OCR Text |
Show ' H0W-T9. SEW 4" RuthWyelh Spears c3P gl MAKE A SLIPCOVER FOR f THE HEAD OF THE BED I WLto MATCH SPREAD - jfe' PO WITH fJTfnnn ffl COTTON biluJ unu nhrrHA WW basted to cofrli Xjf MUSU) rods with a SfrrWC I V-r-dl HACK SAWx - Vffl l The number's Hack Saw Did This Trick. of tka Week ' KOOL-AID CREAM SHERBET (Made la Mechanical Refrigerator) 1 package Kool-Ald, 2 cups milk , any flavor 1 cup heavy i 1 cup sugar cream 1 Dissolve Kool-Aid and sugar in milk; turn into freezing tray and freeze SA to 1 hour (until slushy). 2 Whip cream (well chilled) until stiff. 3 Add partly frozen Kool-Ald mixture to whipped cream and whip just enough to mix well, but keep cold as possible. 4 Return quickly to freezing tray and freeze at coldest" point. Requires no more stirring. When frozen, set control back to normal. Makes over one quart. If desired lighter, beat 2 egg whites fluffy with 2 tablespoons sugar and fold into above mixture before final freezing. Adv. be included with orders for both books for the present, but the offer may be withdrawn at any time. Leaflets are 6 cents each when ordered or-dered without the books. Everyone should have copies of these two books containing 90 How to Sew articles by Mrs. Spears, that have not appeared in the paper. pa-per. Send your order at once to Mrs. Spears, 210 S. Desplaines St., Chicago, 111. i IJETSY was all agog to have a bed with no foot piece and a padded head to match her spread. Ingenuity would have to substitute for money, and she was seriously considering this and that when the plumber was called to fix a leaky pipe. As a t.'ny tot Betsy always said, "Let me watch," when workmen were coming and at 16 she hadn't grown up much. The plumber took a fine saw out of his tool bag and sawed a pipe in two just as if it were wood. Right then something clicked for Betsy. That old iron bed in the attic 1 It could be cut down. It was cut down, as shown in the sketch. The top of this bed Is padded with cotton basted to muslin. Betsy used an old comforter for padding. Her mind seems to jump with the greatest of ease from water wa-ter pipes to iron beds and from padding to old comforters. NOTE: Book 1-SEWING, for the Home Decorator, and No. 2, Gifts, Novelties and Embroideries, Embroider-ies, are now 15 cents each, or both books for 25 cents. Readers who have not secured their copies of these two books should send in their orders at once, as no more copies will be available, when the present stock is sold. Your choice of the QUILT LEAFLET showing 36 authentic patchwork stitches; or the RAGRUG LEAFLET, will America's favorite ready-to-eat cereal... FRESHKRISPI DELICIOUS! uo?. 4 tomfiiMMiirfiiii in iiiTiifffurifiiiiifiimirnii m mtui rwir --mm ir ''nr'i'unli t ini JIB pUH rjjjj? f! THE CIGARETTE OF lfPltl Mi 13 Hp COSTLIER TOBACCOS PENNY FOR PENNY YOUR BEST CIGARETTE BUY |