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¥ 'WASHINGTON SHOPS : Your goh)e and | ou ” BY HELEN KENDALL. -tcu-M There sre two axioms which it 18 well t0 remember concerning jeal- ] Dlary of a Proiesiional Movte Fan BY GLADYS MALL. By William Brady, M. D. : Noted Physician end Author. very once in a while we see a gown pleating seems necessary to its exist- 3= 73 s 3 = —~ < 3 5 = In which workmanship. materials aud |ence. The frock sketched uses both | e e spmaleay Mo ] e RGP e e e e e el ,[Matalic Talmedge on Being a coloring ave combined in such an fTgULES K AT tinguished by [ Lio, Yery small boy sat opposite Wholesome Complexion Dope. ore yeur loved one's imterest Mother. l : certainly weuld benefit from a course mothér at a small table in a charming Natalle Talmad; K L 1 1 madge Heaton solemaly cline to be either of these, yot Wh® artistic and original manner that We|tucks running at right augies to each ' exclaim in wonder, “Why hasn't it{other., are set in a Igu waisted ¢ity tearoom. Plainly it was a great| Aside from the blackheads and pim- of this medicine If they could only strays een dene before™ Probably we have |bodice which shows a wide front,event—a trip to town to have his hair |Ples of ,youth, which are a rather ?:1 ulol,;gelv;_:“l‘lvh:: |'.'m' .n:ltg 2 and affirms, via a letter raceived only the scen many similar models, with per- | Pne ‘effact "eih & ong contor Front |Pobbed. 2 visit ta the toy department | Wholesomo restraint on yauthful Van© foomgrsaults on e foor aych Dugkh ""'fl'" no mense in being jealous {other day, that when Buster Keaton, haps the same colors, mediums and . and Juncheon at a growm-up ladies’ [ilY, the most common compisint about | 3ng morning, half a dozen forward after your loved oue's interest strays |jr. (properly christened Joseph KFran- design, but they have lacked that l:euauunt. His eager eyes beamed |the complexion is that it seems muddy |rolls as & minimum. Take as many Jealousy is just so much carbon 10 leis Keaton. jr.) first saw his pclornu\l indefinable “something” that trans- around the room at the other smiling | OF sallow. This sallow tint, accord- Tiere o8 You Bve on wpDelles S (veur cylinders at any time. It wistes jparent he amiled. L think nono the L iNg to the w. k. Mrs. Sumsey and the o/ Iour % less of, the secand Buster'for this. ul lunchers. Every eye was on him; on his yellow head, bis blue-and-yellow amocked blouse and diminutive trou- sers, his plump knees and socked. slip- is a wise child that sisgs up its own father. And he has, obviously, th makings of a wise and discriminatiig | fau—if nothing else! forms a mere dress into a “ereation.” Perhaps it may be traced to the mas- ter hand of the fashion designer. or few baclward, too. Greatest fooi- ishness you ever heard of, but it does get that stagnant blood out of the splapchnic poel and back into circul- busy Ben Told, shows the victim needs something for the liver. Often she does, though not so badly &s she perhaps it is the print of the skilled fingers oi' lh: '\:ull\lr(m ;\;hu‘h r:lng':m! lDel'Ied feet. He smiled back engag-[nceds something for the lupgs. tion. among the folds long after she has ngly. 'The healthy e lexion is flesh = £ Howev let to weightier ceased to touch them: but be it what ’ B ealthy complexion lowever, us on to & Then the luncheon came and he tint. Flesh tint is yellow red. The| QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. matters. 4 gan to eat with the same delighted interest. But. alas! He held his spoon 1 humbly postulate here and now it may, it stamps the gown as “dis- yellow is the natural color of the H. snd Heart in This Work. tinetive.™ Such a one is the dinner model awkwardly. He handled his slice of |skin with its underl: f tat Flig 5 S 3 5 ying layer of tat| I beg inconsiderate espondents that it Aunt Norma and Aunt Con Dlustrated. © Purple chifton. silver bread and butter as a flat, huge|shining through. The red is cof- (o believe that I -r-:tfl:c':; Ty hands stance and Mother Natalte and Grand ribbon and cream-colored lace form {whole. He scooped his soup toward|tributed by the blood im _the minute land heart freely to this work, not t® ma “Peg” don't spoil the new—th brand-new—Buster he will he a mo: mention mind, but that T do net ané will not give my eyesight to serve those who inconsiderately write with lead pencil or in an illegible manner. Bran. ¥ When I am away from home it 18 difficult for me to regulate my habits. Pléase tell me whether it makes 8By difference whether one takes so mueh bran or so much mineral ofl for the bowels?—B. R. E. Answer—Bran choice. m Ae 'd Lse of Saceharin. your strength. muddies *your alm, 1s there any harm in taking about {slackens your speed. It never helps & ;:re:r‘fi:::ln ofe ",:fi,"‘"'“ :llfly = bad situation and it may hopelessly sweeteder in place sugar? Have been put on a diet tor | Wreek &, [aifly hoveful one. | bl afbuminuria and overweight—Mre. J. | fyndamental law. which is that you it 1 don’'t own any one cise. no maiter how Answer—Yes. Saccharin showld [dear they may be to you, nor do they never be used unless by specific di- fown you. rection- of your physician, Therecan | Jealousy bucks that law. Jealousy be no objection to a certain' amount |disregards the right ¢f every human of rugar in the diet of one who has [to his own life just as murder does, uminuria or who is overweight. |and is nearly as dangerous an urge. Saktcharin is capable of destroying:Yet because we've wrapped the vital blond corpuecles and weakening the |truths concerning love in mummy |will be a heart. clothes of sentiment we refuse to so! he will regard jealousy and, indeed. almost athemat An Aftet Effects of Gasning. sanctify the hideous thing. Take the |they come upon him playing Will one who has been overcome bY lcase of the Millards, for-instance. !doliar bill. eating the apple and read- surprisingly effective dope I can sug- |{lluminating gas have any atter! “Constance Millard has just lost her ) ing the Bible all at once. thex will gest for the purpose of opposing sal- | éffects such as stomach, lung or heart hysband by divorce, and she began Towness of the complexion is a |trouble’—C. G. losing him the day they were mar- remedy which, unfortunately, does| Answer—The constituent of illumi- Iried. Does she love him? Madly. not appeal to the judgment of the|nating gas which is mest peisonous|But partly through ignorance and Ereat majority of those who most|is carbon monoxide. Poisening by |partly through obstinacy she refused need it. It does appeal to the down- |carbon monoxide is likely to leave the | to recognize that fundamental law_of right simpletons, on the one hand,{system generafly in a baq condition {individual freedom in her love. She and to the highbrows, on the other;|for several month: . {believed that she owned Harry. She but there are a lot of folks who de-1 (Copyright, 1922.) felt that all that he did, all those he knew, all he thought or planned should be open to her inspection and, him in its silver spoon. His mother vessels 1 h kin. Temporarily murmured correctingly to him, “Break S ey e withdraw considerable blood from the nice flesh-tinted complexion and you have a sallow complexion, as in faint- ing or f11ght. Permanently withdraw considerable blood from the skin, and the same sallow appearance follows, as in impoverishment of the blood from any cause or just stagnation ot an exceas of blood in the great splanchnic reservoir or pool in the vast network of vessels within the abdominal and lower chest cavitie Here in thia splanchnic pool, accord- | ing to physiologists and surgeons who have studied shock, a large part of the total mass of blood may stagnate. 4s much as one-fourth of all the blood of the body, temporzrily, as in shock. or for an indefinite period, as in many cases off ptosia or downward ¥AggINK of abdominal organs, slouchy postur .'l‘nd neglect of proper physical educa- tion. This will make no lasting impres- sion on the unwise, because it 1 volves some thought; but. neverth less, it is a fact that the girl or woman who has a practical knowi- edge of hygiene and strives to get physical education as well as mental has the finest complexion and tne least necessity for artificial complex- ion dope. The simplest. cheapest and most the mediums, adorned here and there amaszing child. For Mrs. Natalie has some definite precepts and theories anent the rearing of her youngling. Here are a few. of them, seconded LY the first Buster: ¢ A womap is mever a women until =he is a mother. That’s that. Small Buster is going to have everything his father did mnot have when he was a boy. Ax these things re too numerous to detail; we will eave them to your good imagina- tions; if you will keep careful track of what Buster. jr., acquires as he proceeds to grow up you will/ have a fairly accurate knowledge of what Father Buster sed in his most smileless youth. Buster is to be the President. Thi you; but, after all, w NATALIE TALMADGE LATEST ROLE. know that they have an embryo poli- tician on their hands. Upon which they will introduce him to William' Jennings Bryan and await resuits. ‘opsTight. 1922.) IN mER should . be your ‘\vlrd if you're young yet, try rolling H EARLY FALL HAT OF NAVY-BLUE| DUVETYN, WITH VEIL. panel of accordion pleats, while the side panels are of plain crepe gath- ered slightly over the hips. A girdle of braided crepe strands folds loosel.‘" — around the waist to add the final, touch to the gown. The hat Shown in the sketch is also of canton crepe, with a smaller braided strand laid oo the narrow brim and a large white Iribbon bow placed at an angle on one( side. | Although very few autumn gow have made their appearance in |0t establishments, millinery win- {dows are fllled with velvet and duvetyn models, practically to the ex- clusion of summer chapeaux. The model pictured is of navy duvetyn and compromises with the seasons DY I having a fold of navy canton crepe bordering the brim. ~The crown is slightly crushed and at the front a long sweeping feather adds: a chic note of trimming. Yellow and orange tints mingle with the navy blue in ) this feather spray to give the only ! bit of color contrast. A long veil of blue lace adds a fllmy drapery at the y As a matter of fact, Natalle has hit upon a =imple, expedient and ad- mirable plan of foretelling her sam's large future. She is going to pwe- =ent him, ‘most any day now. with an apple. a dollar bill and a Bible. 1f} he eats the apple, he will be a farmer. | if he plays with the dollar bill, he banker. If he reads the be a preacher-man. d if. by chance, | with lhe} 1 t 4 [T AT RN vour bread off into smaller pieces”— i istingui for: “Hold your spoon as mother holds i = well as forecasting a return to favar ;0f the bowl, like mother. ¥ She was s BY EDNA dhlv they '\sero.elnigse‘;i“:'hemr;u:_e;-ul‘t I ‘“ " e Narme veils 'Since they are such |embarrassed at his ignorance, his evi- BEAUTY CHATS B theory into practice. with the resuit | I\ feminine accessories. design- dent Wrong habit of eating \ KENT FORBES. e iar cow tnere i { g decidely ars seem to be xounding the knell for | mannish. strictly tailored apparel. As for him, he laboriously tried to follow her instructions. He manfully truggled with the new way of hold- ing the spoon. the new manipulation of the soup. But the joy had faded divorced. Not because they were faithless, not because any third party broke up their home. but simply . rooted in seifishness il U "Egil‘.u“\lll B Cucumber Fritters. Dressing Table Ascessories. R L o | Edell aud jgrate one balfiiaficup ot O et Tavine & vaud time| How many dresstog) table wecens:| proct oo e (has Teen havin s R susgmber Malh Avalding Sthe scens|at aUIERIMAIY R looked MCIossns ) sor fon ave finpressary® i out hair | shell is ‘more” cxpensive than, solid ail- T T el ‘I('M“l' H by scooping out the large cucumbers |his mother, and said, in a clear = ; 2 ver. However, if you haven't a prej- (T oo Rrating. Press out the juice.|voice that traveled throughout the{®hat are usually used, I should say. | ygice ggainst imitations you can”hud |to yau if he or she has strayed—fair | i To the pulp of each large cucumber [entire tearoo Jt is much better to have a dressing | charming toilet sets of composition re- | €88, courtesy, humor, compiete recog- L ada Tane ens. one-fourth cupful of | “Why didn't you teached me before table with nothing on it but one nice | markably like tortoise shell for only a (Dition of the other's right to live. It flour. one tezspoonful of butter, Ope |We came. muvver £ looking mirror than to have one.|fraction of the cost. that won't tie him nothing will. and Tablespoonful of milk ani sall and[” Oh. why hadw't she? Why don't| n z Real ivory sets are fabulously ex- doubtful if he's worth pepper to taste. Have ready a deep mothers?” The right way to handle W3 'I'* tops cluttered up with a lot.| pensive. Mortunately the craze for ul:ut:; may !ure: his body e < 1i fat. dip the spoon |food: what to take in the fingers and [of cheap brushes and untidy bottles. | white celluloid imitations of ivory ig|in the love pact. but you wi e lkettle of boiling fat. dip the &p lost touch with the spirit, and nothing dying out. These became 80 cheap and common that they lost all their beauty. | else is of any value. if _they ever had any. One woman i (Copyright. 1922.) know who possessed quantities of cheap = white celluloid_which shé grew to hate dipped the articles in hot black dye what net: what to cut with the knite }into it. take up a spoonful of the Most dressing table articles should mixture with the drained spoon and|and what with the fork: what to eat U eto, the kettle. Fry until weit |with the spoon and what with the:be Kept in a drawer rather than on browned. ! fork—all these things can soon be-|the table. It does not seem partieu- 1 OF WHITE N TUCKED INSETS. | come natural and habitual with little | Jarly nice to have the brush and comb | HOWING | folks. if they are remearsed dally. with large yellow and lavender beads out where they can pick up all the’ produced a curiou gray mettied effect Ppleasing. so round and clear that they resem- Baked Buttered o‘m_“- 1 e {dust thaf flies in the room. But the | which was novel a b ter, tinted by the even- | pee) some very large onions and Ch ol hand mirror, the powder jar, which —- ing lights, which seem about to driP|parhoil them; then remove the hearts. erTy ves. should be covered and as good look- | Zita W.—Rubbing ice over fleshy from the filmy edges. The chiffon|{eaving firm shells. Chop the pa=| Select some smooth. large. ripeling as you can afford, the manicure |Parts of the body would not effect a [ reduction. 1Ice is used on the skin te hodice, draped over a plain camisole foundation. droops at each side until ‘removed and add one-third the quan- of bread crumbs with one tea-|Plack orr tity red berries, being careful not iimplements, one or two tiny boxes for pomade or paste, and perhaps a pair close the pores after they have been opened for clea .. Ice treatment contracts the skin, but does not re- duce weight. The reaction which follows brings the blood to the sur- face, toning the skin and making it Cut the stems Wash the cher- to loosen the stems. close to the cherries. ries and pack them closely in wide- mouthed sterlized bottles. Whea full, add two level teaspoonfuls of sdlt of quaint bottles to hold perfume or ! toilet water are certainly gll that are necessary for the dresse: Then there is the impartant question as to what these articles should be it nearly reaches the lower border ot nful of ehopped parsley and one the'”girdle, while “the ~chiffon "side | 32eccr tpgen of butter for about five panels of the skirt, following tne |pntott ¥POR, Ot ions and place same suggestion. extend below thelpnat VS Fyoying pan. Add enough cobwebby edging of the lace panel|pytter to form a gravy and baste the Which appears at the center front. onions with th Bake until ther- [and two tablespoonfuls of vinegar to|made of. Siiver seems to be a popular |firm. piarflike sleeve draperies 971455 [oughly tender, which will be Inabout jeach half-pint boftle. Ml with cold | favorite. 30 popular that those who can- | Reduce portions of the body throush s s Wmoeuly intoh Su b basdsjvounowTS and serve. water, cork and seal with paraffin. |not afford solid put up with silver|exercise or vigorous massage. which give a dotted outline to them : 150 aid in holding the folds in piace. = The wide. stralght girdle is of s'lver ¢ eloth, lightly embroidered with yetlow SN / Lvpauss -2/ ¢ CORN FLAKES perfect food for summer days Health demands a lighter diet during the warm days! - That’s why Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are such an ideal food Rt for summer! They’re not only crisp, appetizing, refresh- 3 ing and really delicious, but wholesome and nourishing! Ana, Kellogg’s benefit every one, from babyhood to old K Z age! Eat Kellogg’s with fresh fruit now in season! Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are the most popular breakfast 4 cereal in the world, served with milk or cream; yet, in thousands of homies they are also appreciated as a dessert, " served with plenty of cream and fresh fruit. Eat Kellogg’s Corn Flakes liberally. Let the little - folks have all they want because Kellogg’s are easily and ; quickly digested, yet they are satisfying and sustaining. ERIEXX, ' Dish towels soaked clean ; every day*« It is no longer a task to wash the to each dish washing. Just soak them in Rinso, the new kind of soap for the family washing. This pure mild soap does almost afl the work oiwaahll,ng]mtbyw.khg. ]Bm’wfllfll gently loosen the dirt so that the worst: ts need any rubbing at all. Speinkie a littla : Rinso on these see how quickly youcal * " rub them off. 2 B Rinso is mad the largest makers is 80 e by sesp DINNER FROCK OF PURPLE CHIF- FON AND CREAM LACE. and lavender bead: suggested headdress would be a bandeau of sile ver, finislied,with long beaded tassels at the sides. Needlesa to say this} creation I8 not for the debutante, but rather for her mother. as both the colors and lines are particularly suit- ed to the matronly figure. There is great similarity In this sea- son’s white frocks. but they are all so thoroughly charming that we don't seem to mind a bit. Practically every model i8 of canton or crepe de chine, and either fine tucking or accordiom| A e s — # AVE you plenty of clean, sweet smelling dish towe?s on hand every time you “do es?”” Are you sure there will be no cloudy streaks on the tumblers, no greasy smudges from half-soiled towels on your best dinfer plates? t grocery and ;«‘« Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass. Use enough Rinso to get the hig ‘lasting suds that locsen all the dirt ud Cre; A