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WOMAN’S PAGE. R W THE DOLL 1S COSTUMED IN ROWS OF Nightgow with with-spi natinz. The sofa cushi; down fillir the form of dol skirts are fasci lar to the doll y 1 of having for the fluffy frocks they have perfumed wadding. Beneath this another circular wadded portion which forms the pocket into which the itgown is slipped during the day time. The upper and lower portions sewed together for little more than half the circumference, shaped pocket for the smoothly fold ed zown The lit is with skirt as full for - of any court beauty in crinolines. sits (or it may be she stands) in smart poise above the pil with its trim sham, and no one 1d suspect what her ample skirt It must be confessed that > lady is often a bit small for voluminous skirt, but this is merely one of the whims of th- fash ion. She is supposed to be more pi quant if she is small. A large doll id be quite out of place in the po sition accorded and so well held by lit tle Miss Nightzown Cas To Make Doll Casy To make this dainty lad t a doll h chic. No more than the hody needed. Suitable dolls can be found at embroidery de- parime lamp departments even better t regular shops. If you have little zirls who have discarded doils, you may tind just the right sort without having to buy another. Silk is the fivorite material for the costume. Perhaps the most attractive of all thes: dol costumed in a dainty colored frock with rows of lace. her size as tho or BEDTIME STORIES Mocker’s Secret. wd all is done be told_to none Mr. Mocker. Mocker has t very seldom n one knows it 1t idea. A secret et when more There is no_more precious secret for the feathered folk an the place wher they sleep. Mocker the Mocking Bird knows this, and this was the t he was keep: ing all to himself. Not adl the spyin by Peter Rabbit could discover that sleeping place. My, how Peter did want to find where Mr. Mocker spent - dliovi HE TOOK TO his nights. And it nothing but urosity that made Peter want to find this out Peter thought he was very smart. tie thought his spying wasn't known. thought that Mocker the Mocking 4 had no iden that he was being vatched. What Peter forgot was that the feathered folk have very sharp eves--much sharper eves than he h; Mr. Mocker’s eves were no exception. could see Peter when Peter couldn’t see him: and every night when he started for his hiding place he would chucki the way there. “‘Peter Rabbit thinks 1 don’t know what he is hanging around for,” he would say to himself 0ol everybody as easily ax I can fool Peter. If I could, I would have very little to worry about. Peter ought to know better.” Yes, suh, Peter Rabbit sho'ly ought to know better. Tt isn't volite of him. It isn't police and it sn't right. 1 think tomorrow night Ul play a little joke on him.” So the next night, just before the Black Shadows came creeping out trom the Purple Hills, Mocker, instead I czn fail in my aims 2nd not mind . When [ve labored the best that L coula — But I cannot be calm and resigned When my motives 2are not understood. e~ thus making | I wish T could | DAL COLORED FROCK RUF NTY WITH | edged ruffles extending at regular in- | tervals down the entire skirt. The | bodice is cut low and finished with a | narrow ruffle or bertha and the sleeves are short and puffed, with a frill of lace falling from the snug band of each. The color of the gown should suit the scheme of the bedroom. Black tin is a favorite fabric for these dolls’ dresses. The shirts are likely to | be made with the ruffles of the same | goods (or black ribbon) without lace. The top of the low bodice edged with narrow gold braid or fanc raid. Bodicés should be snug fitting, thus accenting.the slim waists and the is | full skirts. jd Choice of Materials. E of whatever kind, Make the skirt of one | width of the fabric and sew the ruffles on it. Then sew the lower edge to the edge of the wadded portion previously | made and neatly covered with white | cambric or muslin. Gather the top of the skirt and fasten it to the waist | | of the doll after she has been sewed securely onto the top of the wadded portion, She must be in the exact center of this pillow portion. Tha lower part should be covered with the | same material. Sprinkle both padded portions with , your favorite sachet powder. The side of each portion that forms the insid of the pocket should be lined with white, cream or some delicate colored silk. China silk is ex- cellent for this, ‘When ea portion is done, seam them together for more than half the circumference, and the { dainty lady is ready to take her place on the pillow or just below it, which- | ever position suits your fancy best. should be soft | | BY THORNTON W. BURGESS ng around Farmer tErown’s house, flew directly over the Old Orchard toward the Green Forest. | Peter started after him at once. You | would have laughed to have seen h You see, he kept dodging behind tree: all the time thinking that Mocker didn't see him. How Mocker dia | chuckle then! He took great care not |to fly too fast. He made a great pre. | | tense of looking behind him to see if he was being followed. Peter would THE EVENING SUB ROSA BY MIML Pretending Is Dangerous. “No, I wasn't really mad at Ken- neth the other night,” Istelle re- marked, laughingly. “I was only kid- ding when 1 accused him of having a flirtation with some oné else. g “But what's the point in raising & fuss, when there's no cause?” she was asked. “Oh, a quarrel now and then helps to clear the atmosphere. We have a good time making up, and I find out that he really cares for me. When I fuss at him and tell him I'm con- vinced of his infidelity, he takes it so serfously. It makes me feel quite sure he'd never be capable of unfaith- fulnes Estelle’s little habit is not an un- usual one. Dozens of girls, perfectly confident of their men’s fidelity, pre- tend to be violently jealous of other loves they know do not exist. They indulge in scenes just for the sheer pleasure of hearing their sweet- hearts deny the accusations. nd the poor men are thoroughly taken in—protest their ignorance in seven different languages, and feel miserable. However, the quarrel ends, event ually, a few tears are shed, and all the_trouble is over. : “There’s no harm in it, Mimi" telle assured me, “and sometimes when things get dull, it's rather fun pretending to be green with jeslousy.” There’s no harm in it for Istelle, just now, while she's young and pretty and sure of herself and her man. But the seeds she's sowing in her own mind will take root and grow in 4 most unpleasant way during the vears to come. Now she laughs inwardly while she ra at Ken for pretended wrongs. There will come a time when the doubt and suspicion she has so often played at feeling will really find a place in her mind. When she goes to her fiance, or husband, asking for his assurance that her fears are ridiculous, he may be just a trifle bored with this type of scene. He may, because of years of repetition, not find it worth while to make his answers convincing Accustomed to these quarrels over nother woman,” he may cease to take them seriously—and then what of poor Estelle, who has ceased pre. tending, and is at last in earnest Don't you see how dangerous it is to play at any sort of emotion? " Don't you see that wasting your energy on make-believe is ridiculous? Don't you see that once a subject has ceased to be a novelty—once it has become stale and tarnished with time—it will no longer impress the person you most desire to impress? to answer any inquiries to this paper. provided a stamped ed envelope 15 inclosed (Copyright. 1926.) HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. Amongsthe many rare and interest- ing thin; finding their way into our American gift shops from the is this beautiful Moradabad sware. The ancient city of Mora- dabad has been one of the chief cen- ters of the brassware industry in India for more than a century. The brass is engraved and the de- always stop then. Then Mocker, pre- ending to be very anxious and very | secretive, would go on. So he led | | Peter farther and farther into the | | Green Forest. | By ana by they approached mp | of hemlock trees growing very close | together. Mocker sat on the top of a tall stub for some time, looking this | way and that way. Peter Rabbit, | hiding behind the trunk of a tree, had his turn at chuckling. “That's the place, himself, “that’s the pl spends ‘his nights. e hides in the | thickest part of those hemlocks. I | | knew I could find his secret if T kept | at it long enough. It is hard work to | fool Peter Rabbit when he doesn't | want to be fooled. Yes, sir, it is hard work to fool Peter Rabbit. Anyone who thinks he can fool me must get up early in the morning. There, didn’t 1 say so?" Mocker had that very moment, after a last look around, flown straight into the middle of that group of hemlocks. | Of course, he disappeared from sight at once. ‘But what Peter didn’t see was that Mocker came out on the other side and, keeping the trees be- tween himself and Peter, away he flew. When it was quite safe to do so, he turned and without wasting an time, for the Black Shadows were almost to the Green Forest, he made straight for a_swampy place where grew some cedar trees. They grew close together and they made a splen- did shelter. Once upon a time Wel- come Robin had spent the Winter in | those very same cedar trees. In among the branches of one of those trees Mocker made his way. It would take sharp e indeed, to find him there. He was sheltered from wind and storm and from the eves of ene- mies. There he fiad been spending’ his nights all Winter. There was his secret. And, as he closed his eyes for the night, he was still chuckling. He was thinking how he had kept his se. jcret and fooled Peter Rabbit. (Copsright, 1926.) said Peter to where Mocke Oyster Toast. Pick over and drain 40 small oys. iters. In a saucepan prepare a pint of thin sauce, using one large tea- { spoonful each of butter and flour, one pint of milk, one-half a teaspoontul of salt and one-third teaspoonful of pep- ald the oyster liquid sepa- ¢, skim carefully and add to it poonful of butter. Have ready eight or ten slic>s of thin, crisp toast: dip each into the hot oyster liquor and lay on a_heated platter. Drop into the sauce the drained oysters and . stir over the fire until they are plump and well ruffled. Pour at once over the | toast and send to the table. Eggs—Bread Sauce. Have ready a heaping cupful of stale bread crumbs, using only the in- terior of the loaf. Put into a sauce- pan with a cupful and a half of milk, one-half a teaspoonful of salt, a dash of cayenne and half a teaspoonful of onion juice, and simmer slowly un- til thick and smooth, beating several times with a spoon. Pour the sauce pressions are filled with melted lac, so that the design shows in brilliant color against a background of brass. The workmen who produce this bra. e are Mussulmen of various castes. Their art is handed down from one generation to another, and the work is carried on in their own huts. BEach article passes through the hands of several artisans; each being an expert in the particular part he performs. The pieces include serving travs, plates, bowls, vases, candle- sticks and jewel boxes. HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. Sophomores. Some traveling has been done by the term “sophomore,” with which we are iliar as the name of the second ification in our colleges, that of the second year, or one above the freshman. The interesting fact revealed by a study into its beginnings is that, though it has long been regarded as an out-and-out Americanism, it came to us from England, having had its auspicious origin in the halls of the University of Cambridge. For among the cant terms (peculiarities of speech) at Cambridge, as given in the “Gradus ad Catabrigiam,” we find “Soph-Mor" as the next distinctive appellation to freshman. At the English universities the course consists of three years and one term, during which the students are known as first-year men or freshmen; second-year men or junior sophisters, or sophs; third-year men or senior sophs, and, in the last term, question- . with reference to the approaching examinations. The theory as to the ultimate origin of the word ‘“‘sopho- more” is that the young sophs re- ceived the adjunct “mor,” which is a derivative of the Greek, meaning “foolish,” with reference to the pom- posity that is supposed to be charac- teristic of the young collegian leaving his freshman year. The term has ceased to be known, even as a student expression, in Eng- land, the land of its birth, and in the university which fathered it there, But it has waxed strong in this coun. try, where at an early date it had its introduction, we learn, from Cam. bridge in England to Cambridge in America, W i @ozn_et cooks 1 into a broad, shallow dish and break carefully over it half a dozen eggs. Place in a hot oven until the eges are et, then serve. s 7. white STAR MONDAY ~w| Dorothy Dix; Study the Girl’s Taste; Don’t Show Jealousy; Talk to Her About Herself; Choose Romantic Setting in Which to Pop Question. Gives 17 ‘Workable Courting” Rules -+ LOVELORN youth asks me to give him a few tips about how to win & madien’s heart. Of course, there are no hard and fast do-this-and-you- cannot-fail rules for capturing a young girl's fickle fancy, but here are a few suggestions that, faithfully followed, can be guaranteed to turn the trick nine times out of ten. . First. Put pep into your wooing. Make it snappy. Go after a girl as if you meant to get her or die in the attempt. There is something primitive In every woman that responds to the Cave-Man stuff, and there isn't & woman living who secretly doesn't yearn to be abducted and married against her protests. Second. Be persistent. Don't get discouraged too easily. Never take “no” for a final answer until the girl is married to some other man. As a general thing, the girl just wants to be persuaded and have somebody make up her mind for her. Success goes to the patient suitor, and the man who sits down on a maiden’s doorstep and camps there almosy, invariably ends by getting her. Third. Never let a'woman make a convenience out of you. Don't be & substitute beau who will fetch and carry for her and take her to parties and fill in the dates that nobody else asks for. Humility in man is a virtue that cuts no ice with the feminine sex. Fourth. If you are jealous, hide it in your own heart. Jealousy is the hallmark of the Inferiority complex. It shows that you are afraid of your rivals and that you do not consider yourself as attractive as they are, and girls are pretty sure to take a man at his own valuation. Fifth. Never let a girl find out that you are afraid of her. she will play with you as a cat does with a mouse. Besides, no woman wants # coward for a husband. She desires a husband of whom she stands in awe and of whom she is a little afraid herself. > 1f you do Sixth. Dress as well as your means will immaculately clean and shaven and well pressed. Women are very sensitive to appearances, and not all of the virtues or the genius in the world will keep you from looking ridiculous to a girl if your trousers legs are too short nultll your coat sleeves tvo long and your hair hangs over the back of your collar. permit and, above all, be Show a girl that you know how to take care of yourself and Don’t force her to be the pacemaker when you go out together. .« e v JEIGHTH. Learn how to do things. Learn how to dance so that you won't walk all over her feet and bump into every other couple on a dancing floor. Learn how to play a decent game of cards, so that you won't trump your partner’s ace or make leads that rouse murderous passions in the breasts of those who are playing with you. Learn how to order a little dinner, even if you have to subsidize some headwalter into showing you how to do it. Practice on your mother and sister until you can help a woman put on her wrap without tearing it to pieces or mussing her permanent wave. Seventh. of her. Ninth. Study a girl's taste. It flatters her to death to find out that vou care enough for her to remember that she likes marshmallows instead of chocolates and prefers violets to roses. Tenth. Be discreet in your gifts. Blow in your money on many little tokens of affection that will be constant reminders of vou, rather than on one expensive article that will be put aside and forgotten. It is better to send one rose every morning for 12 days in succession than a dozen roses in a bunch. . Eleventh. Talk to a girl as if she were a creature of almost human intelligence. This is the subtlest brand of flattery and goes to a woman's hr]u‘d like vintage champagne, because she is so unused to it and gets it so seldom. Twelfth. Talk to a girl about herself. That is the subject in which she Is most interested and of which she never tires. If she is a beauty, tell her what a wonderful mind she has. If she is homely, compliment her complexion. Develop a deep interest in her opinions. Ask her advice about your own affairs. This will make her concern herself about vou and feel herself responsible for you, and before she knows it she will consider herself vour side partner. Play this line up strong. Thirteenth. Don't monologue about yourself too much. engaged to you, or married to you, she may childhood and youth and the state of the you made in your automobile, but she isn" life at the beginning of your courtship. of egotism. After a girl is want to hear all about your t craving to hear the story of your It takes love to sugarcoat the pill FOURTEENTH. Don't go too often’to see a girl or stay too late when you do go. Many a man has killed a promising love affair by giving the sirl an overdose of his society. ) Fifteenth. Never argue with a girl before marriage. time for that afterward. Never criticize a girl's faults. the illusion, for a short time, anyway, that you think her try to boss a girl, There is plenty of Let her cherish an angel. Never because the modern woman isn't looking for a master. Be bold, be bold, be not too bold in Your wooing. Let the girl see that you are not afraid to ask for what You want and that you realize that she will be doing a pretty good day’s work when she gets you. But, on the other hand, don’t act as if You were conferring a favor upon her by offering her a life job, without wages, as vour wife. Sixteenth, Seventeenth. And lastly. use some discretion w the question. Don't ask a girl for her heart and ha for a 30-day option on a ton of pig iron. Don't propose across a regt table, with your mouth full of roast beef and potatoes. Don't propose siien hen you come to popping nd as if you were asking you are dodging automobiles on a crowded street. Don't propose ta & w when she has on a new hat and is feeling fit and fine, and as if she coulq buck the world on her own account. Many a woman says “no” when she would like to say “yes" just because she is so exasperated with the man for not having the sense to wait for the time and the place, when the thing could be .beautifully and romantically done in such a way that it would be a comfort for her to remember the remainder of her life. So bide your time and seize the psychological moment when nature has set the stage with a lover’s moon or when you are safe away from the madding crowd or when the girl is tited and feeling forlorn and bedraggled and that all she wants in the world is a nice masculine shoulder to cry on. Try it then, and it is a safe bet that the next day you will be pricing engage. DOROTHY DIX. ST HiEe (Copyright, 1926.) Jungle Fashion. Mrs. Diana Strickland, explorer and big-game hunter, says In London that bobbed heads of today have every thing in common with the “fashions of the primitive jungle dwellers, and not only that but- many ballroom Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. FE grocery trade and how many miles | Green-Eyed Monster. Love, ardent and devoted, some- times accompanies jealousy. The more ardent the love, the greater will be the jealousy if one happens to let the ‘“green-eyed monster” stalk around. Sometimes a jealous person would kill the object of his affection rather than permit others to have her. Jeal- ousy usually accompanies large self- esteem, contempt and love of notori- ety. In any event, extreme jealousy is not a desirable or a likable charac- teristic, for frequently its manifesta- tion is without real foundation. ‘Wives or husbands, with this trait overdeveloped, cannot keep their feel- ings under controleif their own sex manifests the least evidence of liking for their mate. Jealousy in its legiti- or her good name and to guatd loved ones against all evil influences. The facial sign of jealousy is found in the lower lip. You may know it by the fullness below the red membrane section. It will be found on each side of the mid-section, and when extreme it seems to puff out the region indi- cated. FADELESS DYES Dye or tint all materials in one operation Dresses, however trimmed or made of combined materials, neo-lnfl‘drfll o tinted in one with Putasm Fadeless Dyes. No need to rip apert. Samo mm.‘n:d-.ou- . Tl Koler Bloach to v __:..;: - Free — 4 Address Dogt. N MONROE DRUG CO., QUINCY, ILL. s, g . food offers you.. mate action causes one to guard his|, dances of the present time have kin- ship with the dances of “our savage ancestors. “While we imagine we are doing the most up-to-date step from New York, Paris or London,” says Mrs. Strickland, “actually they are about the same movements as those known to our great-grandmothers of thou- sands of year ago.” Mrs, Strickland spent more than a year in Africa, having two woman companions, two male escorts and sev- eral hundred native porter: Quaker Oats “stands by” you through the morning Has the “bulk,” too, that makes laxatives seldom needed HOUSANDS have unenergetic mornings because they start the day with breakfasts that lack in cer- tain important food elements. To feel right, you must have a well- balanced, complete breakfast ration. At most other meals —lunch and dinner — you get it. But breakfast is a hurried meal, often badly chosen. Thus Quaker Oats, containing 16% protein, food's great tissue builder, 58% carbohydrate, its great energy element, plus sall-important vitamines and the “bulk” that makes laxatives seldom needed, is the dietetic urge of the world today. It is food that “stands b& you through the morning. Quick Quaker ks in 3 to 5 nligutes. That's faster than plain toast. n't deny your- self the natural stimulation this rich BRUAR OLD APPLE ADAGE FRED STUART GIBBS. Food Specialist. BY W i Half truths are so unsatisfactory. ‘The old adage, “An apple a day kee the doctor away,” was, perhaps, serv- icezble in the dny of incomplete die- tary knowledge. Probably it i bet- ter to make unintelligent use of a food that is essentlally wholesome than not to use it at all, but times have changed. Today the up-to-date home- maker and dietary dispenser demands accurate information about our com- mon foodstuffs, and she is quite justi- fled in her demand. ‘What are the facts about apples, and how shall they best be stated? First of all, the apple has such an honorable place in history! Since the first of our recorded events it has held its own as a valuable food. Fact. No. 1: All claims as to the apple’'s food value may be jsubstan. tiated by unlimited evidence. No need for special dietary studles such as are undertaken in the case of foods which have never been completely tested. Then as to its place in the popular regard. The most wholesome food in the world will do very little good if people “do not like it or if they can- not be coaxed to eat it. An apple census would disclose a very small percentage of individuals *'who “do not like apples!” Fact No. 2: Mothers who are con fronted with poor appetites on the part of their voungsters will usually have no trouble in making them eat apples. Next, our complicated civilization, with its equally complex diet, has brought about certain conditions of acidity in the body, conditions that are apt to prevail in any so-called pros- perous community. One cause is the general populari of acid-forming foods. To stop by the way for a bit of explanation, practically all students of nutrition know that food is, in a quite literal sense, fuel, and that it is burned in the body. Foods that leave an acid residue will, when burned in the body, cause a decrease in the alka- linity of the blood, its natural and nor- mal state. The sequel is often kidney and liver disorders, since this state of affairs places on these organs an in- creased strain. In a similar manner, the foods with an alkaline ash will en- ter into Nature’s plans, with the dif- ference that they will Lelp instead of hindering the alkaline balance. Re- sult, increased powers of resistance against disease, to say nothing of con- tinous daily health. Apples give an alkaline ash. Fact No. 3: The apple is one of the important foods in warding off kidney trouble, liver disorders, high blood pressure, rheumatism, gout and con- stipation. Does this mean that the apple is a complete food and one which may be counted upon to nourish the body com- pletely? Not at all: Probably if every one could be made to take a balanced view of the food- stuffs which go to make up our bal- anced dietaries, most of the prevail- ing misunderstanding in regard to di- etar; be cleared up. There would be fewer individuals resting content with half- truths. Apples, for example, are deficient in i body-building material. Let them do the important work of helping to pre- serve the alkalinity of the blood, and depend on milk, on eggs and on nuts for protein. After the acid condition has been cleared up and—this most impor- tant—when this condition has main- tained for a considerable period, then it is allowable to return to a moderate amount of meat and other acid-form- ing foods. So let us revise the adage and phrase it thus, “An apple a day helps to keep acidity away.” MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Telephone Book Cover. Our Mother says A colored magazine cover, pasted on the outside of the-telephone directory makes it a thing of beauty instead of the unsightly object it often becomes from constant handling. Pictures which tone with the general color scheme of the room in which the di- rectory is Kept are easy to find, and the children delight in seeking suit- able ones. When a cover becomes dirty or shabby, they take turns in selecting new ones, and the variety always pleases them. How Times Change. From the Duluth Herald. In the long ago Sunday was a day to think about the hereafter, not a day to get there. Few Women Still use old hygienic methods. ‘Charming freshness, true protec- tion, this new way O help women meet every day I unhandicapped is the object of a new hygiene. A way that ends the hazards of the old-time “sanitary pad,” that ends the embarrassment of disposal. Eight in 10 better-class women today employ “KOTEX.” Wear lightest gowns and frocks without a second thought, any day, anywhere. : Five times as absorbent as ordi- nary cotton pads! Deodorizes. Ends ALL fear of offending. : Discards as easily as a piece of tissue. No laundry You get it af any drug or depart- ment store simply by saying, “KOTEX.” No emban‘aslm:nt.h_ In fairness to yourself, try this new way. Costs only a few ceats. Twelve in a package. KOTEX No lawundry—discard like. tissus and nutritional questions would | Dear Ann: . Dressing to make the mqst of one's looks is 8o largely a matter of lines Now a stout woman has just as many choices of vests as any one else. Thus there is no excuse for her selecting one with a short line, like the vest or the left. The long line of the vest on the right was just made for her, be cause it adds length and detracts from breadth. Yours for memorizing one’s lines, LETITIA (Copyright. 1926.) BY WILLIAM Cheerful Atmosphere. The excessive dryness or low hu- midity of the air in the overheated dwelling, office or shop in the Winter season, when artificial heating is re quired, explains the squeaks cracks in furniture, the piano getting out of tune, the plants not doing well, the roughness and chapping of the skin of the individual much of the time indoors, the ruination of .fine book bindings and the spoiling of good tempers. Overheating means heating the air to a temperature above €S degrees F. This is the time for the manager. | father, housekeeper, or whoever pur. the establishment to put his down and a suitable number of good reliable mercury thermometers up. ‘and issue the necesary ukase abol | ishing attempts to regulate the tem- | perature by mercurial sensations. The mercurial reading, the height of the mercury, should be the arbitrar: guide and all persons whose sensa- | tions are not in accord with the ther mometer.should be advised to consult | a physician about whatever ails them. This is no joke. There really is some- thing wrong with those who cannot feel comfortable when the atmosphere is moderately heated, say-at 65 to 67 degrees F. T can suggest what ails a_good many of them. They are affected with hypothyroidism, deficient thyroid gland function, and they sorely need a suitable fodin ration. Others who complain when room temperature is below 68 are hypersensitive from the depraving and weakening effect of prolonged {coddling. They have become accus- tomed to hothouse environment, temperaure soaring up around T4 degrees F. and the Saharalike dryness { that goes with it, and their vasomotor | | mechanism is pretty low and their | vitality is just as low—they are in | the worst possible condition to put | jup a fight with any serious illness. | For their own good these hypersensi- | | tive people should not be permitted to dictate or impose their peculiar stand- ards of air conditioning in home, office or public conveyance on normal peo- ple. The booze hound always knows his poison is good for everybody else. A third group of peopie who do not fail to send up a loud yodel when- | ever any one tries to condition the | {alr properly consists of women, who wear the sheer {ings and the skimplest shoes, and no sleeves and exposed chests, not because they find such mode of dres or undress comfortable but because they feel bound to follow what they consider the dictates of fashion. It is quite all right from the hygienic point of view for anybody who feels com- | fortable that way to go without cloth- ing. but it is hardly fair for such per- the stock- Keepin Safe Soap For your face . . . That’s the important thing to women This simple rule in skin care is bringing the allure of natural skin beauty to thousands TO endanger a good complexion with unproved soaps is a folly. The kind of soap to use on your face is a beauty soap. A scap made for one purpose only—to safeguard your complexion. Thousands have learned how true that'is. For Youth is thus preserved. Complexions are.« treated kindly; natural loveliness retained. Palmolive Soap is made by ex- perts in beauty; of famous beauty | oils in secret blend; a soap made to be used freely, lavishly on the skin.‘- That is the kind of soap you want for, your face. i , gnrt today. Follow this rule in skin care for one week. Note the difference in your skin. World’s au- | thorities urge it. Countless thou- sands now employ it. De this . . . then note the E changes in your skin Wash your face gently with Palmolive Soap, massaging it softly into the skin. Rinse thoroughly, first with warm_water, then with cold. If your skin is inclined to be dry, apply a touch of good cold and | half-clad | H§ BY DOROTHY PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | BRADY, M. D. | B > me, shol car o con for perature is below 68 they 1ld put on more clothing. Now is the time | establishment | It will right aws es a sh the when the fi roll around all of the zinning not inning thead and then Autumn s<hould be Gene | ports to be the general caretaker of | o0t CHerch hien well condi £ | mu Sardines With Rice. Open a can of and on powder cornst t throug border TYREE'S . IMGEOT O--0MUN=-2> g Your Schoolgirl Complexion P ~ By IRENE CASTLE Copyrighted 1938 by P. O. Beauty Features Do this regularly, and particularly in the evening. Use powder and rouge, if you wish. But never leave them on over night. They clog the pores, often enlarge them. Black- heads and disfigurements often fol- low. They must be washed away. Get real Palmolive Do not use ordinary soaps in the treatment given above. Do not think any green soap, or represented as of palm and olive oils, is the same as Palmolive. It costs but 10c the cake!—so little that millions let it do for their bodies what it does for their faces. Obtain a cake today. Then note what an amazing _difference onef week makes. The Palmolive Com- cream—that is all. | pany (Del Corp.), Chicago, Iilinois.