who has been recently put in charge of 200 boys at this summer camp. eee Mrs. J. Irving Colwell and brother, Mr, James Clise, left Wednesday morning for Winesap, near Lake Chelan, where Mrs. Colwell's small son, Robert, has been for severn) weeks. eee Miss Hazel Landes will go to Pilot Point on the Sound Monday to spend the summer. he | Miss Gladys Epperson has re-| turned from Portland where she/ spent several days. o- Montifoire Lukov, who has served three and a‘half years with the Canadian army, will return home ‘Thursday evening and be with his | parents, Mr. and Mr#. Jacob Lukov . . Mr. Moritz Thomzen will leave to morrow for San Francisco to attend the High Jinks at the Bohemian etub. Mrs, Thomsen, who has been winter. ing In Altadene, will return with Mr. | Thomsen on July 6, | .-. Dr. Mildred Purman has returned from a short trip to New York. eee Mrs. H. A. M. Bonnar, president of the City Federation of Women's Clubs; Mra. Frank Skinner, vice president, and Miss Nelile B. Ster- rett, president of the Classic Culture club, left Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Keene for Centralia where the women will attend the conven tion of women’s clubs. ose Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Winfred} Crockett and son Oliver left yester day for a summer outing of two weeks at Yeomalt, Bainbridge island, | ey ae Mrs, Walter Vose Gulick, with Miss Filizabeth Rowell and Miss Wenona Bailey, leave tomorrow for a trip to Youemite. . Mrs. O. D. Colvin and daughter, Miss Evelyn, leave Saturday morning to be guests of Col. and Mra. C. N, Perkins at the navy yard for the | week end. . . Miss Emily Reed of North Yakima, who hag been attending Smith col lege, ia the guest of Mrs. B.C. Seeley for several days on her way home. | GREEN LAKE FOLKS | HOLD ANNUAL PICNIC) Two hnndred residents of the |Green Lake district motored to Silver lake Wednesday night to hold their annual community pie- nic under the direction of the Green Lake Commercial club | her | Mra | Mildred | Mase ) Ryther Children Enjoy Ride Do you know a ride in children Ryther in the fu and so truly town that who how much pleasure automobiles little The kiddte Moth Home who with from . rod parade on Wednesday of joy of living delighted to ride about if those automobile own feel stirring within them) im pulee tak children homes” and tituttons” | they would) no longer, | hearted women|/ ed their machines for the children to ride in| k — Waterhouse, Treat, Mra, J.| ” D. Mra Mr D. K, Skinner,| Baillie, Mre, 1. Ht Clara Reynolds, Keen, Mra. M.A. Ar| A 1, Stewart and Mra.) Layton Chaba CLUBS FOR FRIDAY were the ers the from ould have trip Among the kindly who dor Mother Ryther were Mrs, Fra Mrs. Harry Whitney L, Hall, Mra, J C.D, Stimson Alexander Mixs have seen them delayed the Hoge Haatin, Mrs. F nold, Mre w Amaranth Club No, 1 Amaranth club will meet at! the home of Mra, J. P. Grant, 1932] 15th ave. N., Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock. ‘The notice says, “Take Cap- | ito! HN car to end of line and walk north.” | eee | Miasionary The Women's Missionary society of the First Presbyterian church will meet in the ladies’ parlors of the church at 2 o'clock. Dr, M. H. Mar vin will speak on “The Chureh’s Con tribution to Labor.” Dr, Marvin, who has been a minister, has been a member of tho Oregon industrial commission for twenty years, and has had a large part in improving conditions tn factories in Oregon which employ women. Vocal selec tions will be given by Mra J. G Prakken. An informal social hour will follow the program, during which tea will be served by the hostesses: Mrs. H. 1. Pyles, Mre W. A Glam, Mra. William Camp bell, Mrs. George Talmadge, Mra. Duncan Tait and Mra. HH. Had ley. eee Pennaytvania Stady Club The last regular meeting before the summer vacation of the Penney} vania Study club will be held at 2 o'clock at the federated club house Unfinished work of the year will be taken up, the program for the new year will be prepared, the year book made up and the arrangements for the annnal summer picnic will be| completed. All members are urged to be present. | eee | Ballard W. ©. T. U. A social and shower for the bene | fit of the White Shield home will be given by the Rallard W. C. T. U. at 2 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Ernest Healy, 1320 W. 72nd at. There | uwual informed me in a minele fiaxh | it.” will be & program . ae Ladies’ Aid Society | ‘The Ladies’ Aid society of the) Group of subdebutante set entertained by Moritz Thomsen Wednesday evening at swimming and danc ing party at Seattle Tennis club. Thompson, Forrest Crosby, Nancy Moritz Thomsen, Mary Chea, Fred ( Mra, Milburn Reading from left to right Dunn, Margaret Hansard, Charles Kuhn, William Jones, Joy Emory Top row Franatoll, Ja Middle row: Mack Giamn, Yollins, Frances Brannigan. Bottom Dorothy Lane and Polly Perkins. OF CHRYS’ WEDDING—WE RENT HOUSE 0 N COAST ‘The bombing outrage which Imper-| it's true, nevertheless, We must ed- ied so many lives and destroyed one ucate, educate. We must teach for- Bert Burnett, Wallace ¢ Dorothy Allen, Arthur ughian, Dick Woods, Helen collins, Franklyn Crawford Charlotte Bloedel, Bulalie Merrill, ck © "She Is Angry at the Duke of York i -_———_____. or more of the bombthrowers, wor | cign-born malcontents to ‘think just-| ried Daddy Lorimer considerably. He admitted to us that he was greatly concernal about the safety of his dear ones, Tie was troubled, also, about some art treasures at home, and he wired the caretaker of the house to make a thoro Investigation of the premises. Chrys, the practical, suggested tat we had been made so conspicuously rich by the war that our turn would come and we ought to prepare for the worst-—for a funeral in the fam iy Instead of her wedding Hor marcantio speceh worked upon my imagination. We had all won | dered why Daddy Lorimer never had been numbered among those threat ened. So far in the “propaganda by deed” Daddy never had received a single menacing letter. My imagination, which a forever | harassing me with impornibilities, as sion on our own front door step. | Because we were going to have the| the Inte afternoon we were whirled | wedding, we were spared a funeral!| out to the shore to look at several | ly" she murmured. “We must keep ‘em out?’ roared Daddy, “Tye teen Rome ofthe foreign-born children do the most precoctous things in our school,” Mother con tinued fn @lactd reminiueence. “I've known them te learn like parrots and pase thelr examination like geniuses but they never get the American polat of view. ‘The school didn't go far enough, or else it tangiit wrong subjecta. And thors half-edu cated boys became the most danger ous egotiate and revolutioni«ts. We must educate them wholly, not only in American forms but in the true American epirtt™ “And keep out those who can't, or won't, or don't learn it.” Daddy shouted again. ‘Then be turned to me with, “I'll nee about that place on the comat today, little girl, I'll fix An@ be hurried to his New York and refreshments. why we were not to have an explo-| offies And fix it he did, and at once. In Bayview Congregational church, of wo were to be bound, thru Chrysto | houses which Daddy could get—at the Youngstown district, will bold @ | bet and her vast fortune—to the mas: | most exorbitant rent. handkerchief mie tn the social room ter mind of the red terror! We were Fortunately, the one nearest to the of the church on Friday evening. | protected by the head Bolshevik him-| shack on the dunes ulted un all. Refreshments wil be served. | eee | Child Conservation League =| ‘The Child Conservation league wil! | meet in the parlor of the Congres tional chureh Friday afternoon, June | 20, at 2:30 o'clock. All members are | urged to be present. Chartotte FE. White will be present to give a talk) on “Social Purity.” This is a nation. | al organization, of which Dr. Win-| field Scott Hall, of Northwestern | university, ls president, and on the| advisory board are 25 names of men) prominent in all lines of work.| Among them are Prof. O'Shea, of | the University of Wisconsin; Dr. G. Stanley Hall, of Clarke university, and Dr. Meyer Bloomfield and Judge Ben Lindsey, of Denver, Col. ‘This is the sixth year of the existence of this club, which haa representative organizations already established in Walla Walla, Centralia and Chehalia, and plans well formed for a local one. wolf! 1 almost cried aloud in my horror! ‘That shame must never befall us! I rushed to Daddy Lorimer with my plan to move to the shore. Our presence there would cork up Certets | and render him futile for a time, per haps until the long delayed but In: | evitable moment of his disgrace] should arrtve. | I interrupted Daddy In the midst) of some violent raving about the! oi won of Mr. and Mra, K. 8 Davis, | of 623 First ave, W., died in action | need of a nation-wide clean-up of Bol sheviki, and more stringent immigra | required some repairs and cleaning, and I was giad, for thus I had a few more days in town to arrange im- portant matters with the Queen of Smiles, LEARN OF SOLDIER’S DEATH YEAR AFTER Patrick Harrison Davis, 20-yenr- laws. | during the first American offenstve, My interruption gave Mother Lori. | st summer, but the parents learned | mer © moment in which to parade | of his untimely end for the first time | | | the; a Diss Alice Hastings. Mins Alice Hastings, of Hong Kong, | mys the British army is all bound ‘round with a woolen string of red | tape thru which the soul of the noble | Duke of York goes marching on, Her twin brother, Capt. Lawrence Hast- ings, was marched to India via Hong Kong—and army red tape won't let him visit her. Then he was marched back to London again. Hastings is in U. & en route to |Engiand, mying things about red tape every foot of the 12,000 miles. BALLARD PLANS BIG PUBLIC AUDITORIUM Rallard will have a community aud- itortum, seating 2,000 persons, and conting between $25,000 and $35,000, provided the project in approved by & mass meeting of residents. Plans are being drawn and will be sub- mitted to business and professional men at a meeting in the old city hall Tuesday evening. Men are compelled to tmvent all Now Miss | By CYNTHIA GREY Dear Mins Grey: There have | entere ife, both of whom m T bri handsome n » fascinates me with him thrills me. 1 gn do we agree, He Yet we ar Quite sure it is love ft The other man has be not no handsome, not anything for m 1 ha and companion and enjoy me an does the other man Please, Miss Grey, which man do which | as hard ut our Id ical mutual! th n be th conservative. in r him © brilliant but to decide almont most has hypnotic almost at maken mm faithful fr more proven @ trustwe been, and still are, two men who have very great deal to me. = who has traveled a, power over me. To » of Ite are very unlike. In few Tolshevik—while I am quite attracted, He loves me, and I'm think so much of him. nd tor over two years. , big brother. He would do y and sterling friend but he does not fascinate 1 a t young man He ls ke company 1 pve? To have both ts tmponsible, TWENTY ONE YEARS OLD I never knew of one single fasetn indefin or the pe Th ever disco enough t6 hold sway controlled. And that's d one ful temporarily permanent cover that of lite I'm not going to tell you which laon't know. If you can’t make up yo ness of the years to come, as well better not marry until you meet horizon of your life that | another it is nothing the | Dear Miss Grey: We are a young | couple. Have been married two years. We can’t seem to get anywhere | | financially, tho my husband makes a | | g00d splary. | I feel ax if we ought to be saving | something out of $150 a month. I tell him if we don't begin to save something, we will never get the | habit | He seems to think so long as the larder is full and we are happy, that I} that in necessary you think HELEN. I think you are right. | | The saving habit is a wonderful | lone. It grows on people. | | The only way to get this habit, if | you aren’t naturally inclined that! way, i# to set a goal toward which to work—then work | I know a young couple who will be independent at 40. The husband! makes good money. The wife is a | careful housekeeper. But they both { have their recreations and every-day pleaxures. Both dress well and spend a part | of the summer “vacationing.” | They are arriving by this very method of saving and having a goal. | Each year they fix a certain sum | which they make up their mind they will save, barring loss of job or other | | serious handicap. ‘Then they set their eyes on that hilltop and climb toward it every | day. | Sometimes the sledding is a bit! hard. Every now and then they | beth have to go without some things they'd like to have. But at the end |of the year they make the figure | | they have wet. | I would advise any young couple | |to have an aim, financially, as well | 3 morally and mentally It's the only way I know of mak- | ing pretty sure against the day of old age and the poorhouse. | panes 1 Please tell me what Yate opinion of the “shimmie” dance, | |if you care to print it I fail to see | where the “shimmie” ix any improve- [ment on the old-fashioned “koochie” dance. The “koochie” in its extreme form is frankly obscene, The “shim- mie dance” is the “koochie” break- ing into soclety, Of course it is conceivable that clean-minded people may perform the “shimmie” with perfect inno- cence of mind, but how sane, intel ligent, clean-minded people should conceive of dancing the “shimmie” ts truly beyond understanding. The natural affinities of the “shtm- mie” are dope, boore, cigarets, cheap | music and stale air. It can never appeal to decent people. It is neith- er artistic nor beautiful. It can be nothing but grotesque, indefinitely why Half the couples who marry mistake it for lo substantial—just ating thing in life to hold its power yon it ewayed temporarily i ningle fascination in life that was powers the ° ing—it inn’ only to aise willo'-the-wispe the emotion of is thei over fascination one of the man you should marry, becanse T ur mind, keeping in view the happt- the mere present, you, would m man who will loom #o big in @ there won't be any room left for thoughts Dear Mins Grey: 1 have been unsuccessful in finding a recipe for, caramel ple in any cook book and |am very anxious to get it as soon possibla If, by any chance, P | There are just the two of us and | should have one would you please — kindly print it? Thanking you, I am, = n.G.P. 4 One quart of six epee Here in the recipe milk; one-half cup sugar; one-half teaspoon salt Put the milk on to bofl, ; a cupful. Beat the eggs, add milk to them, put sugar in pan and leave on the fire until it comes liquid and just begins smoke and stir into the boiling m then add beaten eggs and cold mi and stir constantly until mtxture b gins to thicken. Have crusts baked and fill the mixture. Cover with whip cream. Dear Miss Grey: In regard to a} letter in your column recently write ten by “The Girl of the Limberlost.”| She asks for letters requesting the first thoughts of a gentleman meeting a lady for the first time. There are many types of men ag | there are also of women and a ferent impression comes to us We instinctively like or distike ¢! whom we meet in our journey thre life. é But speaking for myself and IT eve that most gentlemen will b the same mind, I will say that my first thoughts of a lady upon meet- ing her for the first time, depend largely upon the manners and mode of dress of the lady in question. While she states that most men are willing to try and make them Be Meve that they are the only girl in the world is it not because they ex- pect these attentions from the stern- er eex ** lady who uses artificial means to enhance her charms in order attract the notice of men, I pass } My Dear Miss Grey: Just a Pri- | one Dr H.U.ROGER: Optometrist ugly, indecent. In saying this I feel I have wasted more time on the “shimmie” than it deserves, but I her favorite fad. Dear mother was| a teacher—and a very good one—| once wpon a time. “How few think justly of the! thinking few!” | “How many think they think—but never dot she quoted softly. “It's | an abominable rhyme, to be sure, but | | Will Baby Grow Up? Daddy’s Weekly Check to Decide It By CAROLYN VANCE BELL , WASHINGTON, D. C., June 19.— | What come must an member infant do to be- a of the “bables’ | aristocracy?” He must choose a father earns $1,250 a year or more. His mother must not have been gainfully employed either the year before or the year after his birth The attendant at birth must have been a physician. Both parents must be Mternte. The house he chose to live in must meet the following standard Good means of ventilation and | good use must have been made of these means; must be kept ¢ city water must be available with- | in the home; the home must house | an average of lew than one per- son to @ room—that is, a family of five needs a six-room house, ete That babies benefit from the good living conditions which result from high wages is shown by the latest report of the children's bu- reau, U. §. department of lat on infant mortality in Broekton, who Brockton ts a center of the shoe! industry and higher wages were! paid there than in other Massa- | chusetis industrial centers. The} infant mortality rate of Brockton is low compared with these other towns. Even in Brockton, 97 | of every thousand bables born alive | in the year studied died before they were one year old! With relatively high wages went good living conditions, | The infant mortality rate was highest among bables who lived in| the moat congested, homes, as it was in other cities studied by the bureau, In the 705 homes with more rooms than persons 87 out of every thousand babies born alive} died before the end of the first | year, Where there was an average of more than one person to a room | in the home, the number of deaths | per thousand births rowe to 111, Not @ single dark room was \ |thousand births in y out}; Rae ee a Ce ee nea r r Secee As father’s wages fall the baby th rate rises! Figures on left indicate number of baby deaths per r. Figures at right show father’s yearly earn- ings. All figures from surveys con- ducted by U, 8. children's bureau ven American cities, 1918, found in Brockton. Brockton the homes visited tn Nearly all of the houses in were surrounded by an ample for light and sanitary arrangements were for the most part adequate, | Turkish Atrocities | in Armenia Shown| Showing the terrible the persecution at hands of the Turks and Kurds, Lincoln Le endured by Armenians the Dr Wirt, who is touring the country in the interest of the drive to ald Armenia, exhibited moving pietures of Armenia at the First Me Church Wednesday night. King County has been allotted $100,000 ns their quota, Only $25,000 has been subscribed #o far, Wednesday, thru a brief mensage from the war department ‘The parents are prostrated. Davis was a member of the Fifth marines, one of the first outfits to be sent overseas. kinds of things because they have no Let's go buy Bolit’s French pastry And butter horns, 1414 Third ave., 913 Second ave. or 310 Pike st. MAZO | we poe Qualities and astonishi have a grudge against it because it compels me to forego the pleasure of my regular evenings at the the atre. No, T'm not “metropolitan” enough to appreciate the “shimmie.~ N. Economy of Mazola. Fe cect housewife should know the true cooking Compare the price of price of butter, lard Use Mazola for shortening your asaal will find it that for salads but Wholesome and Eco; FREE and other shortenings. the present 1 your next cake or pie crust. Follow recipe but use % to ¥ less Mazola than butter. . You comes out better, richer, tastier than than lard or compounds. Every housewife should have a ore—and perfect digestibility always follows. Not only Equal to Butter for cooking and Better than Olive Oil you buy it at half the price of either. nomical of the in- 68-page Corn Products Book. Bocailal Masusisd® Ihie'oee. Woke te dy tek. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING CO. P.O. Box 161 New York LA cf Oil for Cooking and Salads! 4

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