Evening Star Newspaper, July 5, 1926, Page 26

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)

WOMA NS "PAGE Recipes for the Best Iced Drinks BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. 'LE H St Direct ere in demand me moy recipes give short notice jons fruit punches | ther at holidi he | can he t To- 1 hot e for ipe is especi: comes from ¢ | respher to he enjove | cookiex and heverages or a pl A sirup made by hoiing iemon juice «with some pieces of the rind) and sugar, diluted with water sufficient o permit of its | cooki fine foundation for fem- ! onade. It can be botiled, kept on the ice and be ready to add to w or to punche cipe for lemon ade th h has a follow add sugar the des an hour with er One lemon will give sufficie enzth for three half pints of water. This is aneconomical recipe. weil hefore pouring n te £ and whic! ious favor ons is gh to & tand for and serve ked ice Stiv Ginger Ale I Five lemons. one cupfu rt water and one quart e the h s qt =i emon very thin and spr Danny Disappears. Whe Thos suffer v whore Ond Mother N Peter Rabbit was hopping lipperty lipperty-lip across the Meadows toward the dear Old Briar Patch. He knew he « be there by the time jolly, round. ved Mr. Sun should kick wsy blankets off and his “limh up in the blue, biue sky there was still plenty of time, turned to make a call on ani Meadow Mouse, bezin 1side Nanny | wonldn't he | | “HELLO NANNY! HOW ol You 2 ARE 't seen of them for me, and. as they were living away from where he then was this seemed like a gond chance to find out how they were getting alon When Peter reached the place where he knew the Meadow Mouse home to be he sat down beside one of | the private little paths that Danny Meadow Mouse had made through the grass. He knew that if he moved hout trying to find Danny and Nanny | he would be likely scare them that they would remain hidden. Tt would be hetter to sit and wait. 1f he ted 1 sh. one of them would be sure 1o use one of those private | little paths, and Peter was sitting where two or three of these met. He didn’t have long to wait. In fact, he | had been therre only a few minutes when he heard a rustling in the grass The Cheerful Cherub When pompous people squelck me With their r‘egz.l attributes It cheers me to im?.gine How tl’\ey‘d look in bathing suits. e He some not f: either te enot | | hour. | Pronounce | ness. regard. OM] TADE CAKES MAKF IMENTS FOR HOT DAYS with the sugar. Let Then pour o the water and the gin and serve in tall glass train with eracked Raspberry Lemonade. One and a half cupfuls sugar, vfuls water. four cupfuls crushed Juice of three lemons and one ge and one quart boiling water Boil the sugar and two cup. fuls of warer together for 10 minutes When cool add the rasphery the juice of the orange and lemon Dilute with the ice water and serve unstrained. ¥ ch cupfuls one jnice of three lemons and three four hananas, two cupfuls mashed strawbherries and two quarts ice water. Roil the st of water to make a heavy sirup. and add other ir edients just serving Crush the berries first eut the bananas into small pieces, Homemade Gings hottle cream ind ora it Pu Two su te cupful Cool One on extract £ tar six quarts water Mix all ingredients hut eake and heat through ol and add yve: ake. Ready to serve in four days. ‘ON and out poppe hurrying paths. “Hell i Nanny Meadow Mouse along one of those little ¥ cried Peter. are you? What are you in hurry about? What is the new anny stopped abruptly. Oh. Peter,” she gasped. “how vou startled me! Tell me, P seen anything of Danny?’ Peter picked up his ears him that Nanny was really Her voice sounded a an “How such a It struck s we 4 he. “Isn't said Danny home? "hat's « silly question.” squeaked Nanny. f he were at home I him, would 17 Peter had to admit the truth of this. “Hax he been lang gone”” he in. quired iny use can nod Mouse has a very “Yes,” she said. two whole davs, and that is a long time. He never was gone long before. Oh, Peter, [ am so afr something dreadful has happened to him: 1 am afraid some one has caught nd 1 shall never see him again. what I'm afraid of, Peter R: I am afraid some one has eaten my Danny.” “Has any one heen hunting aroun here latelv?” inquired Peter. haven't noticed any of the Hawk fam ilv arvound, and Old Man Covote and Reddy Fox have heen keeping up in the Old_Pasture lately or over in the Green Forest. Of course, I suppose Hooty the Owl or some of his relatives may have picked Danny up. but if I were you I wouldn't give him up for lost vet. By the way, that big Man Rird was over here the other day wasn't it Of course, Peter meant an airplane. : nodded. said she. Danny since it flew vou suppose, Peter, {aken him with it? * Peter scratched a hindfoot. t took you hoth away once, didn’t he inquired Nanny nodded And’ it brought didn’t it? ain Nanny nodded WVell, then, T wouldn't worry about Danuy if that is what has happened to him.” said Peter. “But T don't know that it did take and-—and—oh, Peter have some one you nodded as well as a Meadow on know, a Meadow short neck He has heen gone Do—do could have aw it long ear with a vou bhack love disappea (Covyright. 1976, Lessons in English BY W. 1. GORDO Audacious. accent Often mispronounced: aw-day-shus, second syllable. Often misspelled: Syringe. Synonyms: Love. devotion, ‘affec- ion, atem‘hmem. fondness, three us in- word Let Word study: “Use a times and it is vours. crease our vocabulary one word each day. Today's word: Resentment: anger and ill will in view of real or fancied injury. “Wa shall overcome thelr resentment by kind- ness.” and ave you | if she were very | at | sking you if you'd seen | very | ‘and T haven't seen.| it's on tender- by mastering THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. 0. MO SUB ROSA BY MIMI You've Agreed; Don‘t Whine. Have you ever heen asked to m a fourth at bridge when you simpl yearned to be left all alone In an' eas) chair with a hook” Have you finally, after much per suasfon,” given in rather followed your tormentors to the hle? Then have seriously to plaving the ible In_order to give yers pleasure, or whinea? Most of us whine, I'm . can't seem to understand that we might just as well refuse to play en- tively, as to consent and then make others miserable with our disagree able attitude. Helen always co the hest natured pe She was constantly an_expression of mock well, T'll never amount to anything. I'm too e People can talk me into doing anything just to oblige them.” But none of Helen's friends ever thought of her as one who unselfishly vificed herself to please others. Truth to tell. her rifices never made any one happy. She showed so plainly what an ordeal she was suf fering just to give them pleasure. Perhaps there would be the ques- tion of the theater party asked would be awfully keen to see “The Purple Gloom,” a fascinating mystery play. Helen hates mystery plays. They frighten her, annoy her with unexpected noises, spoil her evening for her. This she told the length, but there beir them, all anxfous to go, they united to convince her that “The Purple Gloom” would be a great exception. { She'd just love it Finally, because she hated to miss a good party, she gave in and con- sented to he tortured by wilnessing the detective drama. . But having gracefully ziven in, she did not gracefully submit to her torment. She visibly writhed under the treat ment. She fidgested and yawned and made audible remarks about how bhored she was. She let every one know for several miles around that she'd just come to be good-natured—-if she'd had her way they'd be seeing a nice, senti mental love drama That_sort of giving in one. The only sort of sacrifice that's ally worth while is the at is made cheerfully, ¥ Unless vou're prepared to give up vour personal desires in the real Spirit of unselfishness, vou'll never make anv one happy. When you agree to do s nte doing. vou've tacitly 1o he pleasant about it | Don’t back out on that unwritten { promise. It marks vou as a whiner. whiner., ' MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. devoted best the have you game sidered herself n in the world. exclaiming with despair: “Oh, ¢ at seven of isties no something reed A Handy Shoe Rack. nd cupful | hefore | and | | One Mother The nally closet | rack Ay children’s in a state of confusion on the floor, until 1 devised a shoe 1 took two triangles of wood angles 1 nailed 1wo long several inches wule. The when placed with shoes were habit | | i | {To these t | hoards i ]m the top edge, are held firmly and {in plain sight Now, mismating {avolded “and the shoes alwa shoes. is orderly and quite convenient to g [ SUMMERTIME | BY D. C. PEATTIE. | Sweet Peas. Fach revolving year bring sweet pea season. though, of the marvelous florists can purvey sweet peas in the dead of Winter—if vou feel like paying the price. But peo ple who dine on hothouse strawber | ries the vear round find no thrill when | the strawberry season comes, and the | same is true of the fragrant weeks ! when the sweet pea reigns supreme. Many names dear to gardeners, but all too little known to most people, are linked with the lovely, old-fash’ Lioned sweel pea. The earliest of these, I think, W Father Franciscus Cupani, a devout Italian monk and an enthusiastic botanist. who grew the sweet pea first in 1699. One hun dred years later the English zar | deners had something new to offer in sweet peas besides Father Cupani's | Ttalian plant brought in from the | wild, The strain known as “painted lady" was brought from faraway Ceylon and hybridized with the European plant, and from then on the history of the sweel pea has heen a dazzling one of mixtures and inbreeding and | mitbreeding, producing the wonderful shades we know today. However, some of the strange copper colors that vou see in florists’ windows are due fo standing the sweet pea stems in colored inks. The name of Henry Eckford, | greatest sweet pea breeder in world, is all too ohscure. he who did more than any one else for English and American sweet peas Strangest of all is the story of Gregor Mendal. another monk, this time an Austrian, who lived in great obscurity and grew sweet peas for pleasure, He discovered that the descendants of # hybrid had a curious way of revert- ing 1o the parental type. In fact they did this with such regularity that he | was fible to formulate a little law about the effects of cross-breeding in sweet peas. He read a paper on it the the his paper in the club journal. vied his hand at hybridizing some suraged, and duties in the mon- ¢ took up his time. He died in seurity. In 1900 this paper of his was simultaneously discovered by three famous botanists and repub. lished to the world. Times had caught up with Mendel's great dis- | covery, and the dead man became { famous. Since then. a great library of stud- jes in Mendelian heredity ‘has heen published, some of it foolish, to be sure. but much that carries on the tradition of Mendel's immortal work with sweet peas Prices realized on Swift & Com| sales of ecarcass beef in Was 1o week ending Saturday, July 3. shipments sold out. ranged from 0 17.00 cents per pound an {5.a2" conta Tor potnd. A ny C.. grumpily | vourself | other { you we ! great sacrifice | nappily, | the heels | But it was | to a little scientific club, and published | Then | He got negative results, was | “once in three weeks. | meaning fand ugly sh | E o luxury of a wife hefore you indulge yourself in one. | takes money—and lots of it | bills and grocery bills and plumber | dreamed. | vou consider her {well vourseif <o vou ned not have it | {to slip, tie a piece of tape around it, NDAY. When 8hould A Young Man Says Wait Until Good and| Marry? Doroth yDix Don’t Propose Until You Have Money, the Desire For a Home, and a Girl Who Is Pal Instead of Dancing Partner A YOUNG man wants to know why so many marriages are failures Oh, there are various and sundry reasons. too numerous to catalogue ( hut one of the chief causes of wedding bells getting jangled and out of is that men go into marriage hefore they are good and ready for it ‘They marry on impulse, which is as idiotic a thing to do and as sure a forerunner of disaster as if a general should undertake to fight a battle without any knowledge of strategy or plan of attack or lacking ammunition and guns, hery tun, A happy marriage is not the result of blind luck. It is a structure with a carefully laid foundation. It must have a c architect, who understands his trade and can show his union card ‘prentice hands. scientific mpetent not by Marriage is.the easiest thing In the world to fall into and the hardest to break out of. It costs a dollar and a half for a marriage license and pretty much everything 0 have for a divorce, to say nothing of the fact that vou enter marrfage with smllex and a high heart and you obtain a divorce with tears and wounds that leave scars that sou carry (o the grave | with you. . Therefore, young man, when vou fall in love with a girl or think vou are falling in love with one don't propose marriage to her until you know whether you are really ready to marry. i “'s sake, for vour own sake and. above all, for the woman's sake. " until you are sure you are not marrying just because your fancy ptured by a pretty face and vou selfishly and jealously want to 11 it your own until you tire of it. Only marry when vou have reached the time of life that a quiet home looks better to vou than a cabaret and when vou have reached the point of wisdom that you know the smiling face of & good woman across the table is| the crowning blessing that comes 1o a man and when the voices of little| children have in them a thrill that beggars all other excitement and gayety that the world holds. DO not marry until you are sick and tired of sowing is an old proverh to the effect that the reformed rd. This does not gibe with our American ide ain of truth in it . fach of us at some time—man or woman—must have our little hour | with the eap and bells, our playtime, and if we do not get it in our youth we take it later on when it is mighty liable to make trouble. ats. There the hest hus me there | is a but all the | slipper You will observe that the gav Lotharios whose affairs with adventuresses | furnish spicy reading in our daily newspapers are almost always middle. | aged men, whose vouths were hard and poverty-stricken and barren of all pleasure. We laugh at these men who are the v marks of designing | women. but'the truth is that they are mérely sowinz their wild oats crop in | all. instead of in the Spring, and the Autumn sowing hrings in the harvest of shame and remorse. | if You must go through the time when vour idea of enjoyment is to | drink a hit more than is good for you or to sit up all night in a poker game " to kiss'painted 1ips, he very sure that these ignoble pleasures have palled | upon vou and that they weary, sicken and disgust you hefore you ask any | Woman to marry you. No man has a right to marry a woman and set her down at home unless he intends to stay there with her and to stay because he wants to stay. | If vou are not certain that you love a woman well enough to enjoy spending | vour evenings in her company leave her in her own home, where she has| chegrful society. Give her a chance of marrying somebody who will chum up with her. You are not the only man. | | Also consider the money question and be sure that vou can afford the | . Never forget that while | courtship is run on the hotair plan, marriage is a cash transaction and iy 0 support a family. Before vou marry spend a week in careful study of vour mother's hill hook. Grind into vour consciousness that there are bound to he butcher bills and doctor bills of which you never Then when you marry vou will not. have fits, as so many young husbands do. when vou find out that your wife can't work miracles in the loaves and fishes line nor clothe herself with alr. g | ND to he happy vou must be financially able to meet these bills, for, | believe me, no matter how much people love each other. there is no| peace or foy in the home where the collector is forever hammering on the door and where anxiety as to the future of wife and children tears at a man’s heartstrings, s Finally. son. don't marry until you are ol | settled and to know just what sort of a wife you will really want, Malf of the matrimonial misery in the world is the direct result of men marrying | when they are kids and getting sick and tired of their kid choice of a° life | rartner. Tt is like condemning a man whose sophisticated appetite calls for | caviar and strong meat to spend his life devouring chocolate creams hecause he was crazy about gooey messes when he was 15, 1d enough to have vour taste Matrimony is for grown-ups. It is not a pastime for habe can bring a man’s judgment to the choice of a wife. see something in a woman heside a pretty face =oul seems more important . so wait until| Wait until you can Wait until the color of her to you than the color of her eves. Wait until| heart more important than her complexion and you give | more thought to the kind of companionship she can give you than you do to whether her dance step matches yours or not. | THe. thing that is worth having is worth waiting for. That is as true of love as it is of evervthing else, and if you would be happy though married wait until you are good and ready for it DOROTHY DIX. (Copsright. BEAUTY CHATS i S he | air. then to clip an inch or so from t Eagg'ed H ends. combing out the tangles after If vou are going in for the short ! .4 . H bob, that is, the shingle or the ki vnj ero o st he prepared to go to Shethain eeseris i TPecit trimmed | is normal you should not diseard your | at least ance a month, and preferably |Elusses. ~You may think that vour | Dan't tae to trim | eves will he hetter looking without . the glasses, but they will not be if you ind BY EDNA KENT FORBES. . and Flossie—Unless vour vision your hair yourself. for you can’t pos sibly do it. and don't let any well friend try to do it for von s sure to he ragged bits patches that will take two months to grow out so that a vher can trim them properl | If vou have thick, fluffy hair that| curls under or that can be made to | curl under, you can trim it sufficiently | need them: they will appear weak strained, while now vou say they admired. even though you are w the glasses. Jane —Use very eold water | after eleansing vour skin to contrac the enlarging pores. There is nothing better for bleaching the superfluous hair than ammonia and peroxide. The result S Sugar Pies. Take pieces of biscuit dough ahout the size of biscuit and roll thin Spread half the round with butter. | put two teaspoonfuls of sugar over the butter. and sprinkle with cinna- ' mon. Fold over, press the edges to- | gether. prick with a fork. and frv in| hot fat. Good for school lunches or the nridday lunch at home. done professionally more than once in two months, for the irregular edges will twist under and not show. Here are a few suggestions about trimming | the hair that vou may find useful if vou are courageous enough to try do- inz it at home. You can clip off the short hairs that | grow down the back of the neck l’\_\‘i laying the secissors flat against the | «kin and cutting: the hevel on the blade protects the skin. so that vou | would have to be very awkward inded to cut vourself. If you keep the neck clear of these short hairs it will add much to the neatness of your appear- ance. If vou wear a fringe in front vou can rim it yvourself by first wetting the hair and then combing it straight down over the forehead and cutting it while it is wet. If it has a tendency that ix around the head. to hold the hair flat against the forehead. 1f you do want to try to shorten or thin vour hair vourself so as to make | it a better shape the profesfsonal way 1s to comb the hair hackward. which roughs and_tangles it_slightly, and Also in Glass (ontaines for Your Dressing Tabls Buy a Jar Qoda | Who owned a | voung | bers, [ will apr JULY .5, 1926. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. 1 was laying awake insted of asleep last nite on account of the Jonses ra dio going next door, and ma and pop was down stairs and T herd ma say, O my goodniss grayelous land sakes Ive red the same sentence over a duzzen nd T dont even know wat it is w can T reed with that radio like a perpetual motion ma there awt to be some law agenst playing the radio after 11 o'clock if the government ixpects peeple 1o get eny reeding done. Maybe If T called them on the tele. fone and told them their house is on fire it mite distract their attention from the radio for a wile at leest, pop sed. T dont eare wat you do as long as that dredfill radio stops ma sed. Well then I think Ill start conserva tively and tap on the wall with my and see if they can take a hint, pop sed. Wich he started to do, me heering the slipper going agenst the wall, ony the radio dident stop and pop started to keep time to the music with his slipper, sounding pritty good, and after a wile ma sed. O for land sakes Willyum if your trying to drive me times vet, h going chine, {out of my mind intirely your suceeed ing perfeckly, enuff without werse? Yee gods, T give up I serrender, Tm £0ing to bed and berry my face in the pillow and cry myself to sleep, pop sed. Or no, on*2nd thawts I bleeve 1l herry my fac hate damp pillows And he went to hed and pritty soon the radio stopped by itself and I went back to sleep and dreemed I was the radio operator on a hoat and the boat sank with everybody on it and the ony thing left was me and the radio m chine floating on top of the wat with me still zending out § O § mes- &idges for help. s leing & pritty good kind of a dreem izzent that radio bad ou making it 10 times Willie Willis ROBERT QUILLEN “The reason my nose is skinned up that way is because the roller skates T had on wouldn't go as fast as felivery truck I was holdin’ on to.’ (Covyright. 1626.) HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. A “Dark Horse.” Nominating conventions are al expected to produce a “dark horse: a candidate who is not only unexpec ed but who has never been considered | for the place. The first dark horse wax literally so. though even he was not a live horse. | He lived only it started: In Lord B in ion. This is how onsfield’s novel Young Duke.” we find # descrip, a horse race as s favorite was never heard of: the sec ond favorite was never seen after the distance post: all the 10.t0-15 were in the rear, and a dark horse, which had never been thought of. rushed the grandstand in sweeping triumph!” (Copyright. 1926 “Puzzlicks” Puzzle-Limericks There once was a yvoung lady - bad parrot that — He would likewize —3—, Using language —4-, All of which, o the lady said, —3 1. Practitioner of medicine. object 3 4. Far advanced 5. Horrified: I line (two words) (Note: Tt is quite evident that this lady's parrot had a past. vou will see when you have com pleted the limer by placing the vight words, indicated by the num- in the corresponding _spaces. answer and another Puzzlick AT tOmOrrow.) Saturday’s “Puzzlick.” A certain old maid of Cohoes In despair taught her bird to propose; RBut the parrot. dejected At being accepted, hrieked wor (Coprright Made fun of: feminine pronoun. ve (two words). Curse. st word of second The 19261 (ool, Sweet Flower Petals to Caress Your Skin —would benomorerestful, no more exquisite in their cooling comfort, than a showerof Djer-KissTalcum from this moss-green can! This exquisitely fine French Talcum scented with the distinguished odeur, Djer-Kiss—is a re- freshing tonic to weary bodies, to chafed skin. Used after one’s tub, it gives a flower-sweetnessalltheday. It is smart to use the Djer-Kiss odeurinalltoilet accessories— Extract, Face- Powder, Sachet, Rouge, Talc, etc. . Smith Co. Alfred Dorters New York City ol 418 W. 251 he | “The first | past | i i | ! | [ as | < ton profane to disclose. | FEATU Dear Ann: This outstanding neck line is not at all good for a thin neck, because its very outstandingnass makes the neck look thinner than necessary. But by the simple exped:- ent of removing the little hand, with its shoulder tie, the neck is given better chance and so loses some of that emaciated effect. Yours for knowing what to do, LETITIA. (Copyright, 1926.) PALE BY HAZ it Marsh. who has ahrays hecn aceustomed. to idiensss. 1a Teft rithont money. She finds her rich friends ars of "the fairreather voriety. and 1% Anally foreed 1o yo 1o an employment agency where she weers Mary Rrand: The manager 0 the pincs " After a i Mary ofers her a' p tady, id with a rich. e seomn ilo decides 10 accepr it while she ix getting on her feer and is engaged by Mona” Kingsiey CHAPTER VII Mistress and Maid. Leila was given a tiny room €ar end of the second-f rridor and to her delight she had a bath to herself. Resides herself there were four servants in the Kingslev menas Kuwa. the butler: a_chauffeur, Ingeborg, the Swedish Marie, the second maid. and the chauffeur went evening, but Kuwa slept apartment From the very first, Leila with a curious bland Oriental face displayed pression of any kind, but he to sense the fact that she was ro orli nary maid and he showed it in his manner. On the day that she arrived showed her to her room as if she heen a princess, and she accepted h ! homage gracefully. It made her fe as if she had « friend at court | She closed the door behind him and | whirled around to take stock of her |room. It was very tiny. but ver: fresh and clean, with cretonne cur tains at the windows and a s narrow white iron bed. A chest ef The maids home each in the Kuwa treated respect. His no ex seemed he 1ahie, g atove it served as a dressin: and this with one chair and a ra ompleted the furnishings. frankly delighted. She the small place very ome books and picture: much better than anythinz with, w <he My Neighbor Says: To mend voile or other thin material get a plece of court plaster as near the same color as possible, dampen it. place it under the torn part and press under a4 weight until dry A lump of sugar in a teapot which Is seldom used will pre vent the musty smell which is 0 often found in metal teapots. The lid should be left open. To save time, enough natmeal for two or three morn ings while vou are cooking din ner. put it in a glass jar and | | Keep in the refrigerator.” In the | morning mix the amount needed with milk and reheat When vour Kitchen sink rusty rub it with kerosene. A lump of sugar added to starch will keep clothes from sticking to the irons, but there should always be a piece of beeswax sewed in the top of an old stocking on which to rub the latter If two teaspoonfuls of ecold water are added to egg whites before heating them to a froth for frosting they will not To stiffen malines nse o s tion of gum arabic. Try ene te: || speonful of powdered gum in i | one pint of hot water. let it canl and dip the maline in it. Drv. and it not stiff enough dip again. Press with a warm iron while damp. is . 1028, by uty Feapures. It has brought the reward of natural skin loveliness to thousands O you use powder, rouge or make-up—ever? If you do, by all means start tonight with this rule in skin care. Because they know this rule, thoo- sands of women thus successfully safeguard both their youth and their priceless complexion: On the other hand, because they don't know it, thousands imperil theirs. Not every woman knows that failure to thoroughly wash the skin and pores of make-up before bed (with a gentle soap like Palmolive) is one of the greatest mistakes in skin care she can make. Powders, rouge and all cosmetics have a tendency to clog the pores ... often to entarge them. Black- heads and disfigurements often fol- low. Never let make-up stay on over ight. This is all-important, a fun- 'damental in correct skin care. FOR A RADIANT TOMORROW DO THIS TONIGHT Wash your fac. gently with the soothing lather of Palmolive Soap, massaging it softl into the skin. Rinse thoroughly, first with warm water, then with cold. If your skin is inclined to be dry, apply a touch of cold cream—that is all. Follow these rules. Your skin will be soft and lovely. As the months roll by, you'll need fewer and fewer cosmetics. une / drawers with a mirror hung on a cord | RES Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. HANDS 1. DEYO BATCHELOR. that her spirits rose. wandered back to tha ed for the first time | that a pile of what lnoked like fresh laundered clothes had been placed | there. Guing closer to examine the: | the hot color leaped into her cheek [ The pile of linen turned out | frilly aprons and crisp. sheer | They were the hadge of her servittdc I A 1ow knock on the deor heoke in |on her thoughts, and when she wen: to apen it, Kuwa stood outside in the | hail | “Mrs. Ki vou in her reom as soon as vou are ready.” he informed her without a | change of expression. Then he van ished noislessiv down the corrider, | and, with a stifled sigh. Leila began to ce off her outer things She wore a very simple hlack drese {eut an straight lines. and over this she tied one of the white aprons. 1t | was of point d’esprit with a tiny bib |and rufed straps. There was a tin cap that matched {t, and when Leila had adjusted this on her cinnamon- colored hair, she could not repress a smile. It seemed too absurd to he true. It was like dressing up for pri vate theatricals in which she was to French maid ng very fast minutes later, she knncked Kingsley's door, But she head p v as she turned entered. although her | had expected | Then her exes | bed and she no lex would like soe 1o when. five an Mona li 1 her the knob and | cheeks were se - 1 Mona wae seated hefore h ing table wrapped in a neglize of | pale blue satin, She whirled around |as a entered. and for a moment stared at the gi Then she said sharply. You're late.” “I'm sorry.” Leila said simply “Reing sorry doesn't help matters vou'll have to learn to be prompt. 1 | want to lie down before dinner. but I'd like my bath first. Have the water warm, not hot. and the hath crystaly {are in a bowl on the lower shelf.” 1 went inta the bathreom and turned on the water the cream:* sunken fuh. While it was running, Mona called to her Do know anything about dres ing hair? Come in here and see. wha: vou can do. The last maid I had w | very good at it. but I e dn’t bear 1o | have her touch me. Mona's golden hhir was spread ove shoulders in heavy masses. Lefla i never seen such hair and she ut tered an involuntary exclamation. “How beautiful.” | Mona's face relaxed Tt is nice, isnt it?" she said com. placen . Somehow 1 could never make up my mind to cut it. I like it |bound tightly around my head. See | what vou ean do with it.” | Leila stepped forward, and at the ame moment the door was flung open |and a man strode into the room d intomorrow's Star.) - dress. into a smile (Contint r Soft Drop Cakes. ke seven ounces of butter. five ounces of sugar. three eggs, seven < of flour, and half a teaspoonful lemon extract. \Weigh the in. gredients carefu! Cream the but- ter and sugar. heat up the eggs and add them gradually. sift in the flour, and add the extract. Drop the mix ture from a teaspoonful or put it | into a forcing bag and tube and pipa it in small draps onte a buttered and napered tin and hake. of Never a Night rule in skin care being practiced By NORMA TALMADGE Do not use ordinary soaps in treatment above. Do not think green soap, or represented as m and olive oils, is the same almolive. Remember that before Palmolive came, women were told, “use no soap on your faces.” Soaps then were judged too harsh. Palmolive is a beauty soap made for one pur- pose only: to safeguard your com- plexion. 60 years of soap study stand behind it. Millions of pretty skins prove its gentle safety beyond all doubt. BE SURE YOU GET THE REAL PALMOLIVE And it costs but 10c the cakel— so. little that millions let it do for their bodies what it does for their faces. Obtain Palmolive today. Note what an amazing difference onme week makes. The Palmolive Come pany (Del Corp.), Chicago, Miincia.

Other pages from this issue: