Evening Star Newspaper, August 30, 1926, Page 22

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WOMAKRYS PAGE:” SUB ROSA ! BY MIML Darning Stitch for Various Uses BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. What Shall I Write? Some poor damsels are so self-con- scious and helpless without some | older, wiser person around to help them out that it's a wonder they get up the courage to breathe all by themselves. They ask for advice on every conceivable subject—what to wear in the street, to a church affair, to an informal dance, to a formal dance! And lately they have begun ta wail for advice on how to write letters. i Here, let me say right now, noth- ing is more fatal than a set stereo- typed form for letter wi ting. I hate to think of how many giyls have lost their sweethearts, just because they seized an etiquette book and care- fully copied down the-letters given therein, word for word. What would think if you i@ceived a note from an aspiring suitor, run- ning: “Dear Clare: I take my pen in hand to let you know that T am well and hope you are well, too. The weather has been very bad these las few days. Rain. The rain ie.er seems to stop.. We are hoping for a little sunshine soon, so that we may get in some practice on the team. How are you?" etc., etc., ending up that he will with the dreary hope | “hear from you soon”? You wouldn't believe that tigat sort of atrocity was still being’ perpe- trated In this day and age, would vou? But it happens every day, just because the -poor boy hasn't the gumption 'to think up something for | himself. He uses the same old for- mula which he knows has been used for the last 200 years, and he thinks he gets away with it. He doesn't. Neither does the girl who adheres rigidly to sule in letter writing. The maiden those letters are awaited eagerly by all her correspondents is she who has the imggination and the » . R T 3 i and the courage to spring USE PLAIN DARNING ON TOWELS AND GILT-EDGED ON FROCKS, :’0“,::::',““,"‘,“9“ ey g o SCARFS, ETC. doesn't stick to topics like the Darning stitch, which is one of the |inclosing a self addressed and "“‘f‘“‘”l;];';“ih':f L‘:’;“I‘,,K'J;Tl‘_q e m'nm' --s‘ual of all plain sewing | stamped envelope, and I shall be‘an},c‘gm; of her school or business stitches, becomes one of true decora-| glad to forward them as long as the | faOCOES % S on Yict as amusing tion when used in embroidery. There- | supply as possible. If they weren’t funny, tore it should be one of the first 1o | o o & g put in 2 modern sampler. It can be ! Characteristics for Work. actually, she makes them funny ‘|]»,\ employed for backgrounds, leaving| The darning stitch, when applied to | Xtretching her imagination JEst L the design in silhouette. or it can take | embroidery, must be done in-parailel | least little bt e COPSIC S0 U o the place of 0 embroidery for |rows. These may be vertical, hori- l’%;‘flg;‘;’:hp.;“homf" .l‘he' right wi T | Siic s beonsibusfof eEinninE 1k the rows themselves must be equally distant from one another to be even. The stitches differ in size usually, but without the precision of one long and one short stitch invarfably. This is zeneral rule, but it should be diver- ed occasionally by having two or three short stitches come between long ones, and even sometimes have third method is one color of background bhackground. Still to darn the motifs in thread or silk against a of darning in a sharply contrasting tone. And still another way is to| darn in the design on a one-toned bro- | caded gooas of silk. cotton or | The reverse method may be e and the backgr arned in the | she when to plunges into_what ) she's fir and closes abruptly ished. : The secret of good letter wr an utter unself-consciousne: the putting down on paper i natural unaffected way, things she | | thinks will interest the recipient n(“ ing is brocade. This is the more effective, as| two lcng stitches come next to each | the lette . b i the design 1 this fabric is often o | other. There is something distinctly | A very good rule for u?o@e_x‘\_\ml woven that it has interesting lights | pleasing about the symmetry of the it to write good letters is: “Never when seen at different angles. making | Work. and these slight variations pre- ate when' you're ‘beginning in 1t appear to be shaded, or to have a | vent monotony | note. Just plunge in and let satin finish, ete. By darning the back- | Gtaid e i style take care of itself. | 5 Materials, Weaves, Etc. (Copyright. 1 ) S o Any one-toned material can be orna 2 learly E -tor aterial ca orna- = o Gilt Edge Embroidery. may be smooth finished or rough, Darned motifs are frequently out- | Dlain weave or fancy, open mesh or | lined to give perfection of contour to | ¢lose woven. The design must \VhatTomorrowMeanstoYO\l designs, Just now there is a fancy | stamped or transferred to ins for outlining in gold thread. Some of | evenness of fines unl turn | definitely regular itseli. For example, BY MARY BLAKE. | huckaback you will remember that on my weave lends itself admir: T from Paris 1 had an entire article ‘ devoted to “Gilt-edged Embroidery,” | 4Dl to darned embroidery. The weave| momoirow's planetary aspects s Which was a vogue there. It can now |is even and the over-threads are suffi- [ MRS POHT giccouraging. be found in our own exclusive shops. | ciently large for the blunt needle 10 | ;pcioarter they show signs of im- The gill edging is used to outline beneath them without going | . oo o and at about many. biher needleworks and even | through to the under side. The same | PEOYOIEnt: SO0 T CUN, painting, but in no instance is it more | rules should be observed of alternat. | 2oaTe & QR Ky Ty effective than when applied to out-«ing long with stitches. It is while the presence of stimulating lining of darned motifs. ."‘I'W-”l“:\l_‘;»“;;_’ ‘“i“:;: i ,\":‘_fi ;“3; ions will be observed during the | Patterns for Readers. | Bcde=m ogheting gitune hing. Any very important under- RN itches under the should not be attempted, In connection with the former ar- | threads and an equal number over | [ 08 ) iP5 1 Moxcellent opportu- tlele 1 had a design made which is | them for five or more rows a checker- | 1t (%0t avision or for planning. The accompanied by direction for doing | effect of weave is produced. results will be obtained by en- the gilt-cdged embroidery. There are | This is excellent for borders, narrow | 2020 FETNE [0 e quties, no matter | St ‘Boime F: signs wi o3 1 d i ‘ge or gag 1y rhe | still some of these designs with dire wide, and in large or small che: s monotonous they may be. The| tions to be had, and if readers would | The mention of huckaback indi like them to use either for thelr mod- | that darning w a good embroides ern samplers or for frocks, scarfs or | put on towe other embroidery purposes, write me, ! all is distinetly propitious for | and the indications point to and mutual attractive- oS | evening 0| Jover: though it may be on | ane SOEts Of astioles. ¥ be on | yesponsiven ness. Children bhorn tomorrow will, dur- ing infancy and early childhood, es pe most of the ailments usually ociated with this period. They will, | nowever, when well along in their| ‘teens, suffer from an illness that will \ecessitate something more than or- der, Neighbor Gull,” said he. |dinary treatment. Once this is over-| her is something on my mind, | come, the stars say that they will de- | | | | BY THORNTON | | W. BURGES: BEDTIME STORIES Reddy Rubs His Eyes. B e s cikaviboar | Perhaps T shouldn’t say it 'is on my | velop along normal lines and ain a Wl " GEROA . | inind. for reallt it is on the beach up | vigorous adulthood. In disposition i BieiE, ¢ it certainly is bothering | they will prove to be exceptionally Reddy 1ox roamed quite a way | mée tractable, obedient d :l“(‘l'll".llfl(l‘ down the be: ng his inquisitive “ inquired Gray- | Their preference will all lm,“ for the nose into this and that and the other | Winy pleasures of “out of doors,” and if nould be children as cticable from v or confining vinned more broadly than | possible these at's what T want to know,” | shielded as far what is it? I don’t know |anything of a ibe it to you, so when you | nature. thing. He pulled ove: e he poked under s of wood had heen washed that 1shore; he went up how to desc on the sand dunes to see if he could | e find a mouse anywhere. But all the | #et through catching your breakfast, | If tomorrow is vour. thday, you | time he Kept thinkitg about those | Why not go back up the beach with | are endowed With a limitless ambition | queer jolly masses he had left behind, | me? 1 am sure you will know what |and. as you are forceful, enevgetic and | for you know evey “Tut, tut, Neighbor exclaimed Graywing, ed pleased nevertheles ot at alll Not at all Reddy. “When I am with vou, I feel as if I know nothing at all.” | the doings of others, hav ! Graywing looked more pleased than | faith in vour own efforts to achieve | ever. “We'll go right up there and|Your task, regardless of other people's | see these things which have been puz. | experience or advice. You lack, too, | | the mental opportunities that would | it i hing. gifted with much natur: vou flatter | chances are that you will climb many but he | rungs in the ladder of life. The one weakness in your scheme of things is replied | that you are a trifle too self-sufficient, | | and ‘while having mo confidence in | too much zling Nelighbor ¥ id he. | 0 “You trot along up the beach and I |enable you to drop work when every | { one else can see futility of effort. You will' join you by the time you get there.” | his was just what Reddy wanted. | He turned his head to hide a grin of atisfaction. 3 Neighbor Gufl,” said he. “It Isn't far up there and when you get there you will find the beach™ just covered with queer things. I suppose th out of the water, but I don' My, this sun is hot, isn’t it? Graywing nodded. Then he flew out even in a lost cause. | versatility: you read | th avidity and assimilate readily. | Your friends generally consider you well informed, as well as intellectual, | land your judgment is respected, | {hese | Whereas you never respect the jud came |ment of others. ~If not already mar Knone | ried, #t would be well to take th * | fateful step as speedily as possible. | Well known persons horn on that | date are Jacob Brinkerhoff, ex-Con- are persistent You posses: REDDY WATCHED HIM FOR_A|over the water in search of something s 3 MOMENT, THEN TURNED AND [more to eat. Reddy watched him a | Eressman and jurist: Edward G. Jane- 3 UP THE BEACH. moment, then turned way, physician; Mary Putnam Jacobi, and trotted up Presently he reached the place where he and Jimmy Skunk had been 0 puzzled by those queer Jelly masses. Reddy stopped very abruptly and blinked both eyes. ~Then he | rubbed first one and then the other. | Elizabeth Stu- authol Dr. Joseph | physician and author 1t (Phelps) Ward, Taskell Dole, author Blake, surgeon. the beach athan A, y cannot bear to be puzzled When he is interested in a thing, he wants to know about it. ! Looking far down the beach, Reddy saw Graywing the Gull. G Luscious Pears. was fishing. He was out over the:\ot ane of those little masses of jelly water, but now and then he would | could he see. He looked all around| Peel one pound of stewing pears, cut alight on a big rock on the shore. to see if he was in the right place, | them in halves, then remove the “Graywing seems to know all about | e was. He was sure of that, There | coves. Put fou s of sugar in | pan with one gill of water. Stir until the sugar has melted, then boil fast | to a sirup. Add the pears and an inch of stick cinnamon and simmer until the things on the beach. so perhaps he | were his footprints in the sand, and can tell me what those things are, and f the footprints of Jimmy Skunk. But where they came from. and all about ' 41} those little masses of jelly had dis. them.” thought Reddy, and off he|gappeared. Reddy's first thought was ! started in the direction of Graywing. |that Jimmy Skunk had done some. . tender but not broken. Boil two pints | i of il rinkle in four ounces of | Graywing saw Reddy coming and|thing with them. What he could remained sitting on the big rock until have done with them Reddy didn't ddy reached him. ‘“Hello. Neighbor | stop to think. He looked about for said he, “what is on your mind | jimp Jimmy wasn't in sight. He Don't tell me that you have | had sone back home to sleep. nothing on your mind, for 1 know “Well, where are those things you semolina, 1t, and two; ounces of sugar. Then simmer very slowly until the 'semolina is soft and has absorbed the milk. Add a few| drops of vanilla essence and press the | better. TR e L You | semalina into a border mold, or shape Reddy looked up at Graywing and | wine the Gull, Alehting oo ea Gras| it into a flat or oblong cake on a | grinned. *“You must be a mind- | pear Reddy. 2 compote dish. Arrange the pears Y CovyriEht V1828 ) neatly on the semolina. Boil the d sirup from the pears fast until re- duced, add two or three tablespoonfuls of apricot jam. pass this mixture | through a sieve, and pour with a spoon | over the pears.” Serve cold. Lessons in English I love to be out in the woods at night But the wind makes BY W. L. GORDON. —— —— — | | | Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. C UR[I OIS LIATTER }A AREA I DE O] | S Words often misused—Say “I lent | L her my book™ or “will lend.” instead of ¥ a spooky sound — “loaned” or “will loan" Use the! A I wish [ could tame latter only in money transactions. MIAT EQEP E N AIP E | Often mispronounged — Romance. E ! a few lightning bugs | Accent last syllable, not the first. | And get them Often misspelled Achievement. to lead me Note the “ieve.” | | Synonyms—Obstruct, impede, rve- ! around. tard, stop. bar, barricade, oppose,| R (A | block | D I Word study—"Use a word |hree; | times und it is yours.” Let us in- | crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word— | Extirpate; to destroy: exterminate. | #he whole race of people had been | extirpated: | (Cowsnizht. 1926 ~— JTHE EVENING STAR, WASHIXGTON. D. C. MONDAY, AUGUST 30. 192 8ays Deserted Wives Aid Husbands to Forsake Them Why Wives lose Out ,Doroth y Dix Almost Every Deserted Wife Drives Her Husband Away by Her Nagging, Laziness or Re- fusal to Pal or Climb With Him. WHE.\' a middle-aged woman finds out that she ‘““has lost her husband's affection,” as the phrase goes, and that some younger and fairer lad love has taken her place in his heart, she invariably lays the blame entirel upon the man. he She calls upon heaven to witness that she has been a faithful wife. points to the children she has borne him. She recounts the sacrifices she made, and the work she has done as wife and mother, and she asks us to mingle our tears with hers over the base ingratitude of a man who has taken all of the best of a woman's life, and then thrown her aside as a spoiled child does a toy of which-he has tired. he lamentations of these neglected and for- lize that they help make the tragedy which no denying that in nearly every case of an I often wonder, as I listen to saken wives, why they do not has ruined their lives, for there unfaithful husband the wife is accessory before the crime. And the fact that she sins ignorantly, with no intention of allenating her husband’s affections from her. with no perception that she is killing his love for her, does not alter the situation, nor absolve her from guilt. truly, romantically in love when he matrie: Otherwise, he would not marry and burden himself with the support of a wife and family, nor curb his liberty by putting upon it the restrictions of matrimony. More than that. the woman he marries represents his taste and ideals. She is the one woman that he prefers above all other women, the one woman he has picked out to spend the remainder of his life with. - Nearly every man is deeply Thus the wife starts out with everything in her favor; She holds all the trump cards in her hand, and when she loses out it is because she bungles the game. She is too dull and stupid, or too lazy and indifferent to play the hand that fate has dealt her, and so she is beaten. Wow e 4 APMITTEDLY, there are a few men who are Don Juans by nature. who are attracted to every woman, and faithful to none, but there are not many such men. 'he great majority of men do not de: happiness and contentment at home. Th soul mates. They want to find their s in their wives. And so when they wander away from their own fireside, and fall in love with strange women, it is almost Invariably because their wives have failed them in one way or another. ' ire to roam. They want to find are not out deliberately seeking Many men, for instance, never spend their evenings at home because their homes are places of torment in which no sane person would stay a minute longer than he could possibly help. There is nothing to rake a man want to linger in a dirty, messy hou where the floors are unswept, and the beds unmade; w }:{ro every meal is an insult to the palate, and a menace to the stomach, and where a slovenly woman bickers with untidy, ill-reared children. Are not the slatterns and the lazy loafers who feed their husbands out of paper bags and tin cans at least partially responsible for men leaving home? You will find few wife deserters among the men married to good cooks and good housekeepers. Many wives complain that th husbands are surly and grouchy at home, with never a word to say. Do these women never consider how often a man’s silence is merely the defense he hides behind? He does not say any- thing fear starting an argument, and bringing down on his head a curtain lecture about something he has done, or left undone, and of which he never hears the last, . 'HERE are plenty of women whose only domestic conversational line is a litany of the day's woes. They recount to their husbands everything that has gone wrong. They dwell upon the children’s misdemeanors, the high cost of living; they remind them of tasks undone, of bills unpaid; they whine and fret, and want to know why th an’t have as much as rich women have. And this is so unbearable to a man. already worn and exhausted in mind and hody by the strain of a business day, that he feels that he will scream if he speaks, so he shuts his teeth on his tongue and says nothing. . . But there are few men who are not chatty enough with a wife who is cheerful and entertaining, and who is full of amusing gossip, nor is there any record of a husband who is un; ponsive to the wife who is his best au- dience, who lets him see that she regards him as an oracle and a wit, and who never fails to express her appreciation of all he does for her. J Many another woman drives her husband away from her by refusing to pal with him. If the husband is of a gay disposition, and loves amusement, she will not dance with him, nor go to the theater with him, but is a killjoy who spoils his fun for him. If he likes outdoor sports, she sets her face against golf or tennis instead of learning how to play—or at least how to appreciate others’ play. If he likes to talk business, she yawns in his face. If he is ambitious, she refuses to climb with him, and he goes on ahead without her. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. The Daily, Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1926.) 1926.) Across. 1. Increases in size 6. Impairment of sensation. 11. Prepare for publication. 12. Disturbance. . Help Tiritish admiral. . Digs out. . Knock. . Unit of germplasm. . Loud noise. . Prefix; again. . Constellation. 56. A metal guard. . Wektern Indian. . Uncommon. Long period (plural). . Plece of leather. G4. More tidy. 19. 21. Southern State (abbr.). Consumes. . Myself. . Incite. Disperses (a liquid). . Sailor. Be uncertain. Doctor (abbr.). American admiral. Instrument. Wind of the Adriatic. Gait of a horse. 38. Securl . Revolving part. . Form of address (abbr.). 3. Requires. 46. Atmosphere. Down. . Color. . Hypothetica © Gai . Precipitous. . Commonplace, . Own (Scotch). . Behold. . Inclosure. . Rescued. 13. Varlety of corundum. 13. Character in Othello. A semisolid ofl. force. PiN MONEY PICALILLI A relish that improves the flatgg 1011; any $ PICALILL! 10 PLUD OUNCES. What Do You Know ' About It? Daily Science Six. What is entomology? What is etymology?” ‘What- is meteorology? What is ethnology What is anthropology? What is microscopy | Answefs ‘to these questions in tomorrow’s Star. o 8 ol | | | | | | | | | | b | R ! The “Ologies.” | So many sciences have names termi- nating in ology that jokes are fre- | auently cracked about them, and they | sometimes get confused with jerry- built systems of philosophy ending in “ism," which are born every vear and shortly die. Yet it is astonishing to contemplate the speed of scientific advance and to speculate on where | science will bring us at the present vate. Four hundred years ago it was | still supposed .that “stars were pin pricks in the sky and that the sky was solid. The earth was the center of the iniverse and the sun, a little ball a [ few miles away, went round it. Three | hundred_years ‘ago the circulation of | the blood was unknown: 200 years ago | nobody had_hitched up steam: 150 vears ago electricity was just being |investigated and electriclans were He- | nounced by orators for tempting | Providence. Fifty years ago disease | zerms were just being discovered. | Thir ars ago the airplane was | considered a crazy idea. Now what do you know about that? | Answers to Yesterday's Questions. | 1. A magnetic field is an area within which the influence of a magnet is felt. = 2. A transformer is apparatus for converting an electric current from hnigh to low potential energy or vice versa_without change of current. 3. The two common kinds of electric current are alternating and direct. 4. In case of an electric storm it is better, despite popular belief, not to disconnect the current in the meter box because, should lightning strike the wire and travel in to the meter box it would, instead of grounding through the walls, jump the gap to the lever. forming a huge spark likely to_blow the meter box up. 5. Static electricity is a great nui- sance in taking motion pictures, caus- ing a blurred flickering. 6. A dynamo is a machine used for converting mechanical energy into | electric energy by magneto-electric induction. Villie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN | AN\ { “I had awful good luck with my new bird house this vear. Six spar- rows built in it.” sright, 1926.) . 3 Peach Sponge. Soak one-half a box of gelatin in one-half a cupful of cold water. Sim- mer for 20 minutes one cupful of water and one-half a cupful of sugar, add the gelatin, and when it is dis- solved, add three cupfuls of peaches that have bheen rubbed through a sieve, and the juice from one-half lemon. Beat the mixture vigorously for 10 minutes, then set the on ice, and when the jelly begins to set, fold in the stifily beaten whites of three eg Have a large mold lined with lady fingers or thin slices of ponge cake, and pour in the mixture. When very cold and firm, serve with whipped cream. Dressing Without 0il. Beat one egg light, add one tea- spoonful of mustard, one tablespoonful of vinegar, fwo tablespoonfuls of but- ter, and pepper and salt to taste. Cook in a double boiler or in a dish placed in another dish of water, until thick, ten put in a bowl and stir in a cupful of cream. Set on ice or in a cool place. | —— 18. Heavenly body. 20. Persian poet. small channel or trough. . Seats without backs. . Table utensils. . Vessel employed in a particular trade. . Tiresome person. . Sea eagle. Lieutenant (abbr.). . A kind of shot. . Long cries. . Conceal. . Heavenly body. . Highway. . Pointed missle. . Rapidity. . Crawl. . Smooth the feathers. . Worthless fragment. Friar's title. . French king. . Employ. . Unit of square measure. uthern State (abb A (TASTY” breakfast which you can have ready in good time to | et the family off to business or to | school. The original ready-to-fry fish cakes, | |made from famous Gorton’s Cod| FEATURES Making the Most BY DOROTHY STOTE. gestion: She saw a woman mean proportions,” with large uip and with her dress gathered in unde: of Your Looks Dear Ann: One of my readers sent me th of neath them, thus emphasizing the size. Now, why didn’t she wear a na: rowly pleated skirt beginning about her hip line? T certainly ap preciate our reader's kindness, d: you . Yours for observations, 1 1926.) (Copyright. NEW YORK, August 30. 1776.— Thanks largely to the weather, but thanks above all else o the masterly skill and untiring zeal of George Washington, the American Army has |1 escaped from the trap in which it was left by the battle of Long Island, and is now encamped on Manhattan Is- land. The retreat was completed early this morning. No one would have be- leved yesterday that the 10,000 men 1 then on Brooklyn Heights could have | been moved across the Kast River| with all their baggage and equipment in one night without discovery by the |¢ enemy, who were encamped only 600 vards away, or by the enemy ships in the river. That is, nobody except George Washington. But that is what has happened. The withdrawal was unanimously | ii duty and campfires burning ment were marched 1o the til midnight, the wind was cont ermen <kill, water in spite of much confusion in camp. understood and one for the ferry ahead of sey and the removal of the sick e wounded took entire char from Brooklyn. the He operatic n Brooklyn. About 8 o'clock tast evenipg the fir hoatloads were ready to cross. Whi the lines nearest the enemy camn were fully manned, with pickets o ats. 1 making the pas age of the river fully slow, but then the wind turned and brought a which hung over thick blanket of rooklyn until daylight. Glover's Massachu manned the he W 2 and all went smoothly on t] unavoidable An order was mi egiment star hedule, le ts agreed to yesterday at a council of the [ing a ction of the breastworks officers, but the general worked out |empty. Gen. Washington discove his own plans in complete secrecy.|the blunder and nt the regimen Yesterday morning he issued orders back before the British pickets missed that all small boats on nearby shores |it. Iixcept for the fog, this accident should be collected, giving as his rea- | might have heen fatal to the entire son_the bringing of troops fro: er-_enterp: For breakfast and for othe r meals everybody likes - HEINZ Rice Flakes A new flavor [One of the 57 Varieties ] By IRENE Copyrighted 1926 by P. O. Beauty Features The Kind of Soap Beautyexpertsusethemselves A soap made for ONE purpose only: to foster good complex- jons; and thus, to safeguard yours in this way EFORE Palmolive came women were told “use no soap on your face.” Soaps then were judged too| harsh. Then came Palmolive — a soap made by experts in beauty with 60 years of soap study behind it; a so0ap made to be used freely, lavishly on the skin. 4 On the advice of beauty authori ties, the whole world soon adopted | it. Youth preserved, beautiful com- | plexions came to thousands as a result. Made for one purpose only —to} safeguard your complexion—| Palmolive affects the skin as no| other soap. Just try it one week ini this way. Note then your com- plexion. The daily rule that thousands follow now ! 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 eream—that is all. Do this regularly. and particularly in the evening: Use powder and rouge if you wish. SBut never leave Keeping Your Schoolgirl Complexion CASTLE thém on over night. They clog the pores, often enlarge them. Black- | heads and disfigurements often fol- low. They must be washed away. Just do this and your skin will be- come soft and lovely—wrinkles will be less a problem as the years ad vance. Get real Pal olive Do not use ordina ¢ soaps in the treatment given #jove. 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 one week makes. The Palmolive Company (Del. Corp.), Chicago, Illinois. sies

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