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WOMAN BY MARY MARSHALL. The boleros or rather fects”—that have heen offered to us' rom time to time during the last five or six vears have heen included among the details of the Spanish trend in | fashion. Thiz season the bholero has actually established itself. but it seems | 2o have put aside its Spanish preten holero ef- | MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Melons Oatmeal with Cream Soft Boiled Eggs Broiled Bacon Popovers. Coffee LUNCHEON. Oyster Stew Buttered Crackers Macaroon Custard Sponge Cakes Tea DINNER. Tomato Bouillon Boiled Ham Baked Potatoes (‘reamed Cabbage Hot Mince Pie Cheese Coffee POPOVERS Mix and sift one cupful flour and one-eighth teaspoonful salt. Beat one egg. add to one scant cupful milk and then add to this the dry mixture, making smooth batter. Keat with egg- bheater until mixture is full of air bubbles. Have gem pans well greased. pour mixture in until thev are two-thirds full. Bake on hbottom shelf of hot oven ahout 30 minutes, until they are weli puffed up and browned. Serve at once. MACAROON CUSTARD. Heat one quart milk in double bofler. Beat volks six eggs and add one-quarter teaspoonful salt and three-quarters cupful sugar: pour in little of hot milk, stir mixture into remainder of milk and stir and cook until spoon is coated. Remove at once from fire, strain. cool and flavor with one teaspoonful vanilla and few drops almond. Break one dozen stale macaroons into bowl, pour in custard and garnish with whipped cream and maraschino cherries. Serve ver CREAMED CABBAGE. Cover four cupfuls finely chop ped cabbage with cold water and let stand 1 hour. Drain and shake until dry. Mix one.quar- ter cupful finely chopped pimentoes and one tablespoon- ful finelr cut green pepper with cabbage. Mix one cupful stify whipped cream with one-half cupful mayonnzise dressing and add to eabbage with one tea- spoonful salt. Stir until in- gredients are well hlended. Serve very cold. {lonzer. fatter holero than any of its immediate predecessors. The names of Chanel, Worth, Poiret and Doeuil- let_aie given as authorivies for the | bolero fashion by the purvevors of ready-made frocks who feel that there {is magic in the names of disiineuishea French dressmake This new holero is more generally wearahle than its predecessors. The &hort bolero of other yvears was soon recognized hy discerning women to he for the voune slender and the well propor- BOLERO FROCK OF BLACK S WITH. EMBROIDERED VE sions. No one ish tendency the reason veally come speaks of the Span- thix Awtumn. Perhaps that this new holero s | successful is because it has be. | A fashion suitable only a thoroughly Paristan, thos |and the oughly 1926 fashion device. ‘inece s [tioned. This new bolero is what ihe nething quaint or or |dressmakers would call more sophisti- exotic about it | eated. Which is another way of sa Of course, all sorts of liberties have iR that it may be worn to advantage been taken with the bolero, Some- | hy olier women. It is restrained—to times it appears at the back, but not | ise another word dear to the dress- at the front, and again, it is appavent | maker&—which i8 another way of say- &t the front. but notat the back. Jenny | ing that without appearing to be close- makes detachable bolerds and Mariial [1v fitted it really is cleverly shaped so ~t Armand mevely indicates the holero [as to muke the least of extra pounds. by means of trimming. Usually it is a | (Coprright. 1926, EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day’s Daily Talks on Diet piciuresqin The Right Food Is the Best Medicine | juice dilutes the powerful hydrochle- vie acid ax soon as it is secreted. It is not known just how the stomach is able lo produce this strong acid. Hyperacidity can be caused by the Stomach secreting too much hydro- chloric acid or not enough diluting Suice Generally, when hyperacidity s present. stimulating foods, as tea, cof- fee. high seasonings, salt, condimen vinegars, pickles, spices. cane sugar and water-drinking #i meals must be avoided. - Sweet apples. dates, - fresh pears, bluebeiries, very ripe bananas, cantaloupes, malaga and tokay grapes can osually be taken. Sometimes cooked fruit and purees of vegetables Acid Fruits; Acid Stomach. A question came o me from a Miss B. F. which is repeated so often that 1t is worth answermz here in full T have an acid stomach and should avold ecids. Will you please give me a list of fruits which do not contain acids?” asks AMiss B It is impossible 1o zive fruits which do not contain acids. Al fruits contain vrganic acids — malic acid in apples, pears and fruits of that class; tartaric acid in grapes: citrie acid in oranges, lemons, ete. Theugh oranges and lemons taste sonr when eaten. their reaction in the body alkaline. The reason for this is that the acids of fruits ave present in com- ape e Re beins AT bination with the alkalis. anl | dincarded potash. The orsanic acids fruits e are quickly burned in the and| S meitae desiisibetoRalEaeR RS L the tesidue of soda and potash ave | @usstons should send self-addreased. sramped left. ‘The real effect of food acids iz| Ve L S to alkalinize the blood and tissue . Auids Summer Squash. Years from vhenma 5 4 tism were forbidden to eat acld fruits | ous.varities of ‘the Summer in an effort Breaent an exvessive | Squash ave generally cooked when so acid condition. 11 ix now known that| tender that -the thumbnail this was barking up the wrong |‘l‘l"‘-‘.nn pierce the rind easfly. To pre i menction e fpoanes | eschios o JiSuie e iiic B alann) an acid condition are the vnes suffer- fcut in pieces, and either cook sre from “acidosis” must avoid. And|in boiling water or steam it. It will the food which likely to cause | cook in boillng water in balf an hour. fermentaion when eaten is that very |t kes wabout an hour to cook it in a sweel-taxting food. cane suzar. SUAnge | steamer s fine and season with as it sweel tasting can salt. pepper and hutter. Summer ean cause an acid condition in the | squash is very palatable cut in slices body. Avid tasting fruits cause a and fried like eggplant. Young Sum- ‘sweetening’ in the body | 1aer squashes are good cooked whole. Now, when Miss B. . speaks of hav | For this dish they should he ver ing an acid stomach. she means she | sioall. but the crook-necked and other has an excessive acid condition. or hy- | Summer squashes are richer in flavor peracidity of the nach. The nat-!when grown to a larger size. From ural acid present in the healthy | a mature squash remove the thin stomach during digestion is hyvdro | skin and seeds. Cut the squash in chlorfe acid. This is & very powerful | small pieces and put it in a saucepan acld when bought af the drug store. | with boiling water enough to cover. 1f applied to the face in the propor-| Boil for half an hour. Drain, mash tion it is present in the stomach it [and season with salt. pepper and but would burn the skin ut natare | ter Cook Winter squash the same manages her processes of normal di-|way. Squash is one of the vegetables gestion in a marve manner. A | that requives a liberal amount of limpld secretion known diluting | butter to be good. a list of is hest o g0 suiferers e iy 1o small and smail is o seems, sugar own the Lane By SHIRLEY RODMAN WILLIAMS. 'JL'ST a8 wriggling is an essential part o1 bain kood so muuning and jumping are part of healthy childhood Children will run inst as the brook will flow and te ewrb this impulse is 1o curb normal reactions to the joy of living. Grown-ups who five with children must curh their “nerves” instead and permit a reasonable ex- "pression of childhood gambol, you know, while it's enly the old shieep one expects 1o walk sedately along 4 UT on the farm with Mary Jane When we go walking down the lane, We hippity hop, an skip, an stop To climb the fence and sit on top. And Kick our feet against the raiis And watch the cunning cotton tails Then from the clovers in the gr: Lambs must jump and And when we're hungry We race back Gp th #s€ome up the lane °, sedately, sun or rain, seen one jump or run / Or seem to have a speck o fun. They look s0 thoughtful ag they go “I lke Aunt Winnie best. She ain't the kind that hugs you or calls vou precious or anything when she comes visitin'. (Coprright. 1926.) What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY Tomoirow’s planetary aspects are adverse until shortly after noon. They then rather suddenly change and be- come favorable and remain so for the na e te day. The wmorning | should he given up to routine work, {and even this may prove to be irk- some unless great self-control is exe cised. In the afternoon the clouds will have disappeared, and the plans or | changes that you have had in mind {can be put info execution with ever hope of success. The air will be charged with resolution and optimism, and the “stick-at-it-iveness” so essen- tion to achievement. It is also an occasion that is propitious for love af- fairs, as the omens indicate that emo- tions will be deeply stirred i Children born tomorrow will during infancy enjoy normal health, although they will not show any signs of physi- cal exuberance. Karlv in their ‘teens { they will be subjected to one or more serious ailments. These will ceuse Y. bui vead not. of course. if propery precautions be taken, excite alarm. The signs denote that they will attain a_vigorous adulthood. In disposition they will be amiable and amenable, and they will nat possess those traits of willfulness and selfish- ness characteristic of so many chil dren. They will be studious, but not | brilfantly "intelligent: rather devoid {of worldly ambition, but always striv- !ing to be happy and to make others happy. | If tomorrow is vour | versary, vou do ngt possess the virtue | of patience, and are very apt lo “go {up in the air” without any apparent reason or provocation. You are more impulsive than deliberative; and often xay and do those things that calm reflection causes vou to regret. You have strong emotions, hut these are | more of a transitory than a perma- { nent nature. thing comes to | those who wait” is a saving that has never appealed to you, as when re- sults are not immediate you lose vour poise and self-control. You, however. fare both versatile and original, and very quick to see a point or a wayv out {of ‘a difficulty. Your judgment is quick and nsually shrewd. You pos- sess a well developed sense of humor and are naturally whimsical and vi cious. In vour family life vou are very loving and affectionate. and in | Your home circle vou are always seen at vour best, as vou seem better able among your Kith and kin to restrain those impatient tendencies which fomehow mar your relations with out sider. Well known persans horn on that date are Arnold H. Guyol. geographer; Richard H. Bull, Frances E. Willard. reformer; | H. MacCracken, clersyman | Douglas Wiggin (Riggs). author, Frederick Ma¢Monnies. sculptor. (Copyright. 19761 birthday anni Henry Kate and What Do You Know About It? Daily Science Six. 1. 1s mevcury a liquid” 2. Is glass a solid? 3. What are the three in which most substanc 4. What is meant by chemical term sublimation? 5. What happens to the vol- ume of most substances when cooled” f. How can a smail amount of gas be expanded to a large volume without adding more ras? Answers to these in tomorrow’s Star. the questions Liquid Air. For a lopg time hefore the com mon mixture of gases which we call air was lowered in temperature till it became a liquid it was surmised that such a chemical feat would be ac- complished. There ure many remark- able things about liquid air, such as the fact that it will take the skin off your hand like & burn, and produces much the same nervous sensation as a burn, and that a flower dipped in liquid air for a few minutes hecomes so hard that it can he broken only with a hammer. But the things that people expected of it before it was dis covered ave bevond belief. It was go | Ing to cure leprosy, consumption and | cancer and do no end of wonders. | Actually it was found to he a very dangerous substance. medically con sidered. and xtill remains more of a | theoretical triumph of physics and chemistry than a useful creation Now what do you know about that? Answers to Saturday’s Questions. 1. Whales are the largest animals in the world. | 2. A grampus is | eats other whales. 3. Ambergris. a precious { is obtained from ‘the spe | 4. Whalebone occurs in of whales. 5. Spermaceti is a fat derived frem whales which used to be used for candles. 6. A swordfish can drive a hole into a large wooden ship. (Copsright “Puzzlicks” 'uzzle-Limericks a whale which perfume, m whale. the mouth 1926 1 There was a voung man of Who loved a fair maid of his - But now it is - -3 He walks on his —4- For. alas. she has turned him —-5-— 1. Fame 2. lLarger than a village but small- than a city. 3. Stated. 4. Where one walk, Toward the center of the earth his “Puzzlick,” sent in by R. of Pittsfield. Mass.. may be a little to literal with respect to the effects of a repulse when one is in love—-and then. again. it may not Judge for vourself after vou have | completed the limevick. The answer and another “Puzzlick” will appear here tomorrow (Coosright. Creamed Tongue. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan. stir in one and one-half cupfuls of milk. three tablespoonfuls of flour, one-half a teaspoonful of salt, & pinch of nutmeg. a dash of pep per and a teaspoonful of minced pars ev. Stir until it is thick and creamy. nd then add thin slices of boiled tongue and serye hot with mashed ‘polatoes-and bol-biscuit-or-rolla, t ler doesn’t ordinarily 10261 mathematician: | WASHINGTON, ' DorothyDix, Where Are the Women Who “Never Got Over Things,” Who Mourned Death Forty Years? Where Are the Faded Old Maids? Enumerates Tupes of Waomen Now Extinct Vanished Ladies OFTEN wonder what has become of certain types of women who seem to have vanished off the face of the earth and to have become as extinct as the mythical dodo. Where, for instance, are the women who “never got over things”? Who mourned for 40 yvears over a sorrow and were perpetual flowing fountains of tears? They always dressed in lugubrious black and wore long, floating f; veils and slick black gloves. They wiped their eves on handkerchiefs v wide black borders and derived most of thelr sustenance from SIrong black tea. All of us who are middle-aged can recall a_group of such women. who every now and then came to spend the day with our mothers and hold-a lodge of sorrow. They had an enjoyable time. in a ghoulish way. by digging thelr dead out of their graves and tearing their wounds open and feasting upon their misery. Some of them would probably boast that since their husbands dled they had never permitted the front windows in the house to be opened, or any one to teuch the piano, and that they had never heen io any place of amusemen: Nearly all of them Kept the room in which a son or # daughter had died exactly as it had been at the time. even with the clothes of the deceased hanging rotting on the pe which they had been put by dead hands. and it was their depressing habit to keep thelr grief glive by repairing daily to these chambers and toriuring themselves by reviving the memory of every pang they felt at the loss of & beioved child. We of today have no such visitors as these. No wome the day in an oray of grief at our houses. Only the most woman friends ever speak o us at all of whatever gnaw at their hearts. Women iove their ever did. They adore their children as much, but t dispiay of their grief. noc cuitivate their sorrow. best they can fo: the sake of the living io spend e of our secretly as they make a public with life the intin g0 on lach com thin oid the “ted the woman with the broken he; ND what has become of munity d to have « Generally she wa v sweel-faced, maid, with a sad, gentle smile and gra) inglet w e wore a manner of her vouth, stringing down the side of her t nd she faded colored clothes. draped in an old fashivned way actoss her # ed in Or eise the Anyway, it Supposed L tied There was always some rowantic story of how she had heen her youth by a gay voung blade who kissed her and rode away, handsome youns lover had died of some lingering compiaint. broke poor Miss Alice or Aiss Letitia's heart, and she was popularl to spend her time reading over and over again a packet of love lett with & frayed blue ribhon. Or perhaps the broken-hearted one was a deserted wife whose good-for- nothing husband, after beating her and_starving her and dragging her down into the gutter, had run away and leit her. But the poor lady was still pining for him and keeping the | in the window hurning in case he should veturn. Everybody adopted a bedside manner in dealing with her and she was regarded with awe and sympathy They still are. wife desertion is a common “Men were faithless ever < the old son: Plenty of men leave girls waiting at the church, and crime. but_vou couldn’t find a brokenhearted woman now with a search warrant. Jilted maidens sue for breach of promise. and the abandoned wife gets a divorce on the grounds of desertion and hunts up another husband And where would You go to look for a clinging vine in thix day and age” member the gentle little feminine thing who rolled her eves and asked man she met what he thought she thought. and who was so frail and te she looked as if she was about to pass away at any time? e e e QHE couldn’t have walked two miles to save her life. She gwooned away Y a4t the sight of blood and fainted at any emeigency. She thought politicx perfectly horrid and helieved that woman's place was the home. She didn’t know which was the business end of a check. She didn't know how to buy a railroad ticket or check a trunk. and as a wife she meekly did as John told her and began every statement with “John says u v delic Perhaps few specimens of the clinging vine still survive in remote ruval communities, bul vou never see one in cities. Every Happer can drive a and play as hard a game of golf and tenni her brother. Like Lady Kews' daughter, she knows everything that is to be told. The great majority of young wouien ez thing they cling to is their jobs. And wh likely to tell their hushands Where they themselves, 'n their own living, and the only 1 they marry they are far more t off than to listen to such ad And what has vecome of grandma? Dear old grandma with the silvers hair, under a dainty lace cap. with her blue-veined hands folded on her silken lap. and a patient far-away look in her eyves? Grandma. who was still waiting for the call to come to join her loved ones in the oiher world? Quick, the needle. Watson! Sherlock setting out to seek grandma in & chair in the chimney corn has hennaed her halr and is wearing granddaughter's clothes. manicured hands are dealing bridge. and she isn‘t thinking about sud. She s absorbed in learning mah-jongz But where have they gone. these vanished types of women that be so common DOROTHY Holmes will require it if he for grandma and her highly her used to DIX. (Copsright Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1976, 1926.) lands near Australia tchen police (abbr.) Torning Gold (heraldry) Man’s nickname. Mount (abbr.) ist Western Indians. ‘candinavian navigator. King. Stamese coin. “ondle, Refore. Line of persons. Island State on the Mississippi (bl Mineral rock Nephew of Ahraham Moisture Neutralizer At present. Afternoon. Born Measure of capacity Father of English learning Pronoun Openings. Conjunction Fdible seed. Ineountered. 31416, Liherated from entanslement Down. Sentence that ma ward as well 2 Brazilian eity City in Canada. Printer's measure. Thus. An antiseptic. Swedish coin. of an acid BREAD Gluten Whole Wheat Kids the flavors so good PEP Gives strength. Brings health. Full of life-give ing elements. A ready- to-eat cereal. At your Helloyd® THE PEPPY BRAN FOOD BARKER’S 516 9th N.W. W. be read back- forward. i | | | 1 [ IBIAITITIEIR L INIGIRIAIM ElP[SIOIMEMME[SIS]Y] Iatter lwoP D. 0,- MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1926. SUB ROSA {Are You Sure You Had a Career| to Lose? | number of | There have heen a ! grumbles and whines from married | women in the mails lately. They dis- play a state of mind that is fairly comman to a large percentage of wives these day And though they don't tell me the whole story from heginning to end. there is no need to. One can read pretty clearly the history of their ro- mance, their triumphs and their fail- ures Take a woman like Jessie F., for {n- stance. She assures me that she didnt go into marriage with any ridiculous ideas about divorce being the easiest way out in case her Fred didn‘t measure up to what she ex- pected of a husband. IHers was a common-sense attitude. She was determined to make the best of things. She even sacrificed her one chance of glory without a mur- mur. She'd always been able to write rather well, and people had told her | she could make a great deal of money out of her talent if she'd stick to it. But she gave up this chance for Fred. nd somehow she regrets that saeri- fice now. For Fred doesn’t seem to realize what she's done for him. She's tied down now to the drudg- ry* of household task; She's worn \ the monotony of it all. And d more the thought returns to her: “Did 1 do wrong to glve up my veer? \as I a fool to sacrifice verything for 1r He's practical ined my life.” She's got o now she really wonder: | whether she loves Fred as she should. It worrles her awfully. She feels that perhaps her blighted ambition Lilling hier love for her husband said she give up the one and go back to the other. This is an example of the state of mind into which a woman can work herself if she has sufficient time to brood and worry. Jessie probably never had a talent at all—not a real money-making one. If she'd tried to live on the fruit of her pen, she pi sibly would have starved, and heen 1.enough to marry a nice comfort- e income like Fres Rut she didn't ever to Ly the great career, retains illusfons about it srows tired of the endless washing \d drying of dishes—the eternal planning of meals—the continuous making of beds, she sort of looks around for something on which to vent her anger. \red. Why not hlame evervthing on poor old KFred? She can't reproach him for not having enough money to give her a maid to help her? But she nag at him for ruining her glo- ious career-—which is exactly 1 per cent fact and 99 per cent bunk. Your blighted ambition isn't killing love for your hushand. Jessie It's vour self-pity and frritation at petty household tasks which is per- suading vou that poor old K'red ruined lite. Ave vou sure vou had a ous career to sacrifice? 19281 ab : have a chance so she still And as she your (Conyright 1awer any ina Vided a stan o) Mimi will be glad to directed to this pape Idressed enyelon is el Your Baby and Mine ¢ MEYER ELDRED. BY MYRT Your baby is an un weight for X months, and may he slow in walking, as most very fat babies ave. Your diet is all vight and lacks nothing but cereal to be quite perfect. 1 should do nothinz at all to urge the baby to stand or sit up until he does it of his own ac cord. You cannot compare him with vour friend’s haby who is very, very small for his age, and will nat urally bhe inclined to greater activity Get the baby out of doors, keep on as vou are doing. 1 am sure he will come out fine Tomato juice can be given either cooked or raw. Cooking does not destroy its essential vitamins. | | Use the warmed oil on the scalp. It seems 1o e that teo little good scrubbing more often causes this seruff than too much. Mrs. W. K. D.—There counting for constipation in the breast-fed or bottle baby. In almost all caset it is overcome naturally when | the baby is on a fuller diet. ‘In the| case of 4 3-month-old baby the best method of helping the difficulty is to use a suppository for a week or so, every day at a regular hour. Getting the howels regulated is one way of Jovercaming the difficulty. Continue the ora jnee and vou must use 8 laxative, nudk of nmaznesia is the bes chvice. Sometimes even a part of a bottle ling nursin will help. Your s a zood weight fo three months, he has not made lite the sain a %.pound baby would be expected to make, so his diffi- culty might be solved hy a comple. mentary feeding Mrs. P. T. R bringing the brea twhile firmness after nursing a baby. Drink a quart of milk daily, eat cereal at breakfast, potatoes, cus- tards, rvice pudding. etc.. in addition to your regulation meals and you'll take on flesh. You are not a bad weight for vour height, so why try to get fat? Once you set fat vou'll want to know how to et thin again, and_it's really_lots_havder. Clhe ere&lltest Value ever packed in a two inch space/ L] Mrs T usually lavge is no ac- s There is no way of back o their That's the new Tre- Jur Compact — the “LITTLE ONE™ Etched silver-fin- ished case—just two inches round. Light, slim, beautiful. Con- tainsa generouscake . of Tre-Jur Powder— whose softness, smoothness, and mdgic scent—bring | pure delight. Amazingly pricea at 50c, refills at 35¢. Who but Tre-Jur couldofier thisphe- nomenal Value? Compact refills always available. Generous sample Tre-Jur Face Powde: sent for 10c— stamps o7 coin. House of Tre-Jur, Inc.. 19 W. 18th Strest, N.Y.C. | FEATURES. Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. PERSONAL HEALTH BY WILLIAM Paranasal Focal Infection. The four pairs of bony spaces or cavities in the skull which are lined by mucous membrane continuous with the lining of the masal cavity are called paranasal stnuses, maxillary sinuses or antra of Highmore in the upper jawbones bLehind the cheels trontal sinuses in the forchead brow, spenoidal and ethmoidal sinuses deep in the roof of the nasal cavity hetween the eyes, Acute inflamn ion or in these sinuses produces more or less characteristic pain. which gives a fair clew. at any rate, for the physician to follow. But chronic sinus infection is usually painless. nt.” but none- iheless a source of much mischief and mise Right here T might sand exasperated qi “Well, then, if there ease 4 rheumatism, my joints stiff and sore? is pavay focal infect an tell till vou've been examined A paranasal sinus infection datinz from childhood is the cause of a good 1t cases of chronic multiple arthritis in adults, cases which are subjected all sorts of foolish maltreatment with baths, mineral waters, elimination and the like. Dr. Millard F. Arbuckle, Louis rhinologist, has had well authenticated ases of heart disease. nephritis (Bright's disease), arthritis (oint in flammation). hronchitis and ervsipelas in children. from paranasal focai in fection. Dr. William MeK. Marriot pediatrist, designates acute parenchy matous nephritis as one of the most frequent and nmiost serious of the sy témic manifestations of sinus tion in children It is not that paranasal sinus infec tions always begins in childhood. The majority of cases of serious acute sinusitis occur in adult life. But or suppuration rswe thou ies like this na such dis. what raskes all Perhaps it you never is Dear Ann T happened to run across these twe dresses the The on the right for a i ure becanse of and short vest. Rut with its leng vest that soft, Yours for making ch LETITIA 10200 other day od fullish the one on or panel front, and excellent ane stout skirt is not g the lef* long jabot is (Convrizht KRVICE BRADY, M. D. lent” paranasal focal infection seems to be strikin comn n in early life Perhaps this due to the populay habit of ascribing anvthing child may have in his head to “cold Absorption of bacterial protein fron a silent p anasal focus is the factor responsible for certain cases of asthma, ng persons William A rhinologist. reports Vitus' dance) with ment has b 1 successfully drainage of a paranasal sinus infec tion He finds that most of the hac teria responsible for these paranasal infections produce an acid reactior erefore he advecates mild alka solutions rather than strong anti septics in cleansing the nasal cavities Dr Krieger urges the conservative drainage of the infected sinuses by means of suction apparatus, and he finds that ultravielet treatment fol lowing cleansing of ihe infected sinus is of con: erable vilue Of course. this requires special apparatus and technical skill in applving Aside frov surgical measures and suction drainage, two other general remedies deserve mention for those with chronic sinus disease. The first s general sun hathing—exposure of the naked kin to sunlight, enough to acquire a coat of tan without suffering from sunburn. Probably exposure to <unlight is the secre: benefit some sufferers derive from e of cli mate.” The other remedy is cod liver oil- - teaspoonful twa or three daily of any good brand of plain cod liver oil This has heen well dubbe: “hattled sunshine.” Like sunshine, 1t provides th factor which we e¢all sssential for the develop.’, mmunity against Iy is in vo Dr. sie (St Poughkeep that chorea heart involve treated by Krieger “vitamin, ment of the greatest respiratory infection 1926.) Norway has had such a cool Sum- mer that housewives did not need to Lstack their few boxes, Realy-to Fish . it j Jfollow = this simple rule in skin care By NORMA TALMADGE Copyright By PO Beanty 1906 Featuic- Foremost beauty experts throughout the world urge it as the most effective way to gain natural skin clearness « + . what to do, and why Vv beiore bed—for your skin is an all-important step in gaining the matural sk lovelimess which all the world secks today Leading skin experts urge the fol- lowing rule. Urge that it be fol lowed last thing every night. also every day. It has brought the re ward of a naturally clear complex- ion to more women than any other method known. _ Try it for one week. Note the improvement in the color and soft- ness of your skin that follows reg ular cleansing with the gentle olive and paim lather of Palmolive, in this way: THE RULE — MAKE IT YOURS STARTING TODAY Wash your face gently with Palmolive Soap, massaging it softly into the skin. Rinse thoroughly., fire 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 particu- larly 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. Follow these rules day in and day HAT you do at night—just | out. Your skin ‘will be soft and lovely—naturally colorful and clear. 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 she same as Palmolive. Remember that before Palmofive came, women were told, “use no soap on your faces.” Soaps then were judged too harsh. Palmolive is a beauty t0ap made for one pur- pose only: to safeguard your com | plexion. 60 vears of soap study -Land behind it. Millions of pretty skins prove its effectiven eyond all doubt. S BE SURE YOU GET THE REAL PALMOLIVE Tt costs but 10c the cake!—so little that millions let it do for their bodies what it does for their faces. | Obtain }:ah‘nflli e today. Note what one week of its nee hrin&yfln The Famolive Conrpunyi{ Corp.) F gikes :