Evening Star Newspaper, August 15, 1927, Page 25

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v WOMA N'S PAGE White Is Favorite for Evening BY MARY MARSHALL. The simpler the better seems to be & rule that holds true for evening frocke—or rather the better the dress- FROCK OF WHITE CHIFFON WITH A PINK RHINESTONE BELT AND PINK AND RHINE- STONE FLOWER—THE ONLY TRIMMING. THE _SLIPPERS ARE OF PINK, PEARL-FIN ISHED KID. maker the simpler he or she dares to make an evening frock. I might add—the better a woman's figure, EAT AND B the more willingly she may wear one of these amazingly simple evening ROWpS. Whether white especially becomes you or not, you cannot go far wrong to wear white for evening this Sum- mer. I have seen a number of very smart black evening frocks this Sum- mer, but just at present the black evening frock seems to bé just a little out of the picture. ~White takes first choice—with pale pastel hues a close second. Our black and deeper, more sophisticated colors may come back in full force with Autumn and Winter, but while Sum- mer lasts the light soft shades seem I to reign for evening. Decidedly tanned neck and arms and shoulders are more and more taken as a matter of course among our young women nowadays. When women first began to wear tan as a matter of fashion—and frankly gave up tryving to remain pale skinned on a Summer holiday—evening dress always offered a problem. There was something startling about the area of pale untanned skin below | the V or oval of neck not covered by the bathing suit. But now no eve- ning frock attempts to be more dec- ollete than the bathing suit and the untanned patches remain invisible. There is something charming about our tanned-skinned youns beauties in evening dress. It is after all only a prejudice that makes us feel that all blondes must be white skinned. have seen girls with gleaming golden hair and blue eyes whose skins would be iwhite if unexposed to the sunm, which now has turned a lovely shade of rosy gold. It seems incongruous at first, but quite charming when you get uged to it. The wives and daughters of the blonde vikings of old must have had skins like that, for it is only when | constrained to live in the shade that | the Nordic becomes really white skin- ned. The modern young woman, especial- ly the fashionable young woman, spends her days in the open, and when she passes a few hours of the evening indoors to dance she rather glories in her sun-tinted skin. But she should remember that with the various shades of tanned skin, black is not particularly becoming—and that is perhaps the reason why you have seen so few black evening dresses at the resorts this Summer. Applique roses cut from six-inch rib- bon form the trimming on a charm- ing little French overblouse recently brought from Paris. 1 will be glad to send you the pattern for these roses with directions for using them on the blouse if vou will send me a self-addressed, stamped envelope. (Covyright. 1027.) E HEALTHY Dinah Day’s Daily Talk on Diet The Right Food is Pathetic Tragedy. A most pathetic story was recently printed in the newspapers. A young Russian woman living in Canada lay dving in a hospital after a 55-day fast. ‘Water had been her only nourishment from May 9-to July 2. She was then in a semi-conscious condition and physicians despaired of her life. Mrs, Leontough suffered from indi- gestion. She read of starvation cures. She also joined a cult whose practices included lengthy fasting. For 41 days she continued to do her housework and then was forced into bed by weak- ness. Her husband had been an artilleryman and they were then refu- gees in Canada. Possibly her indulgent husband thought she had enough trouble, and if starvation cure would stop her indigestion he would be gen- tle with her and let her follow her own whim. Of course, he was filled with remorse when it was too late. This s a warning to avoid starva- tlon treatments self-imposed. There are, of course, special cases, like serious stomach or intestinal disorders, where 2 reliable physiclan may place his patient on such a restricted diet that it is practically a starvation diet. Such a means is, of course, drastic. Such a treatment is recommended only because the physician knows the Best Medicine. | tion with proper cleansing methods will probably relieve the attack. If the indigestion attack is severe, call the doctor. It you suffer with chronic indiges- tion, find out the cause. If you know the root of the trouble lles in self- indulgence in rich food, corrected diet will be the remedy. If you cannot determine the reason for the chronic indigestion, go to a stomach specialist. And be sure you go to one who is particular in his tests and particular in_ his directions as to what you can and cannot eat. Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN, “Mamma wanted to think up some new kind of contest for my party, an’ I'm goin' to give the prize to one that's got the biggest vaceination scar."” (Copyright, 1927.) SUB ROSA BY MIML Soarcity of Husbands. Husbands are as scarce as horses in this age of the to. They are skit- tish, too, and it's hard to put the marriage halter on their pecks and lead them into the matrimonial stall. Maybe we flappers are too swift for them or too sophisticated. They keep us waiting until we grow tired and they are bald. Men are wanted Por the game of mixed doubles, as Helen Wills would express it, but in tennis the score doesn‘t get beyond “forty love. And these men are often good escorts, too. A girl may slip into her old duds and go it alone all day, but when the shades of night are falling fast it's nice to meet a man and go to a res taurant or a show. Now, what's the matter with the men? Guess they're peeved at the way we've stepped into their places. Say, if this business of having a job means that a girl can't have a man, too, Il throw up the former and cleave unto the latter. A girl can go to the office alone, but she needs a man when it comes to going to the church. But the men aren’t tuning in on the marriage bells. And why not? Maybe it's a question of money with them as with the French. A man certainly can’t support a girl on cigar certificates, rain checks or trading stamps. He's just got to have some iron men whose ring will chime in with the tune of the wedding bells. The old idea was, “Can you support my daughter in the style to which she's accustomed?”’ Now it is, “Can Clarence furnish Ethel with the kind of dog crackers to which she and Fido are accustomed?”’ It wasn't so hard to drag a girl out of the home when she got her pay in plain food and ma's old frocks made over, but now that she has a job it isn't so easy to haul her out of the office. The males don’t want to help her when she’ can help herself. Men used to like the clinging vine, but they are shy of the rambler. Say, let’s do a little of the old-style cling- ing. Then these timid males may feel that thelr help Is still wanted. Mimi will be glad to answer any inquiries directed to this paper, provided & stamped, addressed envelope is inclosed. SONNYSAYINGS It is bad enough when some one with digestion troubles attempts self- doctoring by starvation methods. Probably the victim thinks she is saving money by home treatment. But what can be said of the foolish woman who deliberately {invites ill health by going on a starvation dlet because she wishes to reduce? The woman who will resort to starvation diet to achleve a sylphlike figure is vain and foolish. Her vanity prompts a foolish procedure. If over- weight is menacing health, starvation methods will not be the remedy. Under no circumstances should one attempt self-imposed starvation as a remedy for digestive troubles ‘or to reduce overweight. Consult your phy- sician if you feel something serious is the matter. exactly the end to be gained. 1f a slight attack of indigestion visits you, a 24-hour fast in conjunc- OUR CHILDREN Parental Courage. | In this day of child specialists, so- cial reformers, psychologists and sci- entists; in this day of great discovery and unvelling of mysteries, a parent has great need of courage. He who would do what is good for the child hesitates and wavers in the face of such a mass of wisdom and authority. “Don’t repress a child lest you make a worse condition than you faced in the beginning. Let a child express what is in him.” “Raise a child in freedom and he will be strong and happy and of high ou are too much inhibited. You have too great a burden of fear. You ‘make your child fearful and destroy his initiativ “Don’t force a child. no lasting good.” . 1 have said some of those things myself to some parents I have met. But T would not say all of them to all the parents I have met. . Some of them have been too free with their children, some have not been fearful enough, some have not had the right inhibitions, did not know when to say stop and when to say go. Tt takes courage these days to rear 2 child. One used to feel sure of him- self after saying, “You stop that. Forcing does Renders desiring personal answers to their anestions shonid send self-addressed stamped envelope to Dinah Day. care of The Star. y Angelo Patri because we are not certain that what we tell them is best for them. We have to think a little before we speak, and thinking hurts us so. But it is the thinking before the speaking that will give us the courage to deal wisely with our children. For there is a time when we must say “No” and when we must say ‘Yes.” In the quartef century that I have lived and worked with children, I have never found a good reason for disregarding any one of the Ten Commandments. The further along the road I travel with the youth of the country the surer I am that these 10 rules hold good, the more con- vinced I am that any turning from them results in misery for the one who turned away, It takes courage these days to hold fast to what we have proven in our own lives. It takes a lot of character to say to the child in your own house, “I know this to be wrong, and 8o do you it vou will think about it. It is selfish indulgence and you will surely pay bitterly for it in the end. It is not to be done. T will not allow it.” Yet it is just this courage that holds children to their fathers and mothers. The wise parent has trained his child up so that he has regard for his seldom uttered word. This child, though rebellious enough in spirit, hag faith in the courage and character of You hear me? You do as I tell you or I'll know the reason why.” We czn't feel that way about it any more, Self-Confidence. A womun's good looks can depend apparently Every under- stands. of course. the rejuvenating ef. fect of being in love on a woman who has gone on into the very late fwenties or thirties—or perhaps, these days being what they are, T should say late thirties or forties! The girl in her late twentles is merely a flapper this season! through falling in love, she'd be a child! Being in love gives one some- thing to live for, hope for, work for. Having some oné in love with you gives you a gorgeous self-confidence. he most curious and lated things one a Eitner loving or being loved will make vou happy, and happiness and beauty are very much the same. But there are all the other times in one's life when love can’t come in as a new adventure. The contentedly married woman is happy; she loves her husband—but the love here fsn’t a new adventure! It may have kept her attractive, but other worries and flinesses and struggles may have come into her life to take away from her youth and her prettiness. What can she do then? Make the most of the small things as they come up, T think. If you be- in to g0 off in looks, and you can af- ford it, go in for good, sensible beauty treatments. Buy yourself an electric It she got any younger | his parents to follow them, though grudgingly, in the manner of youth. BY EDNA KENT FORBES | vibrator, use it on your scalp and your ace. Make or buy really good cold | creams and astringents, and use them. | *hange the whole manner of dressing, { %o in for a_completely different type of clothes. Wear colors you've never corn before—that is a wonderful stunt for color has such an effect on nd if you appear in quite new vs, with none of the old ones, ou'll really fecl like quite another person. I doubt if youw'll believe this until you've tried it. Try having your hair bobbed if you have always worn it long—even if you are middle-aged! We all do it these days—and it does take years off your soul; there's no denying: that. Jennie Lee S.—The reason that gly- cerin smarts the skin is because it absorbs all the moisture in it. For this reason glycerin is always mixed with some other ingredient, such rose water or any of the other per- tumed waters. For very sensitive skins it is better to make the proportions one-third glycerin to two-thirds per- fumed water. 1 you are inclined to freckle or burn you will be afforded relief with the following lotion, consisting of one- third each of glycerin, rose water and lemon juice, BY FANNY Y. CORY. Ya see, baby, ’iss is th’ way me an' daddy catches fish. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED, “I have been watching your depart- ment hoping to see another letter on discipline,” writes Mrs. W. M. H., “and now I see a letter on the subject by a teacher. I have had three chil- dren and have always been compli- mented on their behavior. What pleased me even more was the re- mark an old lady made to me who said: ‘Your children will certainly love you when they are grown, you are so good to them.’ So, as you say, you can rear them on love and get obedience much more quickly than by being severe. There has been very little corporal punishment in our house, though occasionally it has been necessary. “With my children I, love them first. I only say no when I mean it. Long before they are talking and pos- sibly before they understand a word, 1 explain why they must not do things. I never put a book or maga- zine out of reach, but if one puts a hand up to touch it, I say ‘no’ in a no voice which even a baby under- stands. “Just this afternoon a friend pre- sented my 3-year-old with a box of chocolates. She is allowed one plece of hard candy after a meal or after her glass of milk, of which she is not fond. She hugged her box of choco- lates all the way home and then said, ‘I am going to see what is in it.’ After duly admiring it she put it in the refrigerator and I did not even say, don’t eat any now. After dinner she passed the chocolates around and put them away again. “When my son was a year old _he went to visit his grandmother. His grandfather’s office is part of the house and {s. always strewn with papers and must not be disturbed. Nor must the door be shut, because of the telephone. ‘What,’ questioned grand- mother, ‘will we do about this?" “I took the boy to the door of the office and explained that he must not go In that room. months, and although he would often &0 to the door, leaning forward to peer all around, he never offered to step inside. . “My boy of 10 talks to me of things T would never have dared mention to my mother, for in those days maga- zines and newspapers did not help a mother with her children’s problems. Mothers should realize that spoiling their children {s not a kindness, for they are more likely spoiling life for them, “Don’t laugh when your child does something wrong and say proudly, ‘He's a regular fellow,’ for it makes him think he is very clever and he'll do it again.” ding Saturday. Au on shipments sold out. ran centa 10 72.00 conts per pow 18,56 ceuts Der Ol o An international aviation exhibition is to be held in Copenhagen from August 20 to Sww L TP WEDLOCKED Y HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR. Nan Hariley, an artists’ model, marries Tom Elliott, a poor artist, instead of Martin Lee, a rich lawyer. After the wedding she goes on posing in order to augment their income, They are very happy until the Sum- mer comes and Nan's health is mot 20 sound. She learns she is going to have a baby. She goes to the scashore to wvisit Helen Sheridam, a wealthy woman she has met through her work, and when she roturns to the city she finds that Tom has been overworking. In November Tom has pneumonia and dies. Nan struggles on, but the fight is too much for her and posing is hard work. One day she faints and that night when she returns to her apart- ment she finds Martin Lce waiting for her. He telephones his doctor to bring @ nurse. When Martin discovers that Nan is to have a child, he is stunned. Nevertheless, he insists upon taking care of her through her illness. He asks her to marry him, and she con sents. Her baby is born at an ex- pensive sanitarium. Then Martin takes her home to his Park avenue apartment, CHAPTER XXXI. The New Life. The Lees were, of course, everywhere. People wanted to see Martin's bride. It was rumored that she had been an artists’ model. Was she so vei pretty? Rumor had it that she A and that Martin was simply mad about her. What a pity that she had had to have a child by her first husband to complicate things. invited ‘We were there two | 8HE WOULD TAKE A LITTLE OF EVERY COURSE JUST SO THAT MARTIN WOULD NOT NOTICE HOW LITTLE APPETITE SHE HAD. Accepting these invitatiops was pretty much the same. There was al- ways the formality of dressing, and arriving at an apartment not unlike her own, but perhaps with not so much charm. The hostess would carry Nan off to her bedroom to remove her wraps and powder her nose. And usually the hostess would be a woman from ten to fifteen years older than Nan, and slightly inclined toward embonpoint. She would look at Nan’s slim, childish figure enviously. And all the while she would be saying to herself: “Of course, she married him for his money.” For Nan was prettier than ever. 8he was leading a regular life and she had plenty of time to care for herself. Where in the past she had been forced to neglect her halr, her nails or her skin, now it was possible to give everything the attention it needed. She went to a Turkish bath for the sheer fun of the thing. She had never been to one in her life. 8he saw grotesque women in sheets weighing themselves arixlously and exclaiming at the results. And she saw the eyes of many fastened en- viously on her slim, childish figure as she went through the different processes. First the steam room. She sat on a chair so hot that it almost burned her legs through the sheet while the perspiration ran down her forehead into her eyes. When she felt so weak that she could just stag- ger to her feet, the attendant took her to another room, and scrubbed her with a hard brush. The attendant treated her just so much putty. “Turn around,” she would say briskly, and Nan would turn. Then the scrubbing brush would descend re- morselessly and Nan's tender flesh would cringe. But she feit warm and glowing when she took her shower. Tons of water surging over her! hen she had a salt rub, and after- 1 she was put to rest in a room with two blue lights at each end. She couldn't rest, She was too stimulated. It was amusing to see the other women asleep, or pretending to be. Thoughts kept surging through her mind. Why couldn’t she sleep? She burrowed her head into the pillow with no results. She was wide 1wake and that was all there was to it. She might as well go. When she reached the apartment, Muriel had been put to bed. Nan was still stimulated from her bath. She felt that she ought to exert herself to be amusing tonight. Martin Lee was doing so much for her. Her dresses had heen delivered. Suppose she wore her new evening frock tonight. She was going to have dinner with Martin, but afterward they might o to the theater. The evening dress was rather lovely because it %o apparently Tt was of white lace, or rather a dull cream, over a flesh- colored slip. The slip had flowers all ound the hem, and they showed hrough the lace. The skirt was set in panels, and the sleeves were long and flowing. She loved the feeling of a long-sleeved evening frock. It was a beautiful dress. She had known that the minute she had tried it on, because it was really individual. She considered herself for a long time in the long mirror that hung in her bedroom and decided that she was not bad. Martin must be pleased with her, of course, and she had grown to dread the rather close scrutiny he subjected her to. She kept wondering what was going on in his mind, and it worried her. After Muriel was safely in bed and because she had never had the privi- lege of doing it before, she prolonged her dressing. Lovely to dress fresh from the skin out! Lovely to draw on silken under- wear, and long, delicate stockings. And her evening slippers. Black satin with little pink rosebuds embroidered on_the toes, and silver heels. She looked at herself in the long glass, and wondered. There had never been anything mysterjous about her. She had never been one of those queer women who complain of not knowing themselves. She had always known her every motive. It had been clear-cut, crystal- line. Was it because for the first time in her life she had done some- thing she hadn't wanted to do that she was different? She hadn’t wanted to marry Martin Lee. In the first place it hadn't seemed fair to inflict her life on him. In the second she cared nothing for merely material things. Like most women, she loved pretty clothes, but as for a beautiful apartment and ex- pensive surroundings, they meant nothing. She had done this for Muriel. She had wanted the best for her baby. At first it hadp’t been so bad, because she had been too sick to care. But now that she was well again, it preyed on her conscience. She was too clean-cut to muddle things. For some reason Martin Lee had wanted her, and in return for what she could give him, he could give her the material things that for the present she had no other way of obtaining. She twisted her slim foot in its peach-colored stocking, and low black satin slipper. The white lace dress billowed about her. * Above the some- what severe neckline her beautiful, serious, childish face looked back at her from the mirror. The eyes were somewhat shadowed But the full mouth was red and lovely and provoc- ative, and that sweep of black hair back from her white forehead gave her the look of a fragile, very high- bred princess. This was a different Nan from the girl who had rushed home from her posing to get dinner for Tom. But a far less happy one. Tom—Tom! (Continued in tomorrow’s Star.) (Copyright. 1927.) That was fun. like WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS, HARLAND H. ALLEN. Garden Furniture. Bhoppers should be advised about the danger of finding that their gar- den furniture is without lasting qual- itles unless provision is made for its preservation. It is to be assumed that any furniture, however durable, must recelve extra care if it is expected to resist climate and weather. Besides this practical point to prompt one to action, there is the additional one that much of the charm of garden furni- ture depends on bright color and “new” finish. ‘When one’'s garden furniture is metal. it is necessary to renew the paint at intervals. Paint prevents de- cay, of course, and preserves appear- ance. No matter how much one has paid for her garden furniture, she will find in time that paint must be applied to avold rust that makes such furniture useless. Any metal plece without a protective coating of paint will become corroded and rusted after even short exposure. ‘Wood and wicker furniture will go quickly to ruin in the same manner it they remain unprotected. There is only one satisfactory substitute for paint for use on wood and wicker pleces. That is varnish; and when paint and varnish are combined double insurance is obtained against spollage, MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. “Family Sings.” One Mother Says:* Singing is excellent exercise for children’s bodies and minds. None of the members of our family has a good voice, but we mapage nearly every evening to get together around the plano to sing for a while. My neigh- bor, who has no piano, encourages her children to sing with the radio. We both agree that it is one of the best periods of the day, for aside from the benefits derived from singing, it puts evi one into a good humor. ..ry «Copwright, 1037.). cimeilth A fresh coat of paint or varnish every year is not too. much. A new coat of paint or varnish or both gives one's furniture a trim and gay ap- pearance, . besides preserving it for future Summers. Some few shoppers have made the mistake of thinking that rust effects are secured by per- 'mitting metal furniture to withstand the weather unprotected of surface. As a matter of fact, wrought iron is given a natural-looking finish by imitating the rust appearance. To this end one should buy raw sienna or Van Dyke brown paint. By using either of these shades first, and then stippling with burnt amber pigment which has been mixed with a small quantity of sawdust or even ordinary dust a rust effect is achieved. Women often find that they can “pick up” fine pieces in colors or ef- fects which are not particularly pleas- ing. This condition may be remedied by creating the rust effect or by using a shade like Chinese red. The latter is a popular color for wrought fron and may be produced by mixing red lead with a bright shade of red paint. By frequent applications, or at least annual ones, both metal and wooden furniture may be preserved and enhanced in attractiveness. Picnic Hints. If you are planning an auto trip or just going to a picnic, try the fol- lowing way of packing fruit in jars or glasses of jelly. Cut rings from old inner tubes and slip several around the jars of fruit or glasses of jelly. You may then pack them with- out any danger of breaking. To protect your matches from pos- sible dampness when going on a camp- ing trip, dip them in very hot melted parafin. Allow to cool and they will be ready for use in the usual way. This precaution will save time and trouble when going on pleasure trips or picnic: Post Toastie Ask for' POST TOASTIES ~com flakes that stay crisp in milk or cream. Always fresh and ready to setve, in the red and yellow, wax-wrapped package. @ 1947, P. Co,, Ine. Easter may be lily season to those people who see flowers only through florists’ windows, To me Midsummer is lily time, for then it is the Turk's Cap lily, the wood lily, and the Canada lily. all bloom at once, in meadow, wood and marsh. Of them all, the Canada lily, known by its orange flower, with long recurved sepals and roughened leaves, is per- haps the rarest. It has been found hereabouts in just a few wet meadows near Bethesda, and, so they say, near Terra Cotta, though I could never find it there. Rare, too, is the wood lily, with its red flowers lifting up their flaring cups. To find it you must search the high, dry woods along the upper Potomac's cliffs. . But commonest and loveliest of all is the Turk’s Cap lily—gracefully nod- ding, orange-.petaled and purple-spot- ted, and smooth of leaf and steam. Linnaeus, father of botany, named ft Lilium Superbum, and well he chose its name. I see it, I am sorry to say, in the market, offered for sale. But in my opinion, true flower lovers will not buy it. I fear no law protects the superb lily from the hand of the com- meréial gatherer, but one can at least not be a party to its extermination for the sake of money. Turk's Cap is a bit misleading as a common name, today, for Turks no longer wear the old flamboyant head- dress that suggests comparison with the elegantly recurved petals of our lly. But it Is a good name, deserving perpetuation. DAILY DIET RECIPE Rhubarb Puffs. ' Flour, one cupful. Baking powder, one teaspoonful. Salt, one-fourth teaspoenful. Sugar, one-fourth cupful. Milk, one-half cupful. Melted fat, one tablespoonful. Beaten egg, one. Rhubarb jam, one and one-fourth cupfuls, SERVES SIX PORTIONS. Sift flour, baking powder, salt and sugar together, add the melted fat, milk and beaten egg and beat until mixture is smooth. Grease individual molds or custard cups and into each put three tablespoonfuls of rhubarb jam and then one heaping tablespoon- ful of the hatter. Set the molds in a pan of hot water and steam in the oven for 20 minutes. These are deli- clous hot, but very nice cold. DIET NOTE. Should only be eaten in greater moderation by normal adult of good digestion and average weight. One wishing to put on weight, and of good digestlon, could also eat these in mod- t;ra;.‘lom Recipe contains some lime and ron. HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. If you have traveled through France you have seen them many times—those doll-like country houses that seem to be set on a patchwork quilt of neat little flelds. How dazzling they are in their white- | washed purity! They have risen to | a position of importance in the eves | of the American architect now be- | cause the vogue for the homes and furnishings of provincial France per- sists. Very few small tountry houses along these lines have been attempted on this side as vet, but their day is | undoubtedly coming. o | They offer quaintness and Old | World atmosphere and an escape from the architectural styles with which our broad land is now all too thoroughly permeated—the austere New England colonial, the comfort- able Dutch colonial, the stately Southern colonial, the Spanish patio house and the sprawling California bungalow. (Covyright. 1927.) KITTY McKAY A WILCOX PUTNAM. The girl nd says next thing yor know they will be making this New York-to-Paris flight on sKis. (Copyright. 19! FEATURES, Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1997.) L ERE T L TR E® dWEEE b Across. 1. Hymn. 10, His Majesty (ab.). 11. Closes. 12. Note of the scale. 13. Likely. 14, Doctrine. 16. Infant. 9. Native servant of India 21. 501 (Roman). Mimic. Prefix; 25. Strangely. 26. At a distance. 27. Myself. 28, Make a mistake. of. 31. Snakes. 34. Whart. 36. Encountered. 38. Lair. 39. Nine hundred (Roman). 41. One who is vanquished Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. A EEE CER0E GRE (alplo[R|e/DIMVIE[AIRINIS] [A] [4]c] 43. Greek letter. 44. Golden orioles. Down. . Divination by the divining rod. . Printer’s measure. . Percelve. . Place. Continent (ab.). Asiatic river. . Mountain in Thessaly. . Metric unit. 9. Inducing sleep. . Hebrew month. . Belonging to me. . Assistants. . Toward the top. . Place of residence. 2. Affirmative. . Organ of hearing. . Sun god. . Afternoon (ab.). . Dispose of by sale. of Persian my:hology. . Society girl. . Myself. Compass point. . A State (ab. Dixie Relish. Grind together 10 pounds of green tomatoes, 10 pounds of cabbage, | | pounds of green peppers. 3 pounds of | onions and 3 bunches of celery. Ad¢ | two cupfuls of salt and let stand over {night. Squeeze out the salt wat | Spice and sweeten enough vinegar t¢ cover, which will be about two uarts ix with the vegetables, pack in jare eal. This relish requir :ooking, keeps well, makes a delic candwich_ filling, and also makes an sal dressing when added to m: onnaise. Like popcorn—freshly pop- ed popcorn —that’s how leinz Rice Flakes taste. Ana in milk or aids. That's why Heinz Rice Flakes are both good —and good for you! Youth’s Rule in skin care to keep that schoolgirl complexion By NORMA SHEARER EAUTIFUL complexions MAY be guarded easily if one will only learn this simple beauty rule. Today thousands credit it with added charm and loveliness—with keeping that schoolgirl complexion. Yet of itself it is simple and eco- nomical, unlike most “rules” for skin care, Wash your face gently with Palmolive Soap. Massage its balmy olive and palm oil lather into the skin. Then rinse with warm water, and follow with a dash of cold. Do this regularly, and especially at night, for one week. Note how much better your skin, Use powder leave them on over night. If your skin is inclined to be naturally dry, apply a little good cold cream. That marks the modern ides in beauty culture — the proved formula for keeping “that schoolgirl com- pleB)uofl.l:e ut _be sure you get the real Palmolive. A soap made solely for the purpose; to guard your skin. 60 years of soap study stand behind it. Its results are proved by countless schoolgirl complexions everywhere. Get Palmolive now. Use no othes on your face. Experimenting with unproved soaps is a folly. Good com- plexions are (oo priceless for that. and make-up alt you wish. But never The Palmolive-Peet i UE A Co., Chicago, ‘“Make them Die” Brack FLac—deadliest insect killer made—destroys every fly, mosquito and roach that getsin. Not one escapes. Kills other bugs, too! Sold at drug, grocery, hardware and department stores. Powder 15¢ up, and

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