Evening Star Newspaper, January 16, 1924, Page 34

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

woM Wide Fur Band AN’S PAGE Edges Hem Line BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. Was fur first used for adornmept or protection? This Is a question that might of- fer interesting discussion to students of anthropolgy. It is no doubt true that human inhabiting, of very cold climes was impossible until men learned to, rub their fur-bearing neighbors of their fleecy coats. But 3t Is equally true that primitive races ving in lutitudes where peltry of even the lightest sort would be a bur- den if worn ax a matter of protection 1 decked themselves with animal i<, They used thée bushy tails of ¢ animals as adornment, as they doubtless also did the scalps of their human viethus, as silent pledges of heir prowess in the chase or battle. “The furs of animals were to them as purely o the plumage birds, y% for wear- lonz before . The wom- celitury who fur-trimmed beving one of all feminine Buman hi twentieth the ric is but tive the d an o« yea of and the one sta paraging far Terring tha terly absu but un y truly s it may be even cruel 1 it certalnly is not. And difticult to how it is 1ol than Tamb el n or erd herring for atn a kiy frock is to fash- Quite the trimmed 4 harking back are rvace old. in this regard i3 to put 4 wide band around the skirt, and this hem in the ms to be getting evening at tden 1l bel ASRASton Pulled-Up Drapes New. ut of I draped-up skirt ks waist lightly be- 2o on one side—that's You'll Jike this charm- in which becoming and ry mew features combine. Here splendid chance to use one of th exqui printed vel- mired so often. Or the ve is ew i very vet wiist sill ot ol i b with 4] attrac impossible this limited The dres had in sizes 16 y 4 44 inches bust measure. inch size, two and one- 10-inch material with one fourth vards i6-inch required. ¥rice of pattern, 15 cents, in post- age stamps only. Orders shouid be addressed to The Washington Star Pattern Bureau, 22 East 15th street, New York city. Please wrife name and address clearly. 1 migh skirt of satin possibilities tell about t No end kes it w all in 5 1958, can be 38, 40, 42 and r'the 36- £ yards nd one- contrasting 1s Bistory of Bour Fame, BY PHILIP PRANCIS NOWLAN. RIPLEY RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCE—A locality. Ripley is ono of those English {amn- 1y names which sprang from place numes, as indicative orizinally of the locality from which the individual 20 coin in which he lived. Thero is et town in the west Yorkshir land, which bears naine, and, ur there have hoen other Tocalities hearing the samo wame which ive disappeared from the weouraphical and historical s, the cvidenco is quite elear that ali Ripleys trace their ancestry hack to this town i medieval times known as “John O'Ripley do Covington” as clreumstanc heing the N Anglo-Saxon confra might, for ins ruler of the p merely be have been vious tim tor of n might he or “Peter result of different de,” “of course, alent of the vhich very often or “a'"). He ce, be the owner or e named. He might an inhabitant, or he might an inhabitant at some pre- The majority of family names are explained in the last two ways. And In making your choice betwoon these two you must take into consideration the size of the place at the time the name was:formed. If Ripley was a very small place, a liomestead, for instance, the name would denote residence there. But if, as it happened, it was a larger com- munity, it would constitute no diffe; entiation to zive an Inhabitant th ame of “de Ripley,” because all his heishbors would be indicated by the same appellation. But if he lived in Covington after prior residence in Ripley, the surname would individ- ualize him from his neighbors at once, as he would be most likely the only man of his own given name who formerly had resided in the other community. Flemish- Carrots. Peel one pound of carrots and one- fourth pound of onions. Put them to- gother through the food chopper, using the medium knife, Melt a plece of butfer or good dripping the size of an cgg in ‘e stewpan, and toss the getables into it ntil the onions tegin to brown a litle. Now add pepper, salt, one lump of sugar and a bay lcaf. Cover the pan and stew gently until the carrots are tender, which will be in about one Lour. Smooth a teaspoonful of corn- meal in a little cold water and stir it in to thicken the sauce. Pour all into a hot vegetable dish, sprinkle with chopped parsley, and serves of printed | i ,. | | AND WOOL LACE PROCK TRIMMED WITH SOFT WHITE 1O Benjamin Franklin. There's something very refresh- Ing to the American mind in the thought of Benjamin Franklin. He {has atmosphere. We are choice of itever savors of that intangible, omforting quality here in America, where vthing is so new and | sneaks shrilly of the present ineed met by the present deed. {'Franklin has atmosphere. He be- longs with tho poster beds and the fan-lighted vdoorways and whitp clap- boards of our colonial period. ~ He reflects dignity and graclous benefi- cence upon us. He, in a way, justl- fles us. He was poor and through industry and thrift and shrewd management he became rich. He thought that the getting of riches was an honor- able ambition and the duty of a man who respected himself to the end that he might be respected of othsrs. One could not imagine his laying out shilling without having thought L of doing so. Nor holding that nvinced that eve ave’ to our mind: some one says that such a man or such a woman is thrifty, we gather the notion that he is what we call a “tightwad” and he is labeled accordingly. That isn't quite the idea. Thrift can be demonstrated as much, if not more, Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL Landscape Wall Paper. Tho house was new and lovely, with beautiful woodwork and floors, and the simple gracious lines that Imake the modern dwelling so satis- |fving when well handled. The rooms were well proportioned, the windows well placed, and the stairs rose with low wide treads from e spaclous en- trance hall. The mext problem confronting the owners was the treatment of the 'wall. Al the rooms had been final 1y settled upon, as to wall decora- tion (or undecoration), but the mistress of the home stood in indecision in her hall. She did so want one of the beautiful old landse v w are so especlally appropriate in halls ,where pictures are neither needed nor \suitable. But the imported landscape papers were so expensive, even In re- production, as to be prohibitive. She had almost decided reluctantly to give up the idea, when one of thoss brilliant inspirations which bless the thinking home maker came to her ""The next morning shoe flew' us on wings to the wall paper establishment sho patronized, and asked to see the. all-over Jandscape _papers, which lcome by the roll. She selected one _that showed trunks of tall trees, imasses of gray-green foljage. a flight lof garden steps and & little Greek .temple in the design. Then she pick- od out and bought some plain faintly blue paper and hastened home again. All that day she carefully “cut and fitted” her landsoape paper as if it were a garment. Instead of the tre and the steps and little temple being |repeated every two feet all over the iwhole wall, she had them carefully placed along just over the chair rail so that they formed a charming gar- |den. Meanwhile she had had a paper- hanger come and cover the upper {wall with the plain blue paper, which formed a soft summer sky. Against !this sky rose the tops of the trees, |nigher in some places than in others, making an uneven and ever-different combination of the same design. 1t took time, ves, and Ingenulty, IShe fitted and pasted every piece of the cut-out landscape herself, but the result was a triumph of indivivality, taste, and=—econOY, Our | This afternoon after skool I wawk- ed erround to Mary Watkinses house to sce if she was out, wich she was, ony Persey Weever was standing there tawking to her with his hat “lover one eye, me thinking, Durn that durn sissey butting in all the time. And I wawked up and stood there with my hands in my pockits and Mary Watkins Repp on tawking to Persey as If she thawt he was some- body grate, and 1 had a idcer, saying, Hay, Persey (. you awt to see the | boxing. gloves I got for Krissmas. | I dont like boxing gloves, Persey sed Well do you wunt to see them? 1 sed, and he sed No, and I sed, Well 1111 run home and get them and show them to vyou. theyre swell Boxing Thinking, G, Tl make him h me and she'll suon sce who's the greatest And 1 quick ran and got the boxing gloves and camo back with them saying to Perscy, See, aint they peetches, lets hox a littl 1 dont wunt to, Persey sed, and T sed, Aw watts & matter, you afraid? These gloves are so oft you couldent hert a fly with them, come on, wats you afraid of? T se Nothing, Persey sed And he put on a pair and so did T and we started to box, me jumping erround him making motions like a perfessional boxer and him jest stand- fug there as if he thawt he was a !statue of a boxer instead of a live jone, and all of a suddin I hit him a fea « K In the nose and another one in the stummick and he started to ery and dident know weather to | hold his nose or his stummick, Mary Watkins saving,, You big brute, Meoning me, ind she red, Now you go rite hon you don’t know how to hehave erround ladies nd gen- {tlemen. Meening her and Persey, and | Persey’ sed. Tie hit me twice at once, ! that not fair. | Then go ah and hit m | hit me all you! nite, I sed, an | sed Neo. I ‘wouldent' be such a bru and Mary Watkins sed, See that, your the only brute erround heer, ‘Aw heck, good nite, rats, the dickins, 1 sed. And 1 wawked away with my box- ing gloves looking prouder than wat I felt. Proving sometimes force is a grate thing, ony you cant allways tell on, G, {by wise spending as it can by mere swing. Saving money, hoarding it—as the squirrels hoard their stores, letting them grow mold and forgetting | where they have them until past the {time to use them—is the very low- most unintellizent method of Jend noney wisely is the highest form. of it. Th here Fr klin scored. There is the |secret of our respect for him. ank i name s thrif but isper of * ad” echoes it. When he began earuing I budget- cd himself. 1le sét aside the money be thouxht he could spend for this 4 ghat and the other ecssential thing and always the amount to be saved. In saving, however, he al- ways had in mind the joy of spend- ing. He was saving the money for a purpose that was neither stupid nor_selfish. When his country was in difficul- ties he could help her because he had saved and spent wisely. When he saw the youth about him In need of instruction he could supply the money needed to found the univer- ity that would stand_for the {dea always dear to his hiea the educ tion of the youth of the country. Our Franklin has atmosphere, dig- nity and inspiration. He saved with purpose and spent with wisdom. It {is that messago of thrift he would teagh his countrymen. We spend more than we save and the thrift we would believe our precious qual- ity lles in tho wise spending rather in the routined saving. It's the spending that saves us. (Copyright, 1924) Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Sliced Oranges. Hominy with Cream. Scrambled Eggs with Tomatoes., Brolled Bacon. Hot Corn Bread. Coffee. LUNCHEON. ‘Welsh Rarebit on Toast. Celery. Cup Cakes, Chocolate Eauce, Tea. DINNER. Celery Soup. Hamburger Steak, Bofled Macaroni. Baked Potatoes. Baked Rice Pudding. Coftes. EGGS WITH TOMATOES. The yolks of six eggs and the whites of three, one tablespoon of butter, one ocup of cream and one-half teaspoonful of salt. Put the mixture into a buttered pan and stir quickly untiP it is a soft, creamy mass. Serve with strips of dry toast and slices of raw tomatoes. WELSH RAREBIT. Melt one teaspoon butter, add one teaspoon each of salt, mui tard and paprika, add two cups of American cheese. When melted add one-half cup of cream. Stir vigorously until smooth and pour over hot but- tered crackers or toast. BAKED RICE PUDDING. One pint milk, two table- spoons of rice. Let thom come to a boll, stir in two ‘able- spoons of sugar, one-halt ~up of seeded_raising, a lump u¢ butter.@ Flavor 'with cinna mon and bake until thick. —— Chicken Rice and Pimentos. Cut up a chicken and boll it for about an hour. Boll some rice for fitteen minutes o Put the chicken and rico together, ahd add some ocut-up pimento, and a pinch of saffron to color the rice. 1l down untll th water has _been absorbed und serve ;t ?nne. This 18 a favorite dish in pain. Fried Bananas, _Cut up some ripe bananas length- wise and then in hal Dip in a batter of beaten egg and fry in hot butter or olive oll. These may also be dipped in cake crumbs after dip- ping them in the egg batter before being fried. A sweet egg sauce fla- vored with lemon is dellclous to serve on them. e e Biltn bed Sober e S ever, en new less ul psychology and more about SPPie Eprouts. Women, as a Class, Live Honest, Faithful and Defends Heor Soa on Point of Honor Cleaner Lives, Are More Loyal Than Men— How Can They Be Accused of Hav- ing “No Principles?” MAN correspondent writes: “WIIl you please explain, from the viewpoint of & woman, why women have no 1 can answer this by a blanket & principle. Also T can make a good that one sex is just about as black as the other. out in the assertifn that just as many women as men have been willing principles?” enfal of the charge that women lack pot-and-kettle argument and prove Btatistics will bear me to go to the stake for the suke of their principles, and that far more men than women languish in our jails be: cause they were short of principles. When we speak of people having good principles we mean that they are honest, that they are virtuous, that they are trustworthy und loyal and faithful; that they are truthful and will not do a mean or little thing. Judged by this high standard of h would make u pretty high score. uman conduct, the average woman That women, as a class, are honest is shown by the fact that they are chosen by astute business men as cashiers. store, littlo, or a restaurant, or a motion fluffy-headed girl s not handli of it sticks to her fingers for we very seldom I woman cashlier. Money means more to a woman th, more need of money than n man ha; pretty clothes that will enhance her beauty, o s where she will mic with It she can go to the plac would ke to marry. So the honesty of dollars every day without s ling of principle as one can apply. Women are honest about paying. You hardly ever go into 4 theater, where some pretty money. And cvidently none r of an absconding picture ng the an it ever can to man. A woman has %, because with it she can buy the camouflage her homeliness; t the sort of & man she of these girls who handle thousands a penny of it 1s about as w what they owe. They have of debt, and the great majority of them never rest until they off every cent they owe. T VERY one knows women who had s; an obligation that they fmpoverisl deaths to pay off their debts for which they were not le That women have a higher cod proven by the double standard of mo; The woman w times out of ten lives up to her oath, how many men keep their marriage vi of giving to their wives the same sort Women are faithful. Once a woi loves him on to the bitter end. She will go with him through It is women who haul It 1s women who are walting at priso the men who have been outcasts from Women have a higher sense of dut. of cases of wife desertion to one case It becoming hurdensome to him. poor mother to abandon her helpless will work her fingers to the bone to into an asylum. Tt is women whose serse of duty makes them sacr It is the sisters, not the brothers, who sacrifics themseclves for | their parents, who put aside thoughts of marriage, or give up th the old 0 swears at the altar to be poverty. men out of the gutters und go on s a common thing for a mun to sneak aw: the children he has brought into the world wh But it is the rare ch a high sense of the hed themselves after t husbands’ ally liable. onduct than credness of e of personil men is rality of the sexes. rue to her husband nine But it is probably best not inquire. owe. Very few men ever even think of loyalty that they demand of them. man gives her heart to a man, she sickness, and disgrace. loving them n doors with open arms to take back society. y than men have. There are hundreds of husband desertion. and leave his wife and 1 he finds their port t thing in the world for a little children. On the contrary, she support them rather than put them and elves to career that opened up the life they longed to lead in ordet to stay at home, and min father or mother. N do their duty lives. In what respect, then, do they Perhups he will say that while t are unscrupulous in little; that a wor dollars from xou, Wfll}mld out her st have nt up from a store on dressmaker copy it Or, perhaps, he will they are less candid, and forthright, a Well, at last account; the perfectly honest man. assertion, wh nien cannot furnish in these respects. Y correspondent says that wome re hone: good an excuse For woman's lapses in the small matters of are @ hangover from the &tate of slavery in which sh; She had no the last twenty years. ot everything she had out of men, 8o it is no wonder she som dubious ways to do it. And that's her alibi, if she needs one. ter to the wants and bear patiently with the querulousness of that women , Diogenes was still out with his lanter And nobody has contradicted the he sald in his heart, that all men are X an old n have no He will not al; that they live clea shio ey nan who w big 7 uld not steal reet car fare from 1 approval, in order to hav e less truthful than men, nd more given to equivocation hunt pralmis thermore, Lortcomin, lia ¥ as women solute hones I economie independenc 3 d truth 5 existed up to had to mes took But I don't think t DOROTHY DIX: (Copyright, 1024.) BEDTIME STORIES Danny Takes a Chance. Pity him who has to choose To win all, or all_to lose. —Danny Meadow Mouse. Danny Meadow Mouse had need of all his wits. Yes, sires, had nced ot all his wits. There was nothing be- tween him and the inside of the stomach of Gray Fox but & stump. It was for Danny to keep that stump between. If ho fafled for one little instant, one teeny, weeny instant, he would see the inside of that stomach, and this was the last thing In the world he wanted to see. Gray Fox was just as eager not to have that stump between as Danny was to have it between. So each was doing hix best to outwit the other. Gray Fox trled chasing Danny around and around that stump. The best he could do was to get an oc- WASN'T A SECOND TOO SOON. of Danny's short ried stopping short ®0 as to meet But Du—nn‘!{ casional glimps: tail. Then he thd turning back wo nny coming around. D™ endy. Tor this trick, and dtan’t work. But Gray Fox had an advantage over Danny dow Mouse. You know the big and strong always have a certain advantage over the much shorter that he had to take ever and ever_so many more steps than did Gray Fax, and this took his breath and his strength. As he grew short of breath and more and more tired he knew that only chance or his wits could save him. Now, lying on its side just & few feet away was a rusty old tomato can. The bottom of it was toward Danny. Of course he couldn’t see the other end, and 8o he couldn’t know how big an opening it had.| It might not be large enough for even so small a person as himselt ! to get through. It might be .ud.] open, in which case he would find| no safety there. Danny hadn't mo- ticed this can at first. When he had noticed it he had given it hardly | | By Thornton W. Burgess. more than thought. grew more and more tired that old can geemed to offer the only possible way of escape from Gray Fox. Dan- ny had once escaped from Reddy Fox by means of an old can, and he hadn't forgotten it. “I wish I knew about the opening in the other end of that cam,” thought Danny. “If it is the right size I'll ba safe. " I guess T'll have to take the chance. 1 can't stand this much longer. It will be no worse to be caught In that can by Gray Fox than to be caught here. Oh dear, why ouidn't that can be the other way nd so that I could know how opening is! Well, here But a5 he Danny drew a 1 breath and ran just as fast as those short legs of his could take him straight to that old tomato can. Perhaps you can gucss, though I don't helieve you can, just how he felt when he dodged around the end of that old can and found a hole in it just big enough for him to squeeze through. He wasn't & second too soon. Gray Fox was at very. heels. Danny had taken a chance and he had won. He was still terribly frightened, but he had hope now, and that helped a lot. (Oopyright. 1924, by T. W. Burgess.) Quick Oatmeal Cookies. Cream two-thirds cup of butter with two-thirds cup of brown sugar: add one beaten egg, one cup of rolled raw oats, and one cup of white flour into whiclt one teaspoonful of baking powder has been stirred. Mix the in- greaients well, and if too dry, add a little milk; turn out on a floured board, roll thin, and cut with a cooky cutter. Put into buttered pans and bake in & hot oven. It w!ll take about ten minutes to bake these ALWAYS READY FOR Baker’s Breakfast Cocoa Growing children want and fre- quently need more nourishment than adults, owing to the activity of their restless little bodies. - Baker’s Cocoa fills all the requi ments of the dieti- tian :l:l: physician s a delicious, pure nd® healthful beverage. Itis & cocoa of high quality "Made only by WalterBaker & Co.Lea. Established 1750 Mills at Dorchaster, Mass, and Montrel, Canada m-mmnr"- 1924. COLOR CUT-OUT Going to ihe Tournament. FEATU RES, When We Go Shopping Thread Count in Linen, A common miseonception among shoppers is that a “heavy” table- cloth s, perforce, & “good” one. The Ithreads may be ever so coarse and | “Well, we must discuss our plans for the ekating tournament at Bear Lake tomorrow,” said Mr. Cut-out one night at the supper table. Betty and Billy looked at each other and almost dropped their spoons with ex- citement. “Then you think we can skate well enough™ asked Betty SWhy, I'd be proud of you.two _y’ou‘nx rs anywhere!” beamed | their Lt the first train,” suggest- agerly. “We go tomorrow morning,” tl father said. And guess what w . going to ride in after we get off the train “What?" cried the two children. | “A fine big sleigh. We're going |to ride twenty miles to the music of sleighbells. Now run to bed quick, for we start earl || Billy's trousers are gray, his blouce white, | his tis and bedroom siippers blue, - | (Copyright, 1924) MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN | | at she does.| One Mother Savs: I started taking children's maga~ zines for my youngsters just as soon as they could read and always saw to it that books they liked, were also on the library table along with| my own. Many children are not in- terested {n reading unless they have at hand books or magazines of their own which they can pick up and dip into just as grown-ups do. (Copyright, 1924.) CRANBERRY SAUCE served cold is delicions with Roast Pork, Lamb or Beef EATMOR CRANBERRIES Jumpy, and the spaces between filled with starch, but if it has “body” and feels heavy when lifted in the hand, it is generally quite sufficient to pass muster with the shopper who, when buying her household linens, does not look beyond the first wash day for them. When tho linen s papery and erackles, it in a safe guess that its fistitioys “body” ‘{s produced by a heavy sizing of chalk, starch, gum, and what not, and that this will ali he lost in the first trip to the laundry tubs, leaving you in its pleace only & coarse, slcazy, rough surfaced rug Good Tinen must feel thick, leath ory, and heavy; but it must be heavy from fts own welght, and not from excensive sizing. This does not mean that starch is to ba considered as an adulterant, unless an excessive amount has been added for the evident purpose of covering up a loose, inferior wea Some form of sizing (s essentixl in obtain ing the high gloss and exquisite laundering qualities of tab linens. PERSONAL HE BY WILLIAM BY MRS. HARLAND M. ALLI A 2004 test for a fabri suspect of being overdred take up a corner of the goods and | etween the fingers, swhen the dry starch will fly, S auet tuoun the air 4 - like dust, through | 1o & Perhaps the surest way of ! 2 &et a sample of the cloth. and wash it, when the sizing will be removed, and the nature of the weay« stand revealed But true body in linen is t ¥ in linen is produced by having fine, even threads that Jie 4 close together. A good way to judge linen s to count thy nuniber of threads to an inch. But of eourse the average shopper has no reans o counting the threads or of making microscop ny of the large ir erchandiec sratory by wi {tested in their own la expert, and will gladly iive vou this Information if vou ask it ‘he correct amount for war a €004 double damurk of mediyn qua) |ity 1s 180 threads, wnd for filling & |threads. Or U can tell something about it by holding the linen up te the light and looking through it. Ti. [lower the thread count, the mor loosely t is woven, and the conree {1t probably Is. On the other hand damask mayv b too fine, g0 that |has fine, weak threads lying far |apart. The nt s very importer |in judging table linen, with & [low thread count cannat possibl® |give the me service as the clati of fir w ALTH S BRADY, M. D., RVICE Noted Physician and Author. ‘This Age of Rush. An article about the heart, sug- gests a reader, would Interest every- body in this age of rush. How can a person tell if his heart is weak, a lay person? This is the age of sit. The rush stuff is just a harmless little label pusted on & package you're a little [ dilatory In delivering, or something like that, Our fondness for rush here in America is akin to our habit of kidding ourselves about our “work’ nd our nonchalant custom of think- ing of the "high tension” of ‘“big business” and the “mervous break- down" from “overworl nd all that sort of thing. Phystology will never become su clently popular, I fear, to overtak the silly, old fishiological absurdity of “nervous exhaustion’—as though the nerves wers a source of encrgy instead of & mere system of commu- nication. Even medical literature is streaked through with this and al- Hed absurdities. There are thousands of unhappy mortals this yery minute | entertaining the utterly futile and untenable notion that their impaired health incompetency is explained by “nerves” or “nervousness.” This is the age of sit. Rush? The | only rush that manifests itself now |adaye is the rush to get scross t | track before the train do. America today unquestionably hoic the world champtonship in long-dis | tance o the flivve: | for one factor. « body site now t &0 whereever 1 The id heart dixeas country mey be correct we can judge fron, there does seam 1 death rate from cardio euse (which includes hardening the arteries, chronic Bright's disease apoplexy and most heart discas | cept valvular lesions). or at a | there is not the steady deeline | death rate per hundred thou: population that s apparent mortality statistics of nearly all th other important diseases. But tr ascribe this to our national rush o hurry is to ignore all knowledge o the nature and causes of heart dis ease. hat the prev increasing ence in As well in the the ce 1914, -— when women wers firs ted to the franchise, the tota' of voters in Great Britair i welled from .060,000 to 20,000 True Economy is not so much what you pay for an article as what you get in return. "SALADA’ T E A is incomparable in value. Tryittoday. Delicate Vino you up will build “and make you H441 Children 1 strong — We Guarantee It — Sole Authorized Agents O’Donnell’s Drug Store 1405 H Street N.W. another— this important discovery in the care of the skin N almost no so much misinformation as in the matter of there is one Resinol Ointment alsofor more serious effections NotonlyisResino] Ofnement wsed everywhere for. awsy mincskin blemisher— but fessoothing healing prop- ertles have for years been suc- comfulin elieving moreeeub: Borp skin afiections. Ra and eczema —often kching, anpleasant and embarrassing illtn many casesvanishin few days. Even a light spplication sinks deep into the pores, attacks the roor of the disorder, and startsthe skin again scting normally. Resinol is ly harm- Tesa. Tt will not irritate even ehe delicate textuze. of an infant’s skin. To aim&l‘e factat tom of it all, that any physician will tell you. And women - selves are beginningto pass italong fromonetoanother.Itissimplythis: Below the sutface layers of the skin, natural forces are fighting day and night to counteract the harsh conditionsof daily life. Unaided, these forces fight a | e TUniod e oo St v ity they sccumulate; infection results, Yet merely bring z‘:{gt.uun. indtheb] lem- g £ el v marred textureis mwd.w dust restore the pulsing of the tiny capillaries in the lower other field is there layers of the ski skin beauty. Yet e bot- be more or less Try it today warm water, a_ Resinol Soap begin to notice cleanse the pores of ence in your s and germs, to gently little blemishes. RESINOL SOAPand OINTMENT adl SR e B and then to stop new —thousands are today using Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment. Often in a tew days, blackheads, blem- ishes, and even infections that o serious, will yk:S to this gentle treatment. Begin today this method of daily care off n.mmgym yourself. At night be- fore retiring, work up on the face, with zhick, creamy lather of “Work it gently into the pores; then rinse off, and splash on a dash of clear, cold water to Then, withspecial irritations, roug} blemishes or rashes, apply a t Resinol Ointment. If on overnight. In the morning wash off again with Resinol Sosp. ‘Within & week you will lose the pores. possible, leave it the differ- kin—a finer, softer texture—a ruddier glow—a clearing of the ugly

Other pages from this issue: