Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, January 20, 1920, Night Extra Financial, Page 12, Image 12

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12
EVENING PUBLIC LEDGERS-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1920
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TASTY MEAL WOMAN'S EXCHANGE ADVENTURES WITH A PURSE CARELESS BREAKS CYNTHIA
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MRS. WILSON PREPARES
APPETIZING DINNER
Four Utiles for Proper
Preparation and Cooking
of Attractive, IV hole
some Food
W hen Pork Chops Are Used
for Evening Meal, Use
Bones to Make Stock for
Soup
V, MRS.
(CcptrtsW
M. A.
n:l hi lrj. 31. .1
rfohta tcicrvcd I
WILhON
Wttso.l.
Ml
Ash Mrs. Wilson
If you have any rookery prob
lems, brluR theni to Mrs. Wilson,
flic will bo glad to answer ou
through these columns. No per
sonal replies, however, can be glrcn.
Address questions to Mrs. M. A.
Wilson, UVE.NINO PUBLIU IiEUQEB,
riiiltulplnlila.
SILK CREPE AND ANGORA
fTUit aflunl prepiuatiou of our food
Is of vital importance and jouiig
girls should be tinisht to cool, plaiu, Mib
stantial cliches in an attracilc maimer,
so that, if mother is ill or ts called from
home, daughter can rcp into Iit place
and tene the familv attractive food.
Bring daughter risht into the kitchen
and start from the vrrv beginning audj
step by step. -ho her the fundn
mental principles of good houew iforv.
The first c?utial is cleanliness: this h
absolutel necesvnrv. '1 he utensils, tin I
kitcheu and her hands must be scrupii- j
lousij clean.
The second Hlle is pcnnnm.v . 1
cups uud chill and serve with stowed
applet.
To Sme This Meal
Place the mashed potatoes on :t large
hot platter in Ihc center of the disK.
forming it like u mountain. Jsow ln
three chops on each side and pour over
the gravj and sprinkle with Unci
chopped parsley.
"Gee. mother," said the fourteen
year old son. "jou certainly cau feast
us when jou want to veal cutlets and
us just djiug for some; let's give mother
n ole of thauks."
Tin- bones from the chops were used
for makiug the barley broth.
The Woman's
Exchange
About Writing Plays
c the Ldltor of H'omcni s 1'o.qi
Hear Madam l'leaso let me know
wiierc to send n play for moving pic
lhi 'lure, if anybody writes one. And I
ulbo want to know if the writer has to
describe all the scenery in his plaj .
Vo they accept a play if it is written
in Italian? r. De 0.
Send jour nlav to am nne of the mo-
lion-pieturo studios. Most of the mo
I meau ical true ciononiv that prevent-'
all vust l on know it is extravagance
to use sugnr. butter mid eggs tu large
quantities with the idea that the dWi3
will be rich, whereas, on the contra r.
tbc liberal use of these expensive prod
nets frecpieutlj causes failure. lion-picture magazines publish a direc
The third rule is : Take time to meas- , tory of studios in the back pages. Ton
lire aci-uratel . Care and deliberation j ' Jiu gel some addresses from there, i
arc the real secrets of success. How Nothiug but the plot need be described
often have we teen splendid cooks dash b. the writer. I am sure that a plaj I
ana slap materials togetuer and then wiuien in Jiauan would not he read,
have a failure on their hands nnd most It would have to be written iu Unglish,
willing to blame eierj thing in sight but preferably on the t.vpcwriter.
tiielr own careless metuous. luKc lime
and measure aecurateh
Rule -1 Learn to serve food in the
proper, manner, as lor example: Quite1
recently I isitcd a home and the niuu !
for the evening meal was: Pried pork I
chops, mashed potatoes, stewed to- !
matoes, celerj and bread and butter. I
The mother cooked the chops and when
' leady to serve piled them oue atop the'
other on a small platter and then I '
heard the eldest daughter say: "Oh.
mother, pork chops make me sick von
alwajs have them ou Thursday and I'm
ao tired nf them."
After the meal was over I had a long
talk with Airs. Blank and arranged that
I was to visit them the following Thurs
dav We planned the meuu like this :
llarley V.rolh
I'iekled Ijeets
fillets of Pork IJiown Gravy
Mashed Potatoes Tomatoes an Gratiu
Coleslaw
Gingiv Apple Pudding Coffee
We vvent to market 'and selected
One and one-half pounds of poll:
chops, cut four to the pound.
One quarter peek of potatoes,
One bunch of young beet.
One 'No. l! can of tomatoes.
One-quarter pound of cheese.
One head of cabbage,
One-quarter peck of caokina apples.
Immediately upon reaching home we
wasbpd the beets, removed the tops,
placed them iu the Bauccpan and covered
f them with boiling water. Cook until
tender and then drain and let cool. Then
slice, place iu a dish and season with
pepper, salt and a little tiny bit of
garlic and vinegar.
About C :o0 p. in. we pared the po
tatoes and placed them iu a saucepan
and covered them with boiling water.
Cook until lender and then drain and
season with salt, white pepper, on"
half cup of milk, two table-poons ot
butter. Beat until light
" To prepare the purk ihops: Remove
the bono wilh u sharp knife. Season
with a little salt and pepper and a little
grated onion. Roll in Hour and then
dip in beaten egg und roll in tine bread
crumbs. Krj quickh until a golden
brown Pla'e iu a hot oven while mak
ing the gravy.
Tomatoes au Ur.itin
Open the tomatoes and place in a
mixing howl and add
Tito tabkspoons uf qratcd onions.
One tcaipooii of salt.
One teaspoon of ichitc pepper,
Uhrcc quartets cup of fine bread
Or umbs.
Mix well and then turn into a baking
dish and sprinkle the top with line
i-rumbs and three tablespoons of grated
cheese
Dot one tablespoon of butter over the
cheese Bake for twenty-five minutes
in oven
Ginger Apple Pudding
Wash and cut fou.- apples in pieces
and place in a saucepan aud add
One cup of sirup.
One and one-half cups of tcatcr.
Cook until apples are soft and then
rub through a strainer. Now measure
and place m a saucepan
Tuo and oik half cups of the apple
puree.
One half (.up of cornstarch.
Stir to dissolve the starch, bring to
boil Cool slowly for ten minutes and
then add
One teaspoon of lamlla extract,
One teaipoon of ginger,
Vour tnhlespuous of tugar.
One tablespoon of butter.
Beat to mil ami pour into custard
A Japanese Play
To (if rd'lor of lComaii's Van?
Dear Madam We arc going to have a
.lapanese piaj at tlie end ot this month
Could ou kindly inform me tbc correct
dress for geishas, students of Japan
and servants, and al-o where I could
bu Japanese parasols? I have been
all over town and surrounding tow us,
but have not been able to find anv
., . V. V B
The geisha girls of Japan wear the
regulation gorgeous kimouos, erv long
and narrow, with the full sleeves, and
the wide sash or obi. tied with the pe
culiar hump at the back of the waist
fh eir head dress is tho elaborate high,
stiff affair, with decorative combs or
flowers in it. If jou look at a picture I
m a .Japanese girl ou can get the idea
much better. You could liud pictures
in books at a public librarj.
Do jou meau men students? The
Japanese men wear kimonos, too, but
they are shorter and the sleeves are
plain. Their suthc are narrower and
are not tied in the back or iu a large
bow. The servants wear the same cen-
1 1 nil stj le of costume, but of plainer ma
Iterial. 1 Have jou tried in the large depart
ment stores fur the parasols? There
jure two Japanese stores here in town.
mivi, i uui sure jou couiu get them.
For shoes jou could wear bedroom
slippers, if jou caunot get the thiek
so e,l slippers that the geisha girls
wear. Or jou mlglit wear the sandals
tat arc smiplj -oles with ribbon
crossing over the iustep to keep them
on.
A Paisley Shawl
To llir Ed.tor of Iranian s Paat
Dear Madam I have a double shawl
that belonged to niv mother. It is black
with a ver wide Paisley bordr. It is
a very.prcttj shawl and is as good as
new. I have been told that I could sell
it. AVuiiId jou pha'c let mo know if 1
can and where? I urn sending jou, a
solf-addresecd envelope for answer as I
thought jou would not be able to pub
lish in the paper where anjthiug could
be sold. 1 thank jou very much for anv
information jou cau givo me in regards
to it. MRS. C.
I saw u shawl very much like the one
that jou Icsrribc. in the window of an
autique shop just recently. So I am sure
jou could sell if there. You can liud a
li-t of antique dealers iu the business
directory of the telephone book. In the
sume place jou will find a list of auc
tioneers The sell articles of this kind
all the time on commission, ami get good
prices for them. Collectors are always
on the lookout for valuable things, jou
know I hope jou will get n good price
for this.
v .
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MAKING PERSONAL REMARKS
IN LOUD TONES IN PUBLIC
Is on a Par Wilh Ridiculing the Girl Across the Room, Who
Happens to Be Your Partner's Sister, Without
Investigating First
bho looks like a
piece of suow licr
self, doesn't slic?
Hut, remember,
slip's not going to
wear It Iiero. Slio
just tried It on to
seo liovv slio would
loolt In Miami or
1'aliu Beach or
MOtnenhrro like
that. Or perhaps
she Is going to bo
spring brldo and
this Is ono of licr
trousseau frocks.
Whenever or wher
ever she's going to
wear il. thcro Is no
dcnjiiig Us charm.
The hat is banded
with the samo white
angora that edges
tho ovrrsliirt and
makes the cults and
collar of tho whito
crepo dress. That
fetching little loop
of ono end of the
narrow glrdlo under
tho edge of the
ovcrsklrt is really
meant to be.
m
IT HAPl'IJNCD at a dance, os she was
strolling about with n man during
intermission.
"Do jou know who, that awful-looking
girl is?" she nskcil, nodding Coward
a girl who sat on the other side of
the room. "She hasn't danced more
than 'three dances all evening, and I
certainly don't blame the men. She
la a perfect sight in that trimmed-up
dress."
licr companion followed her gaze.
"That's iny sister," he replied, quietly.
And the subject changed as rapidly as
n lightning-change artist in u vaude
ville show.
Tho girl who made the thoughtless
remark did not let herself think ubout
that agonizing moment for the rest of
the evening. Why i-poil her perfectly.
good time? But after everj thing was
over and she had to go home nnd be
alone with herself and her remembrance
of those words nnd the expression in
that man's cjes when she had insulted
his sister, she would have done any
thing she could think of to have that
speech safely back in her mind, un
said, no matter how strongly it was
thought.
How often wc have those periods of
regret over hastily made, critical re
marks. Aren't they iignnlzing? Haven't
jotl often said something of this kind,
or heard it said in a loud tone on the
train? You have been talking, for in
stance, nbout going to a meeting.
"Well. T hope that Jones vvomau
doesn't come," you have exclaimed in
heedlessly high tones. "She talks bo
much that nobody else" and then the
woman in front of you has turned her
head u little and you have recognized
the Jones woman's best friend. Oh,
that feeling!
"Did you hear?" a carrying roico
is raided high from the midst of n
shopping crowd, "that Esther Thomas
is engaged to that disagreeable stiik
she's been going around with " The
tone fades into a frightened whisper
as its owner recognizes Esther
Thomas's blue velvet hat going past
over n Tcry self-conscious blush on a
face that strives to keep Us cxprcssiou
indifferent.
0"'
AVE all do it, no matter how
kind-hearted we arc. We don't really
mean to bo unkind, cither. "If I
wore a hat like that, or If I behaved
like that," wc always justify our
selves, "I certainly hope people would
wiy the samu thing nbout me." An easy
(hing to say, but wouldn't it be u shock
If somebody took us seriously? flow
would wc ever live through it if wc
entered u train or trolley .wearing our
cherished little blue toque with the
fur on it and heard somebody behind
us sajiug In loud merciless tones: "Just
look at that lint I Isn't that the most
honic-mtfdc-looking thing you uvcr
saw.?" I think wd would be most indig
wwt nliout that. Wc would tome homo
raging about the thoughtlessness of
people who ride ou trolley cars or
trains, the lack ot breeding shown by
women who make critical remarks in
such loud tones that the whole car can
hear, and the unkindncss of n world
that dotsn't appreciate our thrlftiucss
In makiug cur own hatB.
But it never occurs to us to keep
our own voices down when we arc
mentioning nanus in public. We never
stop to find out whom we're talking
nbout before we btnrt to make our
"funny" remarks. . I wonder whether
we'll ever learn at least to be careful,
if wo can't be kind; to save our criti
cism until we are at home and safe from
danger of hurting any one's feelings!
Il Z i
aTF0!' .iso'5
& 14 Chocolata
""" Golden Vanilla
Delicious Food Des
serts in Powder form. They
always turn out "just right."
At Your Grocer's, 12c
TIIK MORRISON CO.. I'HILA.
Ink Stains
Take ink stains out of any white cot
ton material by covering tho spot with
salt. Saturate this with lemon juice
and let it stand In the sun n few hours.
Wash it out thoroughly afterward in
clear water.
In Bahintt
. Bilking tins rusted from
Do cleaned by rubbing the snot.n31'
Piece of paper dipped In flour. Ul"
stlcanginsplteT'grS0-1
well, try dusting tho pans lLtit "W
flour after they are grease l.n'j ,wi"
how easily tho cake SSEPXF
Tinirrriiiic3MiuunncniiiMuiiit3iniiiiiMiic3iniitiMUic3iuiirniiMC3iniitrMinjnnniiMnc3uiiiMMntc3iniiiiiniciin;iui(itaimi
1115 CHESTNUT ST.
(OPPOSITE KEITH'S)
Early Spring Hats
for Immediate Wear
$5.00 Y
u
A comprehensive collection of smart, youthful Hats
for early Spring wear. They are very attractive in the new,
simple but graceful lines. They consist of Satin and Straw,
Georgette and Straw and all Straw. All the new colors and
combinations.
Closing Out S
All Velvet Hats
2
-OO
riiinuiiiniroiimiiiiiit.jpe Accept Purchasina Agents' OrtferearaiinimiiiJI
"CINDERELLA'S DAUGHTER
By HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOB
Lovvrlaht. 1320, b-j the PiMic J.cdai.r Company
Adventures
With a Purse
T ("AX picture you brushing jour b-st
The Question Corner
Todaj's Inquiries
1. What will make cut glass shine
nfti r washing?
" De-eriho an attractive base for
au electric lamp.
3. In what prettj way is narrow
ribbon used on a uet boudoir cap?
4. Of what material is n light, dur
able lamp screen made?
G. How can the necessity of finish
ing the sides of a small apron be
avoided?
6. Describe n trou-ers press that is
convenient and easily managed
Yesterdaj's Answers
1, An enameled tin candy box makes
a pretty handkerchief box after
the candy is all gone.
U. A pretty way of finishing a nar
row ribbon girdle on a dress that
has a straight panel down the
buck is in a loop and au end on
each side of the panel
3. A steel knitting needle makes a
strong substitute for the brittle
straw to trj cakes, bread, etc., in
baking.
-J. A good-looking crown of silk can
be made out of a cone-shaped bag,
with u tassel of bead ornament
fastened to the gathered end. On
cold dajs fasten this over the thin
lacy hat, with four veil pins of tho
same kind, and let the weighted
end hang over tho brim
C, A good paste for whitening and
softening tho hands is mndo nf
myrrh, honey, jellow wax nnd
rose water
0, Discarded house slippers make
couienlent pockets for shoes or
slippers if the tops are cut off and
cretonne la attached to the soles.
-r
hat asou prepare to put it ou aud
gazing ut -t ruefullj. "It was u good!
linl " T-rtii tlirli liiil- lf'c liOTintiin.. Irt
look sort of tired, I really neid a new
one." And if jou are a prudent,
thrifty sort of peison jou will not want
a straw one jet while, on the ether
hund. the purchase of another velvet
one will 'iovv tiem unwise. Which is
tin- reason for iny telling jou about a
tun hat shop I know of where the
shopkeeper works with skillful fingers Today would ttj
lo liisuioii mouisu satin mil in all
colors. If vou sec a model in brown
that takes jour fancy, but fed henna
would be more becoming to your pe
culiar style of beauty, why, then, she i
will make ono up for you in henna I
"And how much are your hats"'" I
asked her, knowing that thev are en
tirelj hand-made. "The satin hnls,"
she replied, "arc $& to 0. "Think
of it!
Ono shop ii hnving a sale of scarfs,
all at reduced prices. One in brown.
soft aud woolly with tan stripes, has
been reduced from 53 to $G.."0. Then,
there aro others, in plain colors, silk
and wool, which have been reduced tu
$.". The nice part of it is, you know
they are good value, for these scarfs an
at one of 1'hiludclphia's oldest aud best
shops.
I once said that it is in out-of-the
way corners that one finds the best
things. But not always. Kor llki
the min who sought the four-leaf clover
jou mny have bten looking all around
for something extra nice in the wnv '
of a bun or cake for breakfast or ti-u,
when all the time jou can get some
thing right in the convenient center 01 ,
town. I speak of a nut cake. In the
appearance of the cake it is much like
u coffee cake, with white icing. But
instend of raisins it has delicious '
crushed nuts in all sorts of unexpected ,
nooks and crannies and, of course, it i
is fragrant with aromatic cinnamon.
And here is a secret if you let it get
just a little stule, and then toast it, the
nuts become warm and tho cinnamon
runny" and "sticky," aud jou have
u delicacy fit for u king. A gener
ous sUetf cuke, which should last u
family two or three mornings, may be
bad for fifty-five cents,
Kor name of (hop addrrn Woman'
I'aia Editor or uliono vruut ww, ,
Sj nopsls
Kathleen footer and Virginia West,
trhoie Hies first touch at boarding
school, arc still friendly m Inter life,
Kathleen, for a purpose, and ' ir
ginia through genuine fondness. Vir
ginia at the age of ticcnty has drunk
deep of the cup of experience. Mar-
i icu io ii poor man, she has uiiown
comparatiic poverty, and his death
beorc the birth of Iter baby ins
changtd her jrom a girl to a iromoii.
hnthken has been engaged buJ biol;c
the cngatlement because the innn tcus
poor. In the meantime le has in
herited a legacy and Kathleen, teho
has alieays liked him better than any
one else, icanti him bath. Virginia
has determined to use her one talent
aud to go on the stage to support her
self and her "baby. She asks IJill to
help her.
VIRGINIA slept like a baby in the
clean little bed iu the clean little
room that Bill had taken for her.
Kathleen, with a great pretense of
friendship, had gone upstairs with her,
leaving Bill below in the hall und had
perched gracefully on the arm of the
one comfortable ihair the room ufforded
while Virginia unpacked her bag.
"I wish I could have had jou with
me," she said depreeatiugly, "hut, you
see, these people are friends of moth
er's, and I really couldn't ask them
lo let me share mj room."
"Of course not," Virginia returned
quickly. "Why, Kathleen, I never
thought of such a thing."
"I did. It seems dreadful lo think
of jou in this ugly little place, when
jou're not used to sueh things. By
the wuv. what do jou hear frjm your
mother?"
"It takes so long to hear from her, '
Virginia said stifling a sigh, "And she
moves about so much. '
"Ilavo vou hard since Jimmy's
death?" Kathleen asked quicklj-.
Virgiuia shook hei head and tears
welled up iu her eyis. She turned
iiwnj so that Kathleen would not sec
them. She felt so alone tonight.
But once in Ited with (he light out
she wpm asleep aud when she awoke
again the sun was shining into her
room. With all of tho buojnuce ot
youth she was awake "ind thrilling to
the knowledge that todoj would bring
V,.- first r.il rnnt.lct with the world.
ItPrt.lo.. ti milfl tv litis mnltlrt ivnlllil
prove whether si e had anvthing in her
that the world wanted. Bill had asked
kn-r to wait until he. had blnzed a trail
for licr and he v. as to come that aft
ernoon and take be,r out for tea. But
Virginia had au idea that she would
like to see what could be done alone.
Just suppose, that through her own ef.
forts she could get something to do!
To be able to tell Bill that she ac
tually hod a position would be the most
wonderful thing that could happen to
her.
She had cwie coffee and toast nt a
little restaurant nearby, and then took
a car downtown. Her heart was beat
ing fast and she was frightened. She
had no idea how to proceed. The roar
of the city engulfed her, swept over
her, but she steadied herself and went
into a drug store where she copied
some nam's und addicsvjs out of a tel
ephone books into her little pocket tab
Jet. Then she proceeded to the ofhees
of one of the largest and best-known
producers in the city. Wajking
bravely up to a very much befrizzed
young person who, in an expensive
Iricotine frock, sat at the desk nud
tapped languidly with a pencil, the
handed over her card and asked to so
Mr. Atkins.
"Have you an appointment with
him?"
"No." Virginia faltered.
The girl tendered the card to A n
ginia, holding it lightly between tv
very pink iingeilips.
"Mr. Atkins never bees people unle
they have appointments." And Vie
ginia. with burning checks, felt herself
dismissed. She was angry aud embar
rassed until she icaehed the street, and
then sLe smiled u little. the was de.
termiucd not to bo discouraged. At
the next place, the producer was not in
but at the third the had better success.
A nice-lo.iking freckle-faced boy
took her card iu to Mr. Parks, while
Virginia waited. She could hardly be
lieve her cjes when he came back nnd
beckoned lo her to follow him. The
next minute she was utanding before a
man who sat at n big flat-topped desk
which was strewn with papers. lie
had a big black cigar iu his mouth
which he shifted over to one corner
when he saw hei .
"What can I do for you?" he asked,
eyeing her with shrewd gray eyes.
(Tomorrow, Tho result of the inler
icvv.) Women's Clubs
The fifteenth biennial session of the
General V( deration of Women's Clubs
will be held in Pes Moines, In., June
lU-iS, l'J'M. This will be one of the
most important sessions ever held bj
the federation, since all women's work
is being remodeled to fit (his post
war construction period, aud also to
meet the new political demands upot
women
Women are peculiarly fitted after
thirty years of organization to meet the
problems left to them as a herituge from
the war, ami the coming program is
heralded as particularly vital to the
entire thinking world.
y .
A Razor Blade
To remove paint from window panes
scrape them with ou old bafetv-razor
blade nnd the paint will shave off easil
without scratching the glass.
FREE
A Ten-Day Tube of
Pepsodent. Send the
coupon. Make this
simple home test and
see how your teeth
look then.
IV if'
"N
See How White
Teeth Can Be Without Film
All Statements Approved by High Dental Attthorilits
Perhaps your teeth are clouded by a
film. Most teeth are, more or less, save
right after cleaning in a dentist's chair.
The cloudy film looks like the teeth,
and you think the teeth are clouded. But
it is the film. Remove it and sec how
teeth look then.
Stain and Tartar C&n
Be Ended
They are due to film. Now
you can daily combat that film
and keep teeth whiter, safer
and cleaner.
The ten-day test will prove
this. The results are clear. And
the book we send will tell the
reason for them.
Make this test now. Millions
have already done it. See for
yourself the difference be
tween film-coated teeth and
clean teeth.
Your own teeth will tell you
quickly what is best for you
and yours.
6
Modernize Your
Lighting Fixtures
Those upright and bracket fixtures arc still
useful nnd proper, but tho open flame bur
ners in them should give way to the brighter,
better light which saves CO per cent, in gas
consumption. Dress your fixtures up with
An improved burner, three little mantles, an
"eye-comfort" shade and a self,-lighter.
Gives a wonderful light soft, cheerful,
easy on the eyes.
fco COMPLKTE, at your gas offle. -Tan tan
p, iBttall the "C. Y.-V." yanraeir.
Bmdcntl Arch and All Dlitrtct Oficta
THE UNITED GAS
IMPROVEMENT CO.
That viscous film which you feel .with
your tongue is the cause of most tooth
troubles. It clings to teeth, enters crev
ices and stays. The tooth brush docs not
end it. The ordinary dentifrice does not
dissolve it. So it stays much of it
and may do a ceaseless damage.
That is why so many brushed teeth
discolor and decay. You leave the film,
and that is the great tooth wrecker. De-
' spite the tooth brush, statistics show that
tooth troubles are constantly increasing.
How Teeth Are Ruined
That film is what discolors not the
teeth, ft is the basis of tartar. It holds
food substance which ferments and forms
acid. It holds the acid in contact with
the teeth to cause decay.
Millions of germs breed in it. Dentists
call the film "bacterial plaque." Those
germs, with tartar, are the chief cause of
pyorrhea.
Dental science has for years sought a
way to combat this film. Periodic dental
cleaning removed the film and tartar.
But what was needed was a daily film
combatant.
It has now been found. Convincing
clinical and laboratory tests have amply
proved its efficiency. Able authorities
endorse it. And now leading dentists all
over America arc urging its daily use.
For home use the method is embodied
in a dentifrice called Pepsodent a scien
tific product. And, to" spread the facts, a
10-Day Tube is being sent to anyone who
asks.
Now Millions Know
Now millions know by actual test what
Pepsodent call do. Everywhere you sec
the results in whiter, cleaner teeth.
Pepsodenf is based on pepsin, the di
gestant of albumin. The film is albumi
nous matter. The object of Pepsodent is
to dissolve it, then to day by day com
bat it.
Pepsin long seemed impossible. It
must be activated, and the usual -method
is an acid harmful to the teeth. But
science has discovered a harmless acti
vating method. And now this film com
batant can be every day applied.
REG. US. Mmmmmanemaa&asmmBmmmmism
The New-Day Dentifrice
The scientific film combatant, which leading
dentists everywhere now advise for daily
use. Druggists everywhere are sup
plied with large tubes. Millions
of teeth show its benefits.
Ten Days Will
Tell
Look now at your
teeth, then look in ten
days. You will sec what
this new method means
to you.
Pepsodent needs no argument. The
results are quick and apparent. Sec what
it does, read the reason, then judge it for
yourself.
Send the coupon for a 10-Day Tube.
Note how clean the teeth feel after using.
Mark the absence of the slimy film. See
how the teeth whiten a3 the fixed film
disappears.
Compare the results with your old
methods. See the effects you never saw
before. The test will be a revelation to
you. Mail the coupon to us today.
i 10. DAY TUBE FREE I
i
I
l
I
i
THE PEPSODENT COMPANY,
1104 S. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111.
r
Mail 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent to
I
Name.
Address,
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