Evening Star Newspaper, September 15, 1926, Page 42

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WOMAN’S PAGE. | Planning a Picnic or a Fall Outing BY LYDIA LE BARON W Picnies e a pleasure when the work involved does net become a burden, and when those going on'the outing en such occasions. These are two widely different aspects which should be considered when planning a il picnic. Often a woman tires her- all out before she arts, and is WHO UTY DELIGHT IN TH or AUTUM ATHI USULLY PR WIHEN ON OUTI THE LUNCHEON OU'T OF DOOR; $2 no condition to enjoy hers #s ~he will to conceal the fact others any obser it one in the groun will sense it » hushand and children first of all. S of se 1is marved. to prepa t up thorate menu to be €aten in the silence of weariness, an e Meals Indoors or Out? Then apart from the point of view ©f the home-makers’ work comes that of the members of the party them- selves. Very frequently a hostess will from | get up a picnic for some house guests who do not like picnics at all. Those who delight in these informal outings the beach find it difficult to under- !'stand this attitude of lack of enjoy- ment. But there are those who prefer to eat meals off a spotless table with every accessory, and with dishes suit- ably” arranged, to sitting under the trees and eating in picnic style. Such persons object to insects. They dislike the breezes disturbing the order of things, and they have mno liking to seats on the ground or the sand. So. before getting up picnics for friends be assured that the form of festivity is to their fancy. Places to Eat. Motoring has increased the fashion fe outings for long drives in the country, and for picnic meals. For- tunately the outings can include meals at some wayside tea room, some little shop or restaurant along the way: rather than that prepared and taken in the automobile. However, it does seem a pity not to be able to enjoy plenic meals. They appeal so strongly to the lover of the out-of-doors who prefers not to be forced to go indoors during the best hours of the day to vat. Picnic Meals de Luse. There are picnic arrangements de luxe which make it possible to be out of doors and yet have a semblance of dining-room luxuries. Not every one likes such combination, but it makes it more agreeable to others. And so these arrangements have their place. They fill a need. There are folding | taBles that fit into autos without tak- | inz up much space. There are lunch- | eon baskets with dishes, silver, cutlery nd even classware! And there are { hampers for holding food to keep it either hot or cold, vacuum bottles for heverages, soups. etc. And there are little stoves for cooking food. and i cream containers that make it pos- sible to include this great American dish as one of the courses. Simiple Meals in Comfort. But against these luxuries there is simple, easily prepared picnic . with sandwiches assorted as a in course. with olives, pickles and saited nuts for relishes, with home- made cookies for the dessert and delicious ripe fruit for the final deli- Hot or cold tea, coffee or lemon- {ade or ginger ale provides an assort- ment of good drin If the sand- wiches are the simply prepared sort and the cake or cookies are on hand, | such a tempting meal should not ve tiresome to et up, and to the person proves satisfying and | the L average { delicious. 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. BY JONATHAN Howe Occupies New York. HARLE SHTS, N. Y. Sep- tenber, "he enemy has to- day taken complete pos n of New York City and all of Manhattan I= Lind for four miles to the northward. | The Am Army has abandor 2!l its camps and defenses in that a wnd is encamped tonight Jleights of Harlem Gen. Howe landed I Yessians in overwhelming foree Kip's Bay, on the East Riv t 11 sm. unde cover of a furious fire $rom the warships. Only by the nar- vowest possible margin did the patriot troops avoid capture Mheir was a panicky fight most disp fug to Gen. Washington, who himself narrowly escaped capture while he was attempting to rally his men and induce them to ofter at I L yesistance to the onrushing Hivitishers, Ncottish Highland Jessiuns, In one more day. the Americans | anight have been away in safety when this morning’s invasion some 5,000 of them were below Bay. Fhose along the ast near the landi L the fire from the enemy’s yashed northward viterly deal to all on the | and | at British some Kips River the warships and | numbers ey in great disorder Gen. Washington's BEDTIME STORIES The humblest f, ks sometimes aflord A zlimpse of life in o cet. accord Old 3 fother Nature The Littlest Crab. v Fox stood b seuttling s on his back. Reddy never got ired of watching those funny little Hermit Cra They amused him You know 11l like to be amuse d down inside Reddy had a great of respect for those little Hermit | there is to kn He his | watching a about with we th HCaov LOOK AT THIS” SAID HE AKE A smart enough to use k for their bs who wer shells of other rotection Do Ty w rabs mily Why a 2 little surprised Because,” replied Reddy. Jave been smart enough to fiv that will protect them better r own shells would, if they None of their relatives j.cen smart enough to do th “Is that so?" exclaimed Gi i Cheerful Cherub The bees 4o "\umm}ng about their work Like fat old women— 1 think theyre funny - hey grumble away about, practical things And complain of the very poor ¢rade of honey. know 1 Reddy Gull, 1 think wrtest of all the O Grayw look & “they than have retreat | | luncheon and that Putnam got aw own g had .m.w Hermit Crabs are well protect- | A. RAWSON, JR. appeals, and all ot away except who were surrounded by the Hessiun Light Infantry Gen. Howe hud planned to cut off en. Israel Putnam's division, which was in the below Chambers street, by posting several regiments on the Old Post road near the center of the islund: but while these regi- ments were waiting at that point Gen. Putnam, guided by Aaron Bur ras leading his men up the west side of the island. Th the meantime Gen. staff were being entertained heon by Mrs. Mary 1 <t Incleberg, the Mu tHowe & uy countr 9 by it thus ned assumed t Howe Mrs. Murray the Americans to ¢ the fact is that Howe 1 trup all set for Putnam before his his by marching around the trap rath than into it. However, Howe did not follow up h ivantages vel vigorously. In the afternoon his troops went north- ward by one road while our people were going in the same direction bout ha!f & mile further west. The tish encamped at nightfall acr island on a line somewhat le: « mile south of Harlem Heights. (Covyright. 1924, the than BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Never X, make until you statement, Neighbor know you know W about that particu- {lar thing. Now you come along with { me.” ywing flew alon to where a boat {ashore with some Oysters that morn ing. Some of those Oy ters had been opened on the boat. Graywing looked -ound _among the opened shells Presently he picked up something ind dropped it whére Reddy could see “Take a look at this,” said he. do you make of it? Leddy walked over and looked. It was @ very tiny Crab. It didn’t have pinching claws and its legs d too_ weak for it to walk around. t was a ffeny weeny Crab. suid Reddy, looking iS a_baby s Guess again, hat Crab is fully grown.” ddy’s eyes opened very wide. to say that I don’t believe you,” said hie, “but you can see for vourself h s Crab can’t_run around. down the s<hore had con it “What ywing. isn't o ‘he, ted Gra That is Mus, ¢ b, and it is that she can’t_run around noi swim_around. She doesn’t have to and she doesn’t want to. You saw Ler before, did you replied Ieddy. “T never did.’ *Well, you wouldn't see her now if it nadn en that somebody opened jan Oyster, and she fell out.” Yon should have seen how prompily Reddy's sharp ears pricked . up. hat do you mean by “fell out of an wing quite true or ywing, “that ind she has > lite within an Oyst was a baby, ter. That ngth in her claws. She You think this | lived nearly Loyster shell. with | went when {and she never left the; is why she hasn't any st legs, nor any pinching hasn't any use for them ed In those shells they car With them, but those shells are noth- ing compared with Oyster shell 1 Do he live on the Oyster?” asked Reddy No.”" repl with the Oyster of [riends.” Imagine.” chuckled R , one havin an Oyster for bt 19260 »d Graywing, They are the best eddy. “any friend.’ (Conyr Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. that take them into the woods or to: lley Mur- | y around | | | onion, very | | It | She | | “she lives Cften misspelled: Acclimate. Two | devoted trust Loyal, true. constant Synonyms: faithful, ~ stanch, worthy. Word study a word thy times and it 18 yours.” Let us mere: b “Use our vocabular ach day. Todi mastering one w s word: Apprehend to iny hold of or grasp mentally: per ceive. “Thelr cfforts to escape had Leen apprehended. | | Now this Jeor 1 SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY Well, T fink drandpa goin’-to make a mistake if he buys ’'iss horse; he got berry fierce lookin' warts on his hind knees, (Copyright, 1626.) Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Development Through Toys. 8 are more than st objects recreation. They have a very T for definite part to play in the develop-| ment of the child's intellect and this development begins when a child is three months old. No doubt, if he is possessed of a lot of adoring relatives, he wiil have whole basketfuls of beau- (iful rattles and jingleers and bright balls ané they eagerly nwait the day when the wee mite will begin to “enjoy" them. months of age, if wee Tommy is up to/ the normal in his mental develop- ment, he will begin to recognize the noise’ of his rattle and the brilllance of his red ball when he hears or sees it near. He will very shortly be putting out | a wavering hand in its direction, not because, as vet, he is aware of the jovs of shaking the rattle in his own hand, but because he has suddenly become aware of something beside the face of his mother and the sound of her voice. These are new sights and sounds and he is interested in them. Which, of course, only shows that Tommy is a bright baby. When Tommy is older he will have a box of blocks, of course. And in addition to keeping him busy and out of mischief they will also teach him dexterity in placing them one on top of the other so they won't fall down: and the feel of them in his hands will make him aware of their own par- ticular peculiarity of outline, so that later he will know that anything which lcoks and feels like his blocks i “square.” He will find more on the blocks and no doubt some figures and letters, which, through ascoctation, he will come to’ recognize A und B, e When we send fommy away to play with his toys we do not always realize that the first steps in his education are being pain- lessly taught by means of these sim- ple blocks. Mother than one color and fathers ave always prone to want to help the baby in his awkward efforts. They take the blocks out of his fumbling fingers and huild « glorious two-storied house. fine amusement for the parents but it teaches the baby nothing. In fact it makes him more Qisgusted with the blocks and he doesn’t want to play with them after this. Let him alone. Let him make his mistakes and, if he wishes, throw the blocks aw lle learns something by disorder as well as order, and the next time he woes to play with the blocks, he won't vepeat the same mistake. Children should be allowed, when wi play. to carry their projects to completion. Don't think = just be- ause it's only a game of blocks that {he buby can bhe torn from it with im- ity He ma Jective in his own small mind and to Qisrupt it is to cause confusion and discouragement for future efforts. All toys are valuable, not only for njoyment, but for early training in the actual business of living, and the Value of any toy lies in its ability to tiv up the imagination of the child ind make him think of new wayvs to use it and new things to do with it. Macaroni With Sauce. ne-fourth of a package of in rapidly boiling salted minutes, and while cooking prepare a sauce s Put one, large tablespoon- ful of hutter in a saucepan, and when it has melted stir in one chopped one-half a tablespoonful of chopped parsley and season pepper and salt. Let th cook to- gether for eight minutes, then add one tablespoonful of flour and one upful of stewed and stralned to- matoes and stir well together for five minutes Butter a baking dish and put a layer of macaroni in it, then 1 layer of the sauce and so on until the dish is well filled and set in the for 10 minutes before serving. And at three or four | in_irritation. | ¢ have some real ob- | with | Wants Men's Privilege of Being Natural —and Ugly Equal Beauty Rights for Women! HDoroih yDixH Millions Are Martyrs to Idea That Etery Woman Must Be Beautiful—Right to Be Comfortable. EXCEPT the snake in the grass that chivvied Mother Eve out of Eden and lost woman her first good home, the greatest enemy the female sex has ever had is the individual who first promulgated the theory that every woman must be beautiful whether she is or not and that she can work a miracle and make herself into a Lilllan Russell if she tries hard enough. Millions of women have been martyrs to this idea. Millions are still suffering in coils of it. Every day miliions of women go through agonies to save their complexions that would entitle them to canonization if it were done to save their souls. The starving Armenfans suffer no more gnawing pangs of hunger than do multitudes of rich women striving to maintain that girlish figure. The torture chamber of the Inquisition has its counterpart in every beauty shop, with its permanent-waving instruments, its sweat-boxes, its re- ducing machines, its face-liftings and skinnings, its manicure tables and so on, where the poor victims are scalped and stewed in their own juices and are beaten and pounded to a pulp and then—not least painful of all—pay out good money for the privilege of enduring sufferings that should give them seats among the cherubim and seraphim on high, but that only enables them to get by down here below. For, alas, unless nature makes you a good-looker, there is precious little you can do to help yourself. ~ Yet women go on trylng to achieve the impossible of being beautiful though homely, for it is sadly true that woman's one best bet is beauty. It is the one.thing she can depend on to carry her smoothly over the rough places of life and atone for and excuse all other lacks and shortcomings. . Of course, this is the fault of men. Men make the most invidious dis- tinctions between a plain woman and a good looking one. The pretty woman never has to struggle for her rights. Privileges are presented to her on a silver salver. No handsome woman has to stand in a crowded car. If she is a beauty she could have a whole cross section if she wanted it, while the men stood and beamed on her. But if by chance a man | ets up and gives his seat to an ugly woman, he does it with an expression that Indicates he feels that he deserves the Victoria Cross for heroic per- { formance of duty. . | e | ALK about men’s rights. There is no other right that women envy so | persistently and entirely and sincerely as the right to be as ugly as na- | ture made them and to look as old as they really are. | The right to vote falls into innocuous desuetude beside the blessed pri | ilege of not having to be straight-fronted when you are built on the bay | window type of architecture, and the freedom of a latch key is as nothing beside the glorious freedom ef throwing away curling irons and crimping pins and wearing the straight/locks with which it has pleased an inscrytable | Providence to affiict you. The worst phase of this injustice, however, appears in society. Ugliness is no bar to a man’s popularity or success. It is a fatal handicap to a woman. Yet the homely and the beautiful are endowed with just the same desire for pleasure and love-making. The girl with the pale-green freckles and carrotty hair and a snub nose is just as anxious to be amused and entertained and sought after as is her brother similarly endowed. But there is this difference; that while no man, except upon compulsion, will dance®vith her or ask her to stroll in the moon- light, brother is received with effusive welcomes everywhere, and so long as he is agreeable no girl thinks of discriminating against him because he doesn’t look like a matinee hero. Nobody can imagine a fat woman with a bald head being in eager request as a partner at balls and partfes. Nobody ever saw a crowd of young men hanging around an angular spinster and basking in her smiles. Yet we continually see women displaying the most undisguised pleasure in the society of such men, and rightly, because a fat middle-aged man or a freckled-face youth may have charms of wit and soul that would make an Adonis sink into insignificance. E scrawniness in order to retain . fter marriage the same difference is apparent. Nobody ever hears of the affections of his middle-aged wife, but the country is full of classes of pathetic matrons solemnly hopping around on one foot or religiously turning handsprings in order to keep young and sylph- |like for some John who doesn't care a rap how he looks to them. of this foolishness is reached when it is demanded must have beauty as well as brains! With a4 woman, in order to satisfy the publ fashion in clothes. And the quintessence that even professional women man, achievement suffices. But taste, would have to wear reducing girdles and set the i i b v vho The beauty cult is the banner injustice to the world, and the woman w first arises and proclaims woman's equal rights with man to be comfortable and ugly will be the female Moses who will lead her sex into the promised land of freedom. | In the meantime. t 1 merrily on. rofessi f the beautifier goes he profession of the goes merrlly on DIX. (Copyright. 1926.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES their virtue, too, by being stimulating to the efrculatio A girl of 15 vears with a height of 4 fect 11 inches could weigh about 100 pounds, but there is no set weight for growing children, as they are making A Youthful Chin. Normally, the chin line of a woman of 30 in smooth and firm as when she was 18. But even so. some extra care <hould be taken of it from 30 onward, it i6 aiffeult to make it vouthful|so many changes all the time. {once it has become lax and fabby. Massage your scalp daily very thor- | ™ F e chief thing is not to let a double [oughly, and you will not need any | ehin grow, and to avoid that vouftonic, for it fo make the hair grow. L ®woid getting fal. The extra|The massage makes the blood circu [ ety (bt the body does mot really [late freely, and that is about all that . Settles in a pocket here, stretch-Imost people need to inerease the Ing the skin, which once stretched is|growth of hair. | very hard to shrink HOW IT STARTED ‘Fhe next thing is not to let the mus- BY JEAN NEWTON. cles under the skin grow lax. Massage will help, for it will stimulate these muscles, and exercise will help by strengthening them, and ice rubs will help most of all, for ice is astringent and also very stimulating. Massage with cream—with flesh- building cream if the sKin is dry, with ordinary cleansing if there is a dou- |ble chin. Rub hard, for hard rubbing | breaks up the flesh under the skin and the blood re-ab- < it away. Throw !back the head as far as possible, with | ! the mouth open, and then close the mouth. This gives a. steady, hard pull on the muscles under the chin and down the necl Rub for 10 minutes a day with ice. 1f you wrap a bit of ice in an old hand- kerchief or a thin piece of muslin you can manage it better and vou lose { none of the cold wetness which is so | splendid for the skin. While vou are| about it, rub the ice all over the face, it is good for the complexion. . “lordia farms produce ,000,000 worth of fruit Fifteen—It takes warm water for a | atubles, on 200,000 acr cleansing bath, but cold baths have | eeee “Hurrah.” This popular form of cheer so com- monly used by be expected to be of foreign origin. Yet it 19 @ direct survival in both sen- timent and form of the Kuropean battle cries of old. “Hurrah!” we have from the Ger- man, With the Scandinavians it is said to be a derivative of “Thor-aie,” an in- vocation to their god Thor for aid in battle. Stmilarly the battle Norsemen was “Ha-Rou,” their viking, Rollo. (Covyright. 1926.) ! scatters it—that sorbs it and ca ery of the in honor of annual and ve: Dr.Rachel H. Freer NATURE has designed that the baby teeth should re- main in place until the per- manent teeth are ready to come through. As the per- manent teeth grow, the roots of the baby teeth are grad- ually absorbed—leaving the crowns free to drop out. Thus it is obvious that the condition of the tem- porary teeth can seriously Now, the growth of the jaws is largely influenced by the regular replacement of the first teeth by the permanent ones. Failure teeth may result in such lack of development of the jaw bones as to hamper an iadividual through life. Millions of mothers are protecting their children by using Squibb’s Dental Cream. It is made with more than 50 per cent of Squibb’s Milk of Magnesia . Particles of the Milk of —a safe, effective antacid. Magnesia lodge about the at The Danger Line—where teeth and gums meet. Here they neutralize the acids that cause decay, giving complete protection. in Squibb’s Dental Cream—no astringents—nothing to injure the Yender, young mouths. Begin the use of Squibb’s Dental Cream today. Children truly enjoy it. cents a large tube, Blue=jay affect the permanent teeth. The blade slipped!’'— that explains hundreds of cases of foot infection,” says Rachel H. Freer, well- known New York chiropo- dist. “No unskilled hand should ever pare a corn. It is a job for a chiropodist.™ Visit your chiropodist as often as you do your den- tist, if you would keep your feet in prime trim. But be- to care for the temporary mouth and in the crevices And there is no grit At drug stores—only 40 a middle-aged man ‘being massaged for wrinkles or physical cultured for | us today would not | Swedish and Danish "hurr."’ SUB ROSA BY MIML Helpless Type Extinct. The trouble with a great many girls today is that they read too much trash—and that they believe the trash, no matter how fmpractical | and untrue it may be. | There's one type of novel that has | wrought a great deal of harm in the | minds of our young sentimental maidens. That's the story of the lovely blue-eyed doll who couldn’t even bofl an egg all by herself. sor! could she sew—nor did she have the slightest idea what the words “house- | hold management” meant. . She's never earned a cent of money in her life—never did a day's work, just been coddled and pampered from the day she was born. Her adorable helplessness went straight to the heart of a delightful voung millionaire who married her, set her up in luxury and swore that she would always be protected from hard tofl as long as he was alive. It sounds easy, doesn't it? All you have to do, if you happen to be born with golden hair and blue eyes, is learn to look helpless and appealing. Then some large, expensively | dressed gentleman will come tearing along, just wild to make things easy for you the rest of your life. Actually, there are girls who be- lieve all this applesauce. They think that, with a little luck, they can get through life without doing a min- ute’s work. Whereas they haven't a chance of nabbing any man, no mat- ter how dumb he may be, unless they're prepared to take a hand somehow and help him out. The helpless, adorable type is ex- tinct. The girl who attracts men now- doesn’t fascinate by means of clinging, helpless femininity. She | evokes his admiration and respect by her accomplishments along some lines. Maybe a lot of us don't know how to cook and sew and dust and man- ge. But we probably have had suf- ticiently successful business careers to show any man that we're capable of taking hold and making things go. Men aren’t so dumb that they want to tie themselves to 125 pounds of uselessness. 5 They want the feeling that they've got something to depend on. And the only way they can get that feel- ing is by examining our past records and seeing whether there's any sort of effort worthy of note to our credit, 1f they find that we've been peace- fully sitting with folded hands wait- ing for something beautiful to hap- pen, they won't be easily persuaded to take on the responsibility of look- ing after us for the rest of their lives. Men—real men—uws: of stability they marry. You wouldn't marry a man whose past life showed no work or effort of any sort, would you? You wouldn't think you could depend on him. Then | you can't expect him to tuke a chance | ou, when he discovers t you've been trusting to luck to see you through the world. You must have some kind of a record to he | eligible for marriage. | Nt some signs and worth in the woman What Do You Know About It? Daily 1. Where grown? 2. Ix tea grown A. 3. What sort of a beverage is yerba mate? 4. Where is grown? 5. Where consumed? 6. What is an advantage in grinding your own coffee? Answers to these questions | | in tomorrow's Star. fence Six. is tea chiefly in the U. s. coffee chiefly is coffee chiefly Help to Churchgoers. According to legend the use of cof- |fee was first discovered by sheep, | { white ate the berries and became stim- | ulated to cutting up excited capers. ! | Arabs in Abyssinia, at any rate, | | brought the coffee bean and the cup | brewed from It back to Mecca and | there it was at first employed only by | | people who wanted to keep It is said that pious persons who went to Mosque half the day were especially glad to get hold of a cup, although the Sultan had forbidden its use, Now what do you know about that? | Answers to Yesterday's Questions. | 1. The loadstone was the old name |for a_magnet or magnetic ore. | 2. Electric eels can give a | shock. 3. Dr. William Gilbert (1540-1603) is considered the father of electricity 4. Otto von Geuricke (1602-1 first invented electric lights, but | body paid any attention to his work. | 5. A Leyden jar is a sealed jar | having electrically charged water and ‘ | awake. | bad ) no an iron rod projecting through the cap from which electricity be drawn off. 6. Sir Isaac Newton showed that a dise of glass when placed in a brass clinder and electrified would attract | paper so strongly as to make it leap about the cylinde may | will enable you to wear the'loveliest, most extreme shoe styles without fear of corns . “Unskilled use of corn razor in- vites infection”—says (hiropodist tween visits, when a corn needs attention, put on a Bluesjay plaster. Bluesjay is the safe, gen- tle and sure way to remove a cbrn at home. Even the most obstinate corn seldom needs more than a second plaster. Standard for more than twenty-six years . . . May be had at all drug stores. Blue-jay FEATU RES. 1926.) The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle prright Persia Father. Kind of bird. Written message. Like. Journey. Nothing. Expensive. Engineering degree Assistant. Spanish_port. Royal Navy (abbr.). River rising in Bohemiu Unit of welght (abbr.) Kiag of Bashan Hebrew month. Exclamation. Water fowl. Southern State (abbr.). Pitfall. Man's name. X Printer's measure. Toward the rising sun Comedian in a minstrel show Burn the surface of. Proceed. Therefore. Wriggly fish Prefix—into. College official Down. @bbr), . Oversight. Proposed international Preposition. Magicians Writing material Pale. Free from disorder Conjunction. language. That D i 10. 16. " The smallest self -conscious: East India (abbr.) s (symbol) Exists, Concerning Siberian rive: Hawaifan bird Comparative suflix New England Sta A kind of shelf. The sun god, Another name for Like. I self Nickname of a Prefix: again. Southern State State > (abbr.) the sun god governor (abbr.). “Puzzlicks” l——Puzzle-Limericks There was a young lady named Who was learning on roll But her friends for a —3 Quickly her the 4 Of “Niag falls were so L f “The Taming of | Shrew Glide alorn Amusem Cognomen Immense. (Note—( Mel. of forwards this “Puzzlick tains a cleve | You can k it out by placing the | right words, indicated by the num in the corresponding spaces answer and another “Puzzick” appear tomerrow.) “Puzzlick.” | There once was a hold halberdi | Who knew not the meaning of fes But his wife made him tremble use she'd dissemble sely attack from the rear. sConvrizht Scotch Broth. e one quart of stock in which in mutton has been hoiled. add one. cupful of pearl barley previous washed, add one cupful and onion cut in small dice and salt to taste and simmer two hours. Add one teaspoonful chopped parsley and serve ver: s to ve the the surface 4. \kron. Ol * which con ver play on_words. will Yesterda¥'s | for | of hot. elicious "SALADA" TEA Improves a Meal at Any Time 028 . in skin care if safeguarding a . gm_)d complexion is your aim F - = s Copsrizht. 107 he It is bringing the charm of natural loveliness to thousands EAUTY experts throughout the world now urge skin cleansing as beauty's most important aid. Yesterday's artificial methods are quickly passing. Youthful appear- ance is thus preserved. Beautiful complexions by the thousands are resuiting. The rule s simple. No costly beauty methods, just the soothing olive and palm lather of Palmolive used in this way: FOLLOW THIS ONE WEEK— THEN NOTE YOUR COMPLEXION ‘Wash your face gently with sooth- ing Palmolive Soap, massaging it softly into the skin. Rinse thor- oughly, first with warm water, then with cold. If your skin is inclined to be dry, apply a touch of good cold cream—that is all. 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- Tow. They must be washed away Do not use ordinary soaps in the treatment given above. Do not think any green soap, or represented as of ~alm and olive oils, is the same as ‘aimolive, k By NORMA TALMADGE auty Features Remember that before Palmolive came, women were told, “use no soap on your faces.” Soaps then were judged too harsh. Palmotive 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 effectiveness beyond all doubt. BE: SURE TO GET THE REAL PALMOLIVE It costs but 10c the cake!—so little that millions let it do for their bodies what it does for their faces. Obtain Palmolive today. Then note what an amazing difference one | week makes. The Palmolive Com- lpany (Del. Corp.), Chicago, lllno-:.' |

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