Evening Star Newspaper, July 17, 1922, Page 21

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An Distinctive Styles in Monogram and Summer Stationery BREWE®D &rm _fir every Occasion TWELFTH STREET It 1s ‘diMcult to escape from ailk braid and from fringe. Most women thought they were free of the latter when fringed homespun skirts and satin capes ran the idea to its death. But Paris, who loves fringe as though she had Indian blood in her velns, in- tends to continue its use, She puts b'u_és,Mo.rhs.An ts Beautify s Complexion INTEN DAYS Nadinola CREAM The Unequaled Beautifier Used and Endorsed By Thousands b=] Guaranteed to remove 217 tan, freckles, pimples, M sallowness, etc. Ex- treme cases. Rids pores and tissues of | Imparities. Leaves the skin clear, soft, Dbeakhy. At ieading toilet counters. At Pre-War Prices,; Two Sizes, B0c. and 8100 NATIONAL TOILET CO., Parvis, Tenw teeth the right way. It’s safe— no grit. Largesize25c Medium size 10c OF THE_ SEN MODELS FRC N _PARIS, WHICH SHOW TRIMMING IN BLACK IT IS ARRANGED RINGED AT A NEW SILK BRAID. IN SQUARES, EDGES. it on new frocks intended for Amer- fcans, flaunting it in odd and curi- ous designs. There is some justification for the new method of using fringe, and the idea, novel as It is, will be just the Made from Original Method of Braiding BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. sort of thing we will incorporate on every-day frocks in_groups of ten thousand; for, as the French observer sald, we do everything in millions. The sketch shows how this narrow bralding 13 applied to & frock of light colored crepe de chine. A group of fine pleats is placed on one side of the skirt; opposed to them are three immense squares of flat brald, fringed at one side. The sleeves have the butcher's cuffs which were launched by Jenny in February, made of brald with fringe at the outside. Among other trifies that French dressmakers will continue Into the autumn is the handkerchief intended to give a color scheme to a gown or hat. Caroline Reboux uses a ban- danna handkerchief in red, black and yellow.as a crown scarf, tylng it on one side in a pirate’s knot, what the children call rabbit ears. Jenny, who appears to be better known among Americans than many of their own dressmakers, was re- sponsible for this handkerchief. not on hats, but gowns. She used long, colorful ones in the hip pockets of plain frocks. They did not hide their light. They fell out of the pocket to attract the attention of the public. They were not modest and they wera not intended for use, for one corner was sewn in the pocket and the re- mainder was intended to drip over the skirt. These handkerchiefs came _into fashion with short fringe. Collot combined two and three colors in one-inch silk fringe to trim the edges of belts, sieeves and panels. Pos- sibly Jenny can induce the Amerl- cans to accept this one-inch fringe which she puts at the edge of her squares of braid, simply because she has success in almost everything she attempts. The butcher's cuff is one of her innovations. Hundreds of women wear it without knowing its name, yet Jenny took it directly from the butcher. It is a wide piece of lace, or plain white organdle, or gorgeous brocade. It began with white wash material. It ends in glory. (Copyright, 1922.) PHistory of Pour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. LEWIS VARIATIONS — Lewison, Ludwig, Ludovics. RACIAL ORIGIN—OId Teutonic. SOURCE—A given name. Your natural conclusion is that the surname of Lewis and its variations are but developments of the Chris- tian name of Louis, despite the dif- ference in spelling; and in the main this is true, though Lewis also is traceable to other sources. However, the original form of the | given name Louls was not Louis. 1t Chlodowig. It was brought into western Europe in the barbarian in- vasions which swept out the Roman ernments and submerged the Cel- populations. It was a_fighting name. It meant “Glorlous Fight. In what today is France the name became softened and shortened un- .r the influence of the Latinized | Celts into Clovis. Then, through the dropping of the intial “C,” and the further softening of the “v” to the sound of “w” or “u,” it became Louis. Taken into England by the Norma it often came to be spelled Lewis In what is today Germany only the “Ch" was dropped. and the second “o" slurred over, remaining as Lud- wig. Still farther east it has re- tained more of the original form as Ludovics. In all these parts of Europe it became & family name in |the same manner that other given names have. But through the English the name traces back often in the middle ages to Levi, many of the Jews coming to that country deciding to Anglicize their names. It also traces back in a few instances to Lewes, the name of a city in England. Lewes, DURUM WHEAT SEMOLINA and genuine egg PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Noted Physician and Awthor. Richest in gluten and they have that homemagde taste 10¢.! Long-Distance Sitting. One need not be a sexagenarian in order to achieve valetudinarianism via the arterlo-sclerosis route. Mere vouths of thirty or forty can make a very creditable beginning in the game by purchasing a modest equipment, say a soft yellow lamp, a good mur- der story and an easy chair—I mean a chair one can relax in without risk of sliding to the floor, not a chair you pay for in easy Installments— something bullt after the heart of the complete sedentarian. Should the dry spell prove ephemeral, after all, I am going to inaugurate a movement to equip every place, including the private ones, with chairs which furniture manufac- turers and dealers call “easy chairs,” so that as soon as anybody settles back to enjoy his eating or drinking he'll slide under the table early enough to conserve his arteries. Pathologists and physicians are still asking each other whether excessive arterial pressure (“hypertension”) in- duces_ arterial degeneration (harden- ing of the arteries) or the beginning of the arterial degeneration brings about the increase of blood pressure. This debate merely goes to show how shortaighted and perverses pathalo- gists can be. The veriest schoolboy could dectde whether the hyperten- sion causes the arterial hardening or the hardening causes the increased tension. Of -course it does! The pathologists themselves tell us so, though they are not aware theyre telling us. They agree cordially with physicians in giving the general eti- ology (as a pathologist would say) of both hypertension (high blood ressure) and arterio-sclerosis (har- xcnlnl’ of the arteries) thus 1. Chronic toxemia (poisons of one kind and another retained in blood or not promptly destroyed). 2. Al kinds of infections, acute and chronic, whether of the minor and Jocal class, like chronic running ear or septic teeth, or of the general or systemic kind, like typhoid fever or syphills. 3. Bxcessive use (abuse) of food, alcobol, tobacco, some drugs, coffee or tea. 4. Long-distance sitting. Now pl do not get excited or anxious about this, for such harmful emotions increase blood pressure and 2dd to the wear and tear on the ar- teries. If you have started in to sit the game out, go right ahead sitting —the game will be over in a little while for you, particularly it you help things along by availing your- self of some of the other life-shorten- ing factors. I've given the list. Help yourself. Now without getting morbidly scien- tific about the matter, just read over NOXZEMA THE COMFORTING CREAM Jor. Sunburn-~ and Jired Achin y Heet - “"Feel it heal” -4\ . . Worth looking into ‘Ready at the touch of a match; out at the turn of a lever. That's the kind of stove for economy and convenience. . All ycur questions about what * -the Florence Qil Cook Stove will do; how it operates, and how it Jooks can be answered by trying it yourself, + You are invited to make the test at any store where Florence Cook in the brief renthe! xpla- o Stoves die S sle, ':u;'. Imade in 5-n.ouo= ith fac. = . 0 e causes of increase Central Oil & Gas Stove Company |1ic0d pressure and hardening of the r, Mass. arteries. Ther & whole spring FIQEENCE. drive of sermons thera. Why abould paisons of one kind and another be retained in the blood? And why shouldn't they be promptly destroyed? ‘Wonder if lotig-distance sitting has anything to do with it? What do you think, now? Do yey helieve ‘,l:fi: ound doe: 2 s oy e T Msuf:&'u.%“‘ I or not abls or - oc;:_flx More Heat § Less Care' eating and drinking | in its deadly work omn the cells and tissues of the body, including the ar- teries. Life-saver: Two miles of oxygen three times a day on the hoof. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. That Reduction Crase. Now, then, young women and wom- en who decline to divulge your age, and maybe an occaslonal man, let me briefly explain about this reduction business. Any reader who can and does use the title of Mrs. and who mentions her height and weight may have what help I can give her in the effort to reduce, provided she is heavy enough t6 warrant the effort. Any reader who doesn't use the title Mrs. may ask for such advice from me but will not receive it unless age, helght and weight are mentioned and reduc- tion seems advisable in my judgment. Under no circumstances will I give any one any Inmstructions or advice about reducing welght when these essentlal data are lacking. There are times, ahout forty or fifty on quiet days, when I wish Dr. Karell had kept his old regimen to himself, Girls and Cigarettes. I notice you advise a trouncing for boys caught smoking cigarettes. Would you advise the same treatment for a girl aged sixteen who has smoked cigarettes since she was four- teen?—Mrs. W. A. B. Answer—I advised a sound thrash- ing or two for boys of normal men- tal caliber who smoke cigarettes to “show o but not for the usual boy smoker, for in most instances it is just a mark of mental weakness and that calls for segregation and insti- tutional control. The same applies to girls. Girl cigarette smokers are generally of the moron class—higl grade imbeciles. Now,and then ane of normal mentality smokes because she has acquired the motlon that it is ‘smart” or something like that. Her mother or other responsible feminine guardian may well administer a vig- orous slapping as a reminder. What is most needed is a supply of ralls, feathera and tar for those who fur- nish cigarettes to boys and giris. “Conservation Handkerchiefs. One thing I have never seen alluded to in your column, maybe because it is strictly a habit of the men. But I wonder whether it is not just as bad to blow the nose on the street, con- serving handkerchiefs, as it is to spit on the sidewalks.—Miss B. B. H. Answer—Rather worse from the sanitary viewpoint, and even less ex- cusable. Not until we have plain clothes sanitary police sort of gum- shoeing around, nabbing such offend- ers and haling them before the chief for a fine—say for parking refuse in a restricted area~-may we expect to enjoy municipal cleanlinesa (Copyright, 1928.) —_— ‘Take some ripe melons, cut them in atrips lengthwise, poel and lay them in a stone jar, cover with 'inl‘Pr and let stand for twenty-four hours. Then :.tng"fl““ ulel.%l;l ‘:ll to esch quart © vinegar unds of brown su and u\”"‘lf an ouncs each of cloves, ciunaman and whole mace. ‘well, the in the -'ulen and let simmer &: Efl. ht g:fi% ey BY ELSIE ROBINSON. ‘They were playing the finals {n the valley league series. You know how it is, folks, when the champlonship is hanging on a hair and it looka as if the home team was golng to win. Some tenslon? I'll say! An' Billy Ayes —h third baseman on the Scoots, y'u know—Bllly was at the bat and Blll was mad! The ump had called it & strike when, according to BilL it was a ball, What Billy wanted to do to that ump would have made a cannibal feast look like a Sunday school pienic. Ho roared, .he hissed, he tore around in circles. Then he started to sulk. He sulked. And sulked! Now Bill 18 & favorite and the fans, being human, hated the ump. So for a time they enjoved Billy's fireworks But after a while 1t became a nui- sance. A lot depended on that game and they wanted the ga £0 on S they started to yell ball!"" First one, then another, then f rock- ing chorus of “Play bawwl!!” And Bill swallowed his vocabulary and played ball. | Isn't that life, pals? Sooner or later the ump makes a decision against | us—our plans go wrong, our hopes! are shattered. Death or sickness. | falseness or fallure step in and spoi our aim. We rebel. We fly into paroxysms of rage and grief. We sulk. And then the gang who've been depending on us turn upon us with a great cry of “Play_ball! want to stay in the game. How heartless we think they are— how unappreciative of our feelings But are they? Isn't it really @ bless- ing_that life and folks are planned that wa. ®o that, despite our tears and sulks, we are vanked on into the hustling and healing of work? How about you, fricnd? Has the ump ruled against you? Are you nur ing some old grievance, some old sin or losa? Play ball! Forget your tears, your sighs, your sulks. You may rage until doomsday, but the ump won't change his decision—umps nover do. Look! The gang Is depend- ing you; the game i walting There's no woom on the team for a quitter. Get in and hit the old sphere snother wallop and the very frenzy of your angry aim may give you a home run. Play bawwwl (Copyright, 1922.) Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL The Rainhohse. Not long ago, In motoring past a country home for children, where each jolly little cottage bad its pret- ty name—Rosebud Cot cote, Chickadee Cottage, and so on— I noticed a low gray, char low which bore the sign house. “That is where they on rainy days,” explained the friend with whom 1 was driving. there 13 every kind of game, with sorts of toys and equipment for any number_of jovful rainy-day occupa- tions. It is kept, 1 think, solely for use on days when the rain falls; so that wet weather is not re a catastrophe at all, but as a chance to visit this fascinating house.” What a splendid fdea, T thought, and what a pity it is that most homes are 100 small to boast an extra *ral house” reserved for showery seasons' all go to play One thing the wise mother certainly can do, however, and that is to keep some special games and toys that may be played with only in damp weather, when outdoor play is pro- hibited. If youngsters have no toys except the ones they know intimately, and are already half tired of, it will have to be an Ingenfous mother who can keep them busy and occupied when the rain falls. One mother keeps all the empty boxes that come into the house—candy boxes, starch boxe: spool boxes, and the like—and supply of pretty figured wallpaper. On rainy days the children cover the boxes with the paper, being supplied with mucilage and blunt scissors for the purpose, and the boxes are put away ta hold Christmas and birthday gifts. They love to “cut out” things, and mucilage is generally a forbid- den luxury. This is a pastime that is all the more enjoyed because they are making things that can really be used later. land cut them in slice: Here 13 a splendid way to utilize a square of wide materlal, be it silk, chiffon or what not. -Fold the square inte triangles as shown in the shaded rt of the diagram In the upper 1 Band corner. Mark off the neckline (shewn by the dotted Hne) and have the edges hemstitched together. Cut off the edge, being careful not to cut deap enough to open the seam formed by the hemstitching, Cut off & small d Y toaulr B dides 00 'ms the open- Sag’for the hands. Btitoh & band of velvet around the edges for cuffs. te the cuffs with fabric flow- D.r:w?qu or face the meek with vel, vet, n pliqued or embroidered flower finlshes this charming neglige made from & square, .h (Coprright, 1832.) Rita Weiman Disousses “New” ‘Women and “01d” Men. Some one once sald that “back of the dreamer there's alwhys the ichemer making the dream come true”—and back of the picture (also the director) ther always the writer, making the story come true (or untrue, have it your own way!). Rita Weiman is one of the writers miaking the story true, as vou know if you saw her “Footlights” with Elsie Ferguson, or the Goldwyn pro- duction of “The Grim Comedian,” which she not only wrote, but kiso helped to direct. Apart from these little feats of the pen, she has some ideas which may be of general fin- terest, especially to “wimmin,” the hitherto oppressed! We belong to the me club, v, The Woman Pays, and after the luncheon last week we went silk- stocking shopping, and Miss Weiman talked about women, new knd old. “The most hopeful sign of this ‘new age'" sald Miss Weiman, “is that women have become willing to help each other. That has not al- ways been the case. There was a time, not so very long ago, when women were not so willing to stretch forth a helping hand to the members of their own sex, especially if any question of sex rivalry was Involved. Perhaps that was because the race for the mighty male, the question of support and the pressure of economic dependence were such. vital matters. They are not so vital today. And so the " spirit of comradeship among women has had its birth tnd it is a fine progressive thing. Women who are successful should never forget one thing, and that is to help other women below them on the steep upgrade—the less fortunate ones.” Miss Weiman belleves that all this feministic movement is tending to- Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL. WOMAN’S PAGE. The Wife Who Wouldn't Settle Down! Sequel to “Brides Will Be Brides.” By Lucille Van Slyke. : Off With the Old Doctor, On With the New! “You're about all in.” She nodded ‘Shelley,” she whispered quickly, “do_something for me, will you? HE performance for the benefit | Come l;uni with Rose and me when of the Hicksville Athletic| ¢, €0 back to the Lindsays." ‘But I thought Dr. Leonard sald Field fund was over, but the [ he was taking you in his car curtain was still ascending| “He is, and Rose is frightfully and descending upon the stageful of ;?filfil;‘bfi‘:‘l u“'-‘ B AT I : sgrace myself, but figttered players, who were not at all | hate getting Rose into trouble. And aberse to taking all the applause they [ when we phoned to the house &t were getting. It had been a wonder- | Supper time" ' (she twisted the big ful evening for Hicksville! The town | jiion on the front of his costume) hall was crowded to its capacity. It|just said the babies were both in had thrilled to speeches by its promiy| ;ifid I;:.dm_e”d'd—lh; he dldr"‘l bell:\p i own, because they—they nent oitisens. It had giggled over the | 250 SOMS ORI, BICusT TRNTAY high school boys' minstrel show: had [ Rose thinks if we just blew in with listened politely to recitations by the | the doctor that théy might be very town elocutionist that it had been |rude to him. hearing for years back; but the| Sheldon tucked his arm things that it had enjoyed most had | hers. been two numbers that were decided | “Of course I'll come. 1 was a brute innovations for Hicksville, even if|to drag you into this in the first they were the oldest things in the|place when I knew how John felt world. These numbers had been |about it and how peeved Doc Jack hastily put together during the day | always makes him." of the performance to fill awful gaps that had been left in the program by It seemed an endless time to Mer- riam before they were in their street the illness of some of the most promi- nent local talent, but it had not been clothes and could leave the hall. She was trying to keep up a pretense at local talent that conceived the ideas|gay chatter, but” she was very for these number: It had been a “visiting lad happy—and a little guilty, too, she acknowledged to herself, as she had Mrs. John Munro Lindsay, who jump- ed bravely in and saved ihe day. With been neglecting her babies. She was quite sure that she had been much nothing more than some sheets and hastily constructed cotton batting|mother and sisters RITA WEIMAN, One of the creative wom come o her own. > T who ward equality, when men and women will work and play side b: partners in truth. Women, she are going to run their lives very much much as men hlave always run theirs. Women will give to the home what men have given to it, a certain amount of interest, a fair amount of supervision and the rest will be given to thelr careers, whatever these may through fve woman,” sald Mi coming into her own! All of this is temporarily shocking to sovereign man, of course, but he’ll get used to it, no doubt. Merely a matter, says Miss Welman, of man adjusting himself to the new order as, for 8o long, woman has had to adjust sherself to the old. Fifty-fifty, censured. but she knew that John's had taken good wigs ‘and plenty of white powder, |care of the twins. judiciously applied 1o anybody she| Save for dim light in the hall, the could wheedle or coerce into posing. |lower floor of the house was quite she had put together half an hour of | dark as Dr. Leonard drew his smart very acceptable-looking Grecian tab- |roadster 1o the curb. The upper in'a nutshell—and that's fair enough. (Coprright, 1922.) EFFICIENT HOUSEKE BY LAURA KIRKMAN, leaux. rooms were brilliantly lighted. Ro: What the audience had enjoyed | jumped cut with a hasty ‘Thank you most of all was the really beautiful | Merriam bade the two men a some- bit of pantomime that followed, in|Wwhat sedate good - night, thinking which little Mre. Lindsay had herself | Wearily how sorry she was that she enacted the part of Columbine. It |had bothered to bring Sheldon with Wwas not a new thing to her; indeed, |them. She gave Rose's hand a peni- in her schoolgirl days she had won |tent squeeze as they climbed the EPING ‘When Milk or Cream Sours. A column reader has asked me to publish recipea calling for sour milk or cream. On these warm days, when milk is apt to sour, it is well to keep some such recipes as the following in a handy place: Sour Milk Griddle Cakes.—Beat well together one egg. one cup of thick, sour milk and one-half cup of any kind of cooked cereal. Sift together three-fourths of a cup of flour and one-fourth teaspoon of salt, and add this to the first mixture. When ready to drop the cakes on the griddle, add one-half teaspoon of baking soda to the batter and beat vigorously. (This batter should look like thick cream. If too thin, add a little more flour or water.) Emergency Biscuits.—Sift together two cups of flour, one-half teaspoon of soda and one-fourth teaspoon of . Rub into this one tablespoon of ghortening, add one cup of thick, sour milk and stir lightly. The dough should be soft. Drop it by spoonfuls into greased muffin tins and bake in a hot oven for twenty minutes. They are deliclous. Boston Brown Bread —Sift together one cup of cornmeal and one cup of graham flour. Dissolve one teaspoon of soda in a very little hot water and add this to one and two-thirds cups of thick. sour milk or cream. Combine the wet and dry mixtures and turn all into a greased mold (leaving room in the mold for the bread to rise). Cover with a greased cover, tving it on tightly, | epoonful of vanilla and if 100 thick add more sour milk | the cream w this mold (an empty baking powder many laurels in the part. But the|stairs extraordinary thing was that on such In the upper hallway stood John short notice she had been able to;and his mother. Both of them were coach two amateurs into so creditable | 8rave. Through the opened doorway a presentation of Pierrot and Harle- [ 10 the spare bedroom came x whim- quin. Ppering cry. The three stood quietly to one side | “OR. Merry dearest, of the stage during the applause that |¥0U'" was being offered to all the persons| Merriam flew to her son. who had taken parts during the even- | 8round him, she cried out ing. But presently the audience began) “Oh. he has a fever—he's sick—and to cr: ol-um-bine!” 5o vociferously | You didn’t tell me: that her Plerrot and Harlequin led [ “John was just going for the doc- her forward and left her standing " Mrs. Lindsay said can 1s a good one to use) into bofl- ing water for four hours. Then take off the cover of the mold and bake in a moderate oven for one hour. Chocolate Loaf Cake—Sift together one and one-half cups of flour and one teaspoonful of soda. Melt two squares of unsweetened chocolate, add to it butter, size of an cgg; one cup of sugar, one cup of sour milk or cream and one beaten egg. Com- Dicky wants Her arms bine the wet with the dry mixture | auiy “Why. ' 3 2 v = e alone at th Why, he's outside vyet Run, and bake in two lavers in a hot oven | 93¢ Ji0n% a0 the front of the stage. | 5, (' Ni&rryy tone was alert for thirty minutes. Fill with the | imsy vellow frock madestly prows | “Don't you remember He turned fn following because they had 1ked her. she bwept | 10 B0 around your drive. Quick Sour Milk Nut Cake Filling.—One cup of chopped walnut meats mixed with two tablespoons of sour milk or cream and one-half cup of powdered sugar. Flavor with one-fourth tea. Dr. tried to the window she called softly. John She ran t “Ohee, Leonard,’ White with anger, sto them an exaggerated bow that al- most let her bronze curls touch the footlights. She looked like the very mbodiment of happiness as she cried, Thank you!" And as the applause grew still more spirited Prof. Shel- don, who had been Pierrot, held up his hand for silence. “Ladies and gentlemen.” he cried eloquently, “I think there must be a great many of you who have heard how gallantly “this young woman came forward this noon to help us in a dire emergency. 1 think this is the first time that Hicksville has had the opportunity to meet Mrs. John Lindsay, who is the wife of one of our hometown boys. Without her this evening's entertainment would have been a limping affair, indeed. I'm glad you appreciate her.” He stooped to pick up some of the flo ers that were being shoved acro: the footlights by the giggling girl ushers. He held her hand as she made a last curtsy and blew them a snapped. “I'm going for Merriam was already back with Dicky, on her knees, crooning over him. “T won't have that old fogey.” she said flercely. “l1 don’t care If you don’t like Dr. Leonard. Quick, run, let him in® our Cream Cake Filling.—When ich you intended for whipping goes sour. try this rec Sweeten and chill one cup of “dou- ble cream.” then whip it until stiff (keeping it cold as you whip). When stiff, fold in one cup of chopped wal- nut meats. 1f the cream does not become stiff for any reason, add one teaspoonful of dissolved gelatin at the last, and place it on ice. Spread this fllling between the layers of any kind of cake. Chocolate Drop Cookies—Cream to- gether one-fourth cup of butter and one cup of sugar. Add two beaten eggs, one teaspoon vanilla, two squares melted chocolate and three- fourths of a cup of flour, sifted, with a pinch of salt. Last add one cup of walnut meats chopped and drop by |saucy little kiss. But when the cur- teaspoonfuls on a buttered pan. Bake |tain had descended for the really last ten minutes in a good oven. This|time he felt her slump limply. recipe makes two dozen cookies. You poor girl"” he sympathized. (Copyright. 1822.) Continsed in Tomorrow Fish Sauce. Make a white sauce by putting one tablespoonful of butter in a sauce pan. When melted, add a tablespoon- ful of flour and blend thoroughly. Add a _cup of milk and two tablespoonful of water in which the fish was cooked. This water may aiso be saved for fish chowder. Season well and add two hard-boiled eggs chopped fine. and a tablespoonfu chopped parsley. BEAUTY CHATS BY EDNA KENT FORBES. | ICED Egg Shampoos. The quickest and easiest shampoo is given with an egg and liquid cas- tile soap. The egg is so cleansing that it facllitates washing the halr, it dries more quickly because it is thoroughly clean, and it is sure to be soft, fluffy and glossy afterward. The only ¢ifficulty with such a shampoo is that the egg should be rubbed on the scalp 30 minutes to an hour before the hair is washed. At first it is sticky and then, as the egg rdens, the hair becomes stiff. But ou can go about your household du- ties, or you can sew or read, so the time is not wasted. The whole egg. yolk and white, should be thoroughly beaten and rubbed directly over the scalp and the hair. All the hair should be covered. If it's unusually long and thick two eggs may be necessary. If there is a great deal of dandruff a tablespoonful of olive oil should be added to the egg after it has been beaten. The castile soap should previously have been melted with enough hot water to form a thin paste. After the egg has dried the hair is given a thor- ough soaping and rinsed with warm Then the soap is used again with fairly hot water, lathered thor- oughly over the scalp and rinsed with hot and gradually cooling water until the scalp is free of soap and grease. 1f posaible the hair should be dried in the sun. The yolk of the egg contains a great deal of sulphur, which is inval- uable for dandruff and other skin troubles. As the egg dries it takes up the dirt, grease and dandruff which have collected on the scalp, leaving a clean and healthy surface. For mild cases of dandruff this is the only treatment necessary S. B—A shiny and red face would indicate that your liver was slug- gish and there was poor elimination. Drink more water and live on a sim- pler diet until your skin shows an improvement. C. 0. D.—An excellent spap is the old-fashioned castile made from olive ofl, although the market is full of other good soaps, also. Marfe R.—A girl with a full face can wear a small hat as well as a large one. It is merely a matter of taste as to which style is best to combine with the rest of the costume. Hats now are so artistic In their lines they can always be made to suit any ‘ace. "SALADA” Teais reallyamostrefreshing economical and harmless summer beverage - TRY IT, Sure Death to Flies roaches, bed bugs, moths, fleas and itoes; abo their retun prevented by spraying with “PRE'! 2 | FAVORITE RECIPES OF WOMEN Cleans Bath Tubs, Tiles, Metal Fittings and Garbage Paila Purifies airin Sick Rogyns, Cellars; poosly ventilated Apartments. The Housewife’s Idea Box MRS. THOMAS G. WINTER. (President of the General Federa- tion of Women's Clubs.) ftonade Dressin; This is extremely good to serve on lettuce, romaine or any green salad. Into @ glass jar put one hard-boiled kg, finely chipped, one tablespoonful finely cut chives, one tablespoonful salt, one-quarter teaspoonful paprika and’ one-elghth teaspoonful pepper, one-half cup ollve oll, three table- Shoonfuis vinegar and one teaspoon- ful tarragon vinegar. Allow it to become very cold, and just before serving It shake the confents of the ughly. Jar thoro ‘(Onwfllhl. ory —_— Mustard Dressin, Beat tha yolks of two egge with one tablesponful of milk and one tablespoonful of Bugar, one-half a teaspoonful of dry mustard, a pinch of white pepper, one-third cup of vinegar and one cup of sweet whipped ¢ This is & splendid dressing’ greali kinds of fish. It i also good served with jellled chicken and other jellied meats, Pear Water Toe, six large, ripe pears Poel and core Hites: then Rut them With three-fourths one inch of cinna- lemon peel and one Cook . into @ Saucepan o‘} a cu‘pkot !flf“:r' tick, & :‘:&‘ Eme-hnu cups of water, and freeze, ey Menu for & Day, BREAKFAST, ‘Bananas, ' Caveal B rrod Dggs, Coftes, ' LUNCHEON, Creamed Sweetbreads, Biscults. Frult Jll‘l:Y. Sandwichea, ‘hocolate, . DINNER, Cream of Pea Soul um':‘;'u Btownp&nvv. ‘Lyonnaise Potatoes, aen Toast, A wonder spray—necessary as soap—harmless ks water. Just what is needed for camps and bungalows. Buy it at drug, grocery and department stores. All cans standard measure. Special combination package, pint can and sprayer, $1.00. Galion can, $3.00; %-Gallon can, $1.75; Quart can, 90c; Pint can, 80c. Haynes Chemical Corparation, Richmond, Vigiaia To Keep Mosquitoes Away. Some mosquitoes and other insects will get into the house even if there are soreens on all the windowa and doors. To help keep them away, paint all screens with kerosene, Use a large brush, Apply the kerosene at night 1f the odor of it bothers you, THE HOUSEWIFE, (Copyright, 1922,) Prices realised on Swift & Company les of beef, “hding. .Tn'.‘;‘e?a Tl 1e, Rt e week 7.50 wold_out, ran 11.00 conta ta -: averaged 1537 ceals cents per pou per pound.—Advertiseme; Tomato Jolly Salad. Put four tablespoonfula of gelg- tin in & saucepan, add thres cups of water, one and one-half pounds of freshly sliced tomato loes g#m.u, one uuunno::.?u}'o .vlln = m ‘White pappercorna, one of salt, ona tz ipOORful L cataun and t- slightly-beaten whites and the crushed ghalls of two Beat over \:ndu‘n Bre until x:‘h rm e the beater, allow te u“‘ raw to one side of the stove Fherelc will zot boll ang cover for lve minutes.- Strain through a hot lelly bag ul' rlg:o rod“wll‘hd w & fo T or, a wat rin, ':ou. Turn out ur e e e e 5% how I suffered from that ecae: wfl:"m‘l%m y every trace of it. IWa| and the "fl.“""‘ -

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