Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 14, 1917, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 14. 1917
ngjy August 13
Peace Dinner After Battle Cabaret.
A "peace and prosperity' dinner
will be given at Happy Hollow club
Tuesday night to offset the 'nerve
racking" battle cabaret which was
given two wes ago The entertain
ment committee thinks it fitting that
tranquility and calm should prevail
at the next big dinner-dance. Per
haps, only perhaps, doves and olive
branches will take .the place of the
tri-color and union jack and an angel
of peace supplant the marching army.
Tables will be arranged "bout the
ball room. The orchestra wilt begin
dance music at 7 o'clock, and from
that time on dancing between
courses will be the program. Otther
diversions, not dark or secret, but
open, above-board and peaceable, will
be on the program. Reservations for
the affair must be in by 8 o clock to-
niThi$ is the second of the special
dinner-dances which the entertain
ment committee of tins club has ar?
,,n,i The first was so highly suc
cessful that all members will antici
pate the second eageny.
The high cost of living dinner is
..:tl : th future.
Mr. Frank Builta. Mrs. F. J. Jum
per and Miss Henrietta Reel are the
entertainment commmcc.
At Happy Hollow Club. x
Mrs. E. H. Luikhart lias reserva
tions for twelve guests at luncheon
u.nn Mnllnw club and Mrs. Mary
E. Van Gieson for a luncheon lor six
on Tuesday. I - .
th TVari- and Prosperity din
ner at the club Tuesday night James
Nolan has reservations for fourteen
guests and Mrs. E.-W. Cunther for
twelve and K. M. Wellman for ten.
4m a Pnhtrts and Walter D.
Williams will each bve parties of
seven; Harold Johnson, m. m. u
.r.nn nH v.. C,. Edwards will enter
nf six and five, and
smaller parties will be with Ned Wil-
imi. Dr. W. M. runcr, r.
i...nn.r C T. Sadler. D. Bliss. E. II
Luikhart, Dr. Elwood, Frank Builta
H. A. Koch and H. j. atreigru.
At the Field Club.
Mr. T. B. Fradenbure has reserva
tions for a party of twenty-four at
dinner at the Field club dinner-dance
Wednesday. Mrs. W. A. Yonson will
nave a foursome party at the club
Tuesday.
At Seymour Lake Country Club. "
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Mangunr enter
tained Mr. and Mrs. Rigdon and Mr.
and Mrs. George Mayne of Council
Bluffs, Sunday. During the evening a
picnic and beefsteak roast over a
charcoal fire was enjoyed. ,
L. E. Norfleet entertained at dinner
Sunday a party of men from the
Sixth regiment. ' ,
T. L. Combs returned Sunday from
a ten days' trip to Chicago. Mr.,
Thome was a guest of- the Combs,
family Sunday. '
Mr. and Mrs. George MacDonald
entertained at dinner Sunday evening
complimentary to Mr. MacDonald t
sister, who is here from St. Joseph.
Covers were laid for six. '
The women golfers will meet for
their regular luncheon and golf game
Wednesday. The hostesses will be
A. Midlan and H. If. Roberts. Final
details will be arranged at this time
for the women golfers to go to Sioux
City in two weeks for a return visit
and game with the women of the
Sioux City Country and Boat club.
. Music Students In New York.
Mr. Carl Sibbert, son of Mr. and
Mrs. B. J. Sibbert, of Dennison, la.,
who has spent the last four years in
Omaha in voice study under Mrs.
Millie Ryan, is now in New York. He
sang- Thursday before the Rotary
club, members of which paid him, an
unusual tribute by standing and
cheering after his encore and con
tinuing their applause until he walked
the entire distance across the hall to
take his place at the table by the
president's aide.
Miss Ruth Gordan leaves Omaha
tfci week to loin Mrs. Millie Ryan
in New York. She has been soloist
at the Westminster rresoyterian
church. . . j
At Carter Lake Club.
Mrs. Arthur Schwarick won high
score at the meeting of the Cottagers
Bowling club at Carter Lake Friday.
Cottagers' dinner will be given
Wednesday night
Cottagers' Red Cross auxiliary will
nieet Wednesday morning to continue
its work for the Red Cross.
Motoring Trip. ' ,
' Mr. and Mrs. Fred S. Hadra mo
tored to Kansas City Friday, stop
ping enroute at St. Joseph to visit
. Mr. and Mrs. William Harris and Mr.
E. Seligsohn, Mrs. Hadra'a father. On
their return they will bring with them
Miss Leola Harris, who will remain
in Omaha until the first of the month,
when 6he will return to Wellesley.
Miss 'Sylvia Carroll of Kansas City,
who has been the guest of Miss Erna
L. Hadra at the family summer cot
tage al Carter Lake club since the
, first of the month, will also remain
' until September 1.
For Women Golfers.
Mrs. F. J. Despeclter will entertain
a small party of Omaha women golf
ers at the Council Bluffs Rowing as
sociation Tuesday.
On the Calendar.
The Columbian club will Rive a
card party Wednesday at 2:30 o'clock
in Lyceum hall, Twenty-second and
Locust streets. The hostesses will be
Mesdames Rose Coulton and . II.
Seidcnspinper.
Afternoon Tea.
Mrs. Doane Powell entertained at
tea at her home this afternoon for
Mrs. Karl F. Adams, who leaves soon
to make Iter home in Seattle; her sis
ter, Mrs. James Richardson cf Cleve
land, and Mrs. Roger Williams, who,
with her small son, is the guest of
her husband s mother. Mrs. E. Wil
Hams. Decorations were in yellow
, daisies. . .
ANNOUNCES WEDDING TO
CHICAGO BANKER.
Enter, the Winter "Bonnet"
f t -7 j
V" J
, , , -
What Women Are Doing
HEY call it the pinwheel hat; and, as its four
UpSWOOping points wniri io inc iujj umhc
crown while the downdrooninsr ones circle
the face under a little cascade of black ribbons, it
does its best to earn its name.
F purple velvet is the hat to the right. And, with
royal disdain for height and depth and width,
it flares out into great, soft wings that rival
an eagle in flight. t
T
0
4 v
JX&LEM cCAIYS ZlAVIST
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Davis an
nounce the marriage of their daughter,
Helen Jane, to Mr. John Robert Lind
say, son of Mr. and Mrs, J. G. Lind
say, a Chicago capitalist. Mr. Lindsay
is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity
and a graduate of the University of
Iowa. He is employed, in the i irst
National bank of Chicago.
Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay were married
at the Church of Our Savior on Ful
lerton avenue by Rev. McLaughlin,
Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The
young couple were accompanied by
the parents of the bridegroom, with
whom they will live, at present at 440
Arlington Place on the North Side.
Mrs. Lindsay is a graduate of the
Council Bluffs High school a"nd at
tended the university at Iowa City
last year. She is a member of the
Gamma Phi Beta sorority.
Housewives and Their Milk Supply
Lake, Minn. They will remain in
Omaha thisweek aid leave Sunday
night for Buffalo, Wyo., where they
will visit before taking their con
templated trip through Yellowstone
parje.
Volunteer Life Guard at
Y. W. C. A. Makes Good
A real life saving act was staged
Saturday morning at the swimming
pool of the Camphre Young Woman's
Christian Association camp, located
on the site of the old South Omaha
Country club.
Miss Nina Williams, familiarly
known as "Bill," had been swimming
all morning and was tired out. Sud
denly, out in the middle of the pool,
felt herself losing her grip, opened her
mouth to call for help, strangled, and
started to go down Miss Ruth Hut
ton, official life guard at the camp,
heard her cries, and with great
presence of mind grabbed a long fish
pole lying near, rushed to the nearest
PQ&i'''P "Pot, and extended me poie
so that the desperate swimmer could
reach it. With the aid of the pole,
Miss Williams recovered herself suf
ficiently to get to the bank.
Miss Ilutton, who is known among
the camp girls as Pete, is now con
teinplating putting out a work en
titled. "Reminiscences of Pete, the
Brave Life Guard."
The pool is twenty-hve by sixty in
dimensions and holds 50,000 gallons.
It is eight feet deep at its deepest
point.
Romance Begun jn Italy
Culminates in Gate City
A childhood romance, begun in
Naples, Italy, years ago, culminated
in Omaha when Guiseppe Tribolta, 24
years old, obtained a license in coun
ty court to wed Miss Francisca Sou
sove. 17 vears old.
Thev will be married by Father
Stenson of the South Side and will
live at 1446 South Twelfth street.
Both the young people were born
in Italy, and as children played to
gether in the streets of the historic
city of art. Their families came to
the United States, but the younsr cou
ole did not meet again until recently
when they both attended a party on
the South bide. .
Their . childhood friendship devel
oped into love and they decided to get
married. Guiseppe was drafted, but
his number is well down the list and
he probably will not be called to the
colors for several months. He said,
however, when his turn came he
would not claim exemption.
Social Gossic , . ." .- I
- Mr.'and -Mrs. Frank D. Field and
daughter, Jean and Lillian left last
week..1 for Benton Harbor. Mich.,
where they joined Mr. and Mrs. Fred
S. Abel and son. Curtis, of Salina,
-Kan., formerly of Omaha, and have
taken a cottage in Higtuan park for
the month of August.
Mr. and Mrs., P. A. Wells have
returned from their summer home in
.northern Minnesota, where they have
been all season. ' Mrs. Wells also
made a visit to Winnipeg. Canada, and
Permitted to Change Name
From Moriarty to JVIorey
Dr. Pierre Colon Moriarty, well
known Omaha physician, and his wife
Clara Moriarty, were given permis
sion to change their name to Morey
by Judge Leslie, sitting in equity
court. Dr. Moriarty testified most
people knew him by the name of
Morey and that much confusion re
sulted. The telephone directory and
the city directory give his name as
Moriartv. but he says his intimate
friends would not know him by that
name.
Club Women of Nearby
Towns Coming to Meeting
Club women from Valley, Waterloo
Elkhorn and other points m tin
county will attend the meeting of
Douelas county women called for
Tuesday afternoon at the city hall,
to oreanizc a Council of Defense,
Mrs. Z. T. Lindsay, Mrs. Draper
Smith and Dr. Olga Stastny of the
state committee will attend.
Mrs. A. L. Frrnald, president o
the Omaha Woman's club, will pre
sent the purposes for organizing.
While the milk producer and the
milk dealer have left a bottle of clean,
unadulterated milk at the consumer's
door they have done their duty. But
by improper treatment in the home,
the housewife may make this milk
absolutely unfit for food, especially
for babies. She does this unknow
ingly, by methods which she has used
ap a matter of course. Why there
have not been more cases of sickness
due to these careless methods is a
wonder, and there is no doubt that
many of the minor complaints of un
known origin might be traced to any
one or a combination of the lax meth
ods mentioned here. These methods
consists: (1) in placing the milk in
unclean vessels; (2) in exposing it
unnecessarily to the air; (i) in failing
to keep it cool up to the time of using
it; and (4) in exposing it to flics.
Milk absorbs all impurities very
readily whenever it is exposed to the
air or placed in unclean vessels. These
impurities or bacteria are present in
all forms of dirt and in the dust of the
air. Not only this, but milk very
readily absorbs odors from other ar
ticles of food which may be placed
near it. Many of the bacteria which
may contaminate the milk are those
,i nIirc
Causing comagiuus uincanco. uin
may cause digestive trouble, which, m
the ease of babies, may prove fatal.
These bacteria may originate in the
home in spite of the fact that there is
no disease presents nut upon Deing
ntroduced to Jhe milk whicn is not
properly cared for multiply very fast
and may prove a source of sickness to
the babies. Much of the so-called
cholera infantum and summer bowel
troubles of infants is due to impure
milk. The amount of the contamina
tion denends lareelv upon the uten-
i iu and the air to whicn tne nunc
comes in contact. The air of even a
so-called clean room contains many
imnnrities. The science of bactcr-
inWv is raising the standard of clean
linpss of all utensils used in handling
milk, as this source of contamination
lias been proven to be one of the
worst that students of sanitation nave
had to combat. Bacteria whicl get
into the milk from the air or from the
vessels multiply rapidly as long as
milk remains warm. All milk above
50 degrees Fahrenheit should be con
sidered warm. At lower temperatures
the bacteria either are dormant or in
crease slowly. ' Clenliness and cold
arc imperative if one would have good
milk, although if it is consumed so
quickly after production that the bac
teria in it do not have time to in
crease much say within two or three
hours the importance of cold is les
sened. Milk from the grocery or
bakery which is kept in a can. open
much of the time, possibly without
refrigeration, is dangerous and should
be avoided.
Here are a few suggestions whicn
every housewife should follow in han
dling milk and cream if she wishes to
do everything in her power to con
serve' the health of her family.
The best way of buying milk is in
bottles. Dipping milk from large
cans and pouring it into customers'
receDtacles on the street, with all the
incident exposure to dusty air not al
ways tne cleanest, is a bad practice.
Drawinar milk frorti the faucet of a
retailer's can is almost as bad as dip
ping, because, although the milk may
be exposed to the street air a little
less than by the dipping process, it is
not kept thoroughly mixed, and some
consumers will receive less than their
proportion of cream.
If situated so that it is impossible
to get bottled milk, do not set out
over-nisht an 1 uncovered vessel to
collect thousands of bacteria from
street dust before milk is put into it.
Have the milk delivered personally to
some member of the family, if possi
ble': if not, set out a bowl covered
with a plate, or, better still, use . a
glass preserving jar in which nothing
but milk is put. In the latter case
use a jar with a glass top, bt omit
the rubber band.
Paper tickets are often more or
less soiled; hence if they are used do
not Dut them in the can, bowl or jar.
For the same reason money should
not be nut in the can.
Take the milk into the house as
soon as possible after delivery, partic
ularly in hot weather, .never allow
the sun to shine tor any lengm ot
time on the milk. Sometimes milk
delivered as early as 4 a. m. remains
out of doors until 9 or 10 o'clock.
This is wrong. If it is not conveni
ent to receive the milk soon after it
is delivered, indicate to the driver a
sheltered place, or provide a covered
box in which the milk bottle or can
may be left.
On receiving the milk it should be
placed in the refrigerator at once,
where it should be kept at all times.
Milk cannot be kept without ice ex
cept in cold weather.
Do not pour the milk into a bowl
or pitcher for storage. Each time
the milk is handled it collects some
impurities. It should, therefore, re
main in the original bottle until
needed. Always be careful to clean
the neck and month of the bottle be
fore emptying. If you do not do this
hundreds of bacteria may enter the
milk from this source alone. Never
leave the milk bottle uncovered as
long as there is any milk in it. If
the paper cap has been destroyed,
keep an inverted tumbler over the
neck of the bottle.
Milk should never be left exposed
to the air f pantry or kitchen, nor
should it be placed in a refrigerator
in the same compartment as strong
smelling foods like fish, cabbage or
onions. A convenient way to serve
milk and a very sanitary one is to
rinse the outside of the original bot
tle well and then serve directly from
the bottle. In case the milk is deliv
ered in some other form than in bot
tles, extreme care should be taken to
have the vessel which the housewife
uses for storage absolutely clean, and
it should be kept covered at all times,
both before and after it is filled with
milk. Always keep the refrigerator
clean and sweet. See that the drainage
is good and scalded otit at least once
a week, as every particle of spilled
milk or other neglected food is a
source of contamination for days. Ex
treme care should be taken to wash
the bottles before returning to the
milk man. This should be done with
lukewarm and not hot or cold water.
Rinse the bottle thoroughly and then
set it up to drain. The consumer
may wash and scald the bottle. But
in most cases tnis is aone so
thoroughly at the plant that if the
housewife is careful to rinse the bot
tle thoroughly, there will be no need
of washing it.
Never use a milk bottle tor any
other purpose than for milk.
All utensils with, which milk comes
in contact should be rinsed, washed
and scalded, each time they are used.
Use fresh water, not dish water which
has been used for washing other uten
sils, or wipe them with an ordinary
dish towel. The best method is to
pour in clean water and set them
away unwiped.
Particular care must be taken in
washing and scalding utensils used
for infant feeding. Never use a rubber
tube between a bottle and a nipple
or a bottle with sharp corners.
The housewife who follows these
instructions may feel asured that she
is performing her part as far as she
can in caring for the health of those
in her charge. Slack methods in hand
ling milk can only be excused by
laziness, as it does not require a
large amount of arduous work.
Advice to Lovelorn
By Beatrice Fairfax
Make Your Own I)'ecllon.
Pear Mian Fairfax: My parents are nulte
wealthy. They have only thought of a
brilliant future for me and are determined
that I shall marry well. , The man I love
(they know him, for wc 'have known each
other for yearn) 1b poor, but I know he will
make good. My parents think I cannot be
happy with a man who must start a ca
reer. There la a wealthy man, nine years
my senior, who wishes to marry me. I
love the poor man dearly and love my par
ents, too. I am here to do as they wish.
Do you think I could forget my ideal. My
parents think the world of the rich man.
BILLIE.
My dear child, what you want me to
decide for you Is whether you are capable
of sacrificing luxury and comfort for love.
And I cannot answer this. After all, your
parents, who know you so well, may be
meeting this situation with a real know!
edge vt what you need to bring you happi
ness. Parents are never. In cases like
yours, governed by ambition and cold
blooded worldllness they are trying to help
their children to real happiness. Now the
thing for you to do is to force yourself
to rise above emotion and feeling and to
look at the thing sanely. What kind of
a wife will you make for a poor man?
Will you nag at him anil hinder his growth?
Will you miss the things which now make
Up your world? Will you regret the bril
liant marriage you might have made? Or
will you be a real helpmate and compan
ion r Tour decision must be based on hon
est answers to these questions.
Girls are expected to supplant the
negro waiters on railroad dining cars.
In some of the large New York
hotels girls are replacing boys as ele
vator operators.
Mrs. Mary H. Sharp, 9S years old.
registered for national service at
Montgomery City, Mo.
, The Pennsylvania railroad now cm
ploys more than 2,300 women and
girls in its operating department.
Mrs. Betsy Osboin, a 92-year-o!d
resident of Cottonwood Falls, Kan., is
knitting socks for the soldier boys.
Every county of Michigan is soon
to have a volunteer woman shop -inspector
to look after the welfare and
interests of the women workers.
Three of the five companies of sum
mer students engaged in military
training at the University of Okla
homa are composed exclusively of
women.
Miss Caroline Breyfogle, dean of
women at Ohio State university, of
ficially represented the city of Colum
bus at the high cost of living confer
ence held recently in Washington.
To fit themselves to take the places
of bachteriologists and public health
workers who arc called to war, a score
of young women are taking an emer
gency course ill bacteriology at the
University of Wisconsin.
A campaign to recruit women for
farm work has been started by the
National League for Women's Serv
ice in co-operation with the Depart
ment of Labor at Washington.
Eighteen Smith college women,
comprising the first unit of American
college women to do reconstruction
work in the devastated sections of
France, will sail within a few weeks.
It is not .generally known that a
woman founded daily journalism. The
first daily newspaper was the Daily
Courant, established in London in
1702 by Elizabeth Mallet and edited
bv her.
'One of America's best known
librarians is Miss Cornelia Marvin,
who holds the office of state librarian
of Oregon and in addition fills the
presidency of the Pacific Northwest
Library association.
In Japan the professional beauty
loves to appear with golden teeth; in
India she prefers them stained red,
but in certain parts of Sumatra no
lady who respected herself would con
tinue to have any front teeth at all.
Mrs. lames M. Lewton, daughter of
Major General Robert Anderson, who
was in command of Fort Sumter at
the beginning ot the civil war, has
presented a chime of bells to the cadet
chapel at West Point as a memorial
to her father. ,
One hundred of the women and
girls employed in a large Philadelphia
knitting mill are devoting their noon,
hour to packing "fracture pillows"
with waste thread and materials con
tributed by the mill. The pillows will (
be donated to the Red Cross.
Dr. Florence E. Richardson, pro
fessor of psychology in Drake univer
sity, and said to be the only woman
head of a department in an American
university, has obtained a year's leave
of absence to help her mother man
age their big sheep ranch at Scotts
bluff, Neb.'
He Must hooee.
Dear Miss Fairfax: Four years ago I met
a young man employed in the same office,
with whom I fell In love. For two years
we kept up an Intimate friendship. Two
years later he met another girl, with whom
he became Infatuated. About two years
after his acquaintance with the other girl
he professed hli lovs for me, claiming that
his affctlon for the other girl was merely
infatuation. Believing him sincere, I took
him back with a view of marriage. Whert
the other girl learned of his change of
heart she refused to give him up and ha
been persistent in her endeavor to win him
back and Is still telephoning and writing
to 111 m. My fiance has admitted to me that
ho thinks of her without wanting to.
SYLVIA G. I.
All you can do Is insist that this young
man look Into his own heart and make a
choice and decision by which you must nil
abide. Uncertainty Is almost hauler to bear
than actual trouble. For when you face
calamity you gather yourself to meet it.
Don't permit yourself to be Jealous or to
nag and question and doubt.
stopped for sonic time at White Bear j woman.
Illinois Lad Said to Have
Run Away to Omaha to Wed
. Mrs. Frank Rittenmeyer of Rock
Island, III., has written Acting County
Judge Sundblad asking him to aid her
in finding her son, t'red Rickweiler,
who she says ran away from home
and declared his intention of coming
to Omaha to wed a woman several
years older than himself. Young
Kickweiler,-according to his mothers
letter, is only 17 vears old. She says
he is infatuated with a 27-ytar-old
Reputation Established.
A Future Guarantee
We dare not jeopardize our
priceless asset, Good Reputation,
for a transitory Profit. We dare
not misrepresent our goods or our
endorsements.
Consider this well!
Reputation is the safeguard of
inexperience. "Avoid those that
make false claims." Whether or
not a man has expert knowledge
of Diamonds, Watches and Jew
elry; he is safe if he puts his trust
in merchants of good reputation.
Why take a chance with small
or unknown dealers when your
rredit is good with Loftis Bros &
Co., The Old Reliable, Original
Diamond and Watch Credit House,
409 South Sixteenth Street Es
tablished 1858.
This business, "the largest of its
kind in the world," is a monument
to the proverb, "Honesty is the
Best Policy."
Those in Glass Houses.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am 23 and deeply
in love with a girl about the ame age. She
has been going about with 'ft married man,
but found out her mistake and dropped
hiin. Now. the question la: Do you think
it would spoil my reputation If I married
this girl? I am sure she would do anything
to rectify this mistake. She would make
any man a good wife. E. P. I.
You will be very lucky tf this girl will
have you. What blunder has this girl made
that Is half as great as the probably half
dosen wrongdoings In your own life? Have
you ever chanced to read a book ki which
the Great Teacher warned only the guiltless
to cast the first stone? I am sorry for your
reputation and courage and generosity If
thev cannot stand the test of this girl's
sadly regreted blunder.
ASK FOR and GET
orlick's
The Original
Malted IVIilk
Substitute Cost YOU Sam PriCA
Important Announcement
in which truth appears stranger
than fiction
August Display and Advance Sale
In connection with great savings during August in
Fur Coats, Sets and Pieces this store offers like advan
tages in the purchase of sew serge dresses, new suits, new
coats, new skirts and new blouses.
$25.00 Fall Suits at
$27.50 Fall Suits at
$33.50 Fall Suits at
The New Fall Suits
.$22.50 $38.50 Fall Suits at..$3Z.OO
.$24.50 $40.00 Fall Suits at. .$34.50
.$27.50 $45.00 Fall Suits at.. $37.50
$50.00, $60.00 and $75.00 suits also included; altera
tions are free.
Suit buyers are delighted with the "Thorney" suits.
May we show them to yout
Every summer garment greatly reduced for rapid
clearance.
AT WELCOME ARCH
LW.I
v.
1812 FAKNAtJ
J
The Qui Place
U.? WhmeBad
n01, ' WeATHIR CAT
j Tired? , SpoiiYour
I . Bored? . - P"ASE"
1 Hungry? v
The Blackstone Roof sup-
Y plies the remedy. The most l
. yL delightful recreation spot in O
Omh. A wonderful place 4 '
foi diningf or light refresh-
ments, music and dancit.. M
t Fr reservations in ad- IJ
v VnC8 raey jj
12$ - .
Orieral Cefe' Rpons
xivd our FoxjaUiin Roorrv
irt urvsurp&ssed for
Appointments .nd service.
Blackstone Roof G&rden visi
tors have free access to the
entire fl floor. whicK is v
dalaxy of wonderfully delightful-
rooms designed to promote the
joy of living by surrounding
pleasure with beauty.
m ! km
V
ATTENTION!
The "White" corps is executing its
regular morning and evening drill.
One, two, three brush! It's the
wgetting-up" drill quite as import
ant to the children's health as setting-up
drill is to the soldier. It's
health discipline which many a
rheumatic grown-up wishes he had
been taught years ago.
Give each of your children a tube
of S. S. White Tooth Paste for his
Very own, and they'll acquire the
tooth brushing habit in no time. It's
a pure, wholesome, non-medicated,
cleanser, deliciously flavored and as
pleasant to use as it is efficient.
For 73 years the S. S. White Dental
Manufacturing Company has been
helping the dental profession. Why
not let S. S. White Tooth Paste
help you?
Your druggist has it. Sign and mail
the coupon below for a copy of our
booklet, "Good Teeth; How They Grow
And How To Keep Them "
THE S. S. WHITE DENTAL MFG. CO.
MOUTH AND TOILET PREPARATIONS
211 SOUTH 12th ST. PHILADELPHIA
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