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WOMAN'S PAGE. THE EVENIN RTAR. WASHINGTO , D. T, MONDAY. X " Evening Gowns for Older Women | BY MARY MARSHALL. | Some women, as they grow older, golve the problem of evening dress by Siot wearing it at all, which, of course, is no solution whatever. Others at- temapt to solve it by complacently overlooking the fact that old arms are @lmost invariably too lean or too fat, DESIGNED WOMAN, THIS EVENING GOWN 1S OF BLACK LACE WITH DRAPED LINES AND A JABOT AT THE SIDE. ,hat old shoulders are seldom lovely tnd old knees, generously revealed, i irifle shocking I remember when I was quite a voung girl, 16 or so, being taken to a small invitation lecture and late sup- PERSONAL FOR THE OLDER| per, given by a very well known so- ciety woman in her equally well known house in town. it was the first party of the sort I had ever at- tended, and 1 was very much im pressed by a number of really elderly women all dressed in conventional eve- ning dress, which in those days and among these people meant bare arms and pronounced decollete. There w: nothing at all striking or ostentatious about their clothes. but those women were old enough to be my great- grandmothers and great-grandaunts, and I thought there was something valiant about them, sitting there with bare arms and bare neck: The old women T knew never dressed that | way, and it struck me that it required a good deal of heroism to do it. Fortunately for older women nowa- da: it is possible to dress fectly conventional evening still hide the arms and and most women are too e: main charming to show shoulders that are no lénger worth showing For my own part, I think that the fairly short skirt has been a boon to the older women, because a surpris- ingly large number of older women have well shaped ankles. Still, there is something rather underbred and even pathetic about the skirt above the knees as worn by a really elderly woman. The gown shown in the sketch, worn by a prominent society woman over 70, might be called an informal din ner gown, but it is a type of d perfectly appropriate for any sort of evening wear. I know you will like the little help we have prepared for vou this week. Tt consists of full directions, with sketches, for the making of the new worsted flowers that every one is ing. In order to give you some- g just a little different, we secured some of these worsted flow as used by a prominent French dressmaker, and got an expert to undo them that she could find out just the trick by which they were made. Send a stamped, self-addressed envelope and I will send directions at once. Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. ‘Words often misused—*Veracity” applies to people and to statements they maks “‘truth” applies to people and facts. Often mispronounced — Radiator; first a as in “rate,” not as in “rat.” Often misspelled—Physiolo; the “ysi.” Synonyms—Rigid. firm, hard, tense, infiexible, unyielding, unbending. Word study—"Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us in- crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Peremptory; positive, final, decisive. “This peremptory command was obeyed.” HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Cancer is probably not a specific disease, but rather a group of disease condition: We know there are at least three distinct types or kinds of cancer, and these three may be con- sidered three different diseases—skin cancer (pithelioma), organ cancer (carcinoma) and flesh cancer (sarcoma). Any doctor can cure epithelioma by one remedy or another—X-ray, ra- di ical excision, destruction , sunlight, dry ice (car- bon dioxid snow), caustics, diathermy, ete., according to the individual re- quirements. Sometimes a prompt and radical operation effects a cure of car- clmoma if the cancer is accessible. Many children and young adults (com- mon.age of victims of sarcoma) have been cured by prompt recognition or diagnosis and radical removal of the cancerous tissue before any bits of cancer have traveled afar through the blood stream. But no honest doctor ever promises to cure any form of cancer in any cir- cumstances and no physician, surgeon or specialist has any secret cure. In every cancer, whatever its type, cancer, by means of his caustic pastes or other crude agent of destruction. But at what fearful cost to the viec- tim in_pain, danger, time and mautila- tion. I am as great a coward as any man when it comes to taking risk of injury, and therefore if I had a skin cancer, or any other kind, I'd want it destroyed or removed by the safest, least painful and least disfigaring method, and that is surgical skill, not secret hocus pocus. Strip all the great ‘“‘cancer cures” of ; the inevitable air ¢f secrecy or mys- tery with which their exploiters clcthe them, and what is there left? Just hideous greed. The element of secrecy is what appeals to the unfortunate vietim. If any man should find a cure for cancer and attempt to keep it secret or fail to give it to mankind without consideration or condition, that man would deserve, not honor but anath- ema. - ‘This same element of secrecy, with its appeal to the uneducated layman, lends weight to the irresponsible propaganda that the eating of certain it is fair to say the case is curable in the early stage, perhaps only rarely curable in the more advanced stage, and incurable in the lafer stage. When cancer has progressed to the incurable stage it is certainly erim- iral to permit anybody to step in and promise a cure. A quack sometimes effects a perma- nent cure in a case of superficial skin The Daily Cross foods or failure to eat certain other foods is the cause of cancer. The un- tutored laity cannot discriminate be- tween sound and unsound advice or information. If we are to make any progress toward the prevention of cancer we should devote our energies rather to the purpose of introducing proper hygiene instruction into the public schools. Word Puzzle (Copyricht 1927.) Worship. Glitter. Ve .iclé Devou-. Note of the scale. Ourselves. E ged. nders Form of address. ! Craft. Outcast. Bulbous roof. Fictitious name. Aadle, Clear profit. Wrangling sounds. Down. Owned. Sun-dried brick. es less difficult Join. Male child. City in Ohlo. Stand for., . Hury, - 5. Head covering. Equality of value. . Female sheep. . Poplar. 26. Bind . Mistake, Polynesian native of No: Vessel. . Bite, . Aurora. . Letter O (plural). Nickname Answer to Yesterday’s Puzzle. | slers’ Club? | can_public no longer demands high- | “sour grape: WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSF tered U. S Patent iKY Oor. \(_ ALL RIGHTY un LAND PArK ) IF Yoo HrD K RON PNEUMATIC Tikes SR When Capt. Murphy of the Arling- ton Wheelmen and Capt. Byrnes of the Century Wheelmen took their clubs on Fourteenth street & nue at 10 p.m. and riding to the An- Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Our son weighed pounds at birth,” writes Mrs, A. H. M. nd now at four months weighs nearly 15 pounds. He is breast fed. Is this too rapid s constipated constantly, and ave to give him something. ve him milk of magnes T tried | to give him orange juice for a few days, but it made him cross. Is he ung for prune or tomato juice? ast month he has sucked his fingers. Is this because of a lack | of sufficient food? He only gained 1 pound and 14 ounces last month. He seem . to be drooling a lot. Is this a sign of teeth? I shall be loads obliged for your help in enlightening me in these various things.” Answe is a tremandous gain. baby would do better ings a day and possibly with boiled water before h nursing. The orange, tomato or prune juice would be helpful, and if you are careful when starting the juices to give them in very small amounts, one teaspoon- ful at first, and dilute them well with water, there should be r> bad effects at all. In fact, there is no reason to think that orange juice would hurt a baby. 1t is hard to tell why babies start finger or thumb sucking. Usually be- cause of the associated joys of suck- ing which carry over to even such barren objects as fingers. His last month’s gain was excellent and it is not likely that the drooling is due to imminent tecth, yet. Possible, but hardly probable. ‘I would staii cod liver 'oil now, also orange or tomato juice, and try periods. Eas I imagine the vith fewer feed- | the fewer ‘nursing | your worry with the knowledge that constipation in the well fed child is not a serious ailment, | Mrs. F. F.—The leaflet on feeding | will help you put vour child on the | right diet so that her improved nutri- | tion will help her overcome the efforts of whooping cough. Give her cod liver oil and sun baths or artificial ones of quartz lamp violet rays. This should help her get rid of the linger- ing cough. If you will send a fully addressed, stamped envelope, we will mail the leaflets you need now. The Sidewalks t Considering the number of tran- sients passing ,through Washington, it is comforting to know that most of them are scrupulous citizens. Occa- sionally, however, a bad egg slips in,f~ and upon depart- ing leaves behind him a few deluded and wiser peopl This is the brief arn of a travel- a local. hotel man- ager. v About a week[§ ago a substantial- appearing gentle- man attached his; signature to the register of one of our hospitable inns. He was ac- companied by suf- ficient baggage to recommend him as a welcome and profitable guest. He was an amiable person and soon s tahlished himself in the bosom of the official hotel family He represented himself as a business man, and ng one had reason to doubt his veracity. In the guest rooms and on the counter of the hotel office are kept, for the convenience of patrons, those familiar little packs of paper matches, The tavern in question has been a steady customer of the match manufacturer, whose name was known to the manager and clerks. Likewise, the name of the match maker was not unknown to the guest, or, at least, that was the impression he contrived | to gat across to the boys. In fact, the | mail he received from the match man- ufacturer with unfailing regularity seemed to indicate that he was mnot only acquainted with the big match man but probably was a friend of the family. Naturally, the guest began to com- mand a bit of respect about the foy of the hotel. Every time the or bellhops lighted a match their spect for tha patron increased. Three or four days later the guest casually suggested that the manager ash a small check for him. Merely a watter of $60, out of which the hotel might deduct’ the amount of his bill and give him $20- change. You know the rest of There §s more. The manager,” who | had been tricked into believing that his guest was a man of standing and integrity, rushed up to the room of the lately departed man and found the “letters” from the match man. They proved to be simply price quotations and advertising circular So, too, | were the “letters” from financial in- itutions which had been daily re- ceived. The check turned out to he a forgery, and now the erstwhile patron is explaining it to the officers in his home town. ] re- * % k *x A well known actor, passing through Washington the other day, complained | to your correspondeént that the Amer It was not a case of with this actor, for he constantly employed. “The’ trouble grade drama “we are educating the tion down, and not and poetry of -the n to most young a Islands.” Mod genel Ten pounds in four, months ¢ Y [TIMER T, 102 The Modern Tells What Girls Demand of Bridegrooms Doroth yDix}l The 1927 Bride Doesn’t Demand Vows of Eternnll \ . . 1 Devotion, But a Squarg Deal and Promise | of Fair Treatment. ! i ! If our grandmothers ever had any doubts v by the high contracting reetly silent about them. Bride Speaks ) other manners. riages ending in the fairy-book s living happily ever afterward, they were d arently they enfered the holy estate with ful' confidence that it was an jum in which a woman had no more cares, or worries, or troubles. Apparently on their wedding eves they were shaken by no tremors and | fears, had no forehodings of ill, and never cast a suspicious eve toward the horizon to see if there might be looming upon it the shadow of the divorce court. THER times Not so the young woman of today. No matter how much she is in love, she does not drug hel i ntiment until she is in_such a dope dream of romance that she c istinguish between fact and fancy. She has seen too many marriages come to grief to delude herself with the belief that her own is bomb-proof. She knows that marriage isn't the end of the struggle between a man and woman. It is just the beginning of the fight. She knows that marriage is the great adventure, and that there will not be | a single moment of it in which she wiil not be skirting disaster. | So she goes into matrimony sensing a thousand dangers, torn with a | thousand apprehensions, her feet like ice, her fingers crossed for luck, and all of the danger signals set. irandmother asked her bridegroom: “Are you sure you love me? That | you never loved any one but me? Will you always love me? Will you swear that if T should die you will never love any one else?” Granddaughter knows that to love, or to cease to love, is beyond human volition. She knows that a man cannot control his heart, but he can his conduct, and so she is demanding of her bridegroom not vows of eternal devotion, but a promise of fair treatment. . s e e "[HE other day a young woman of my acquaintance said to her flance: “Tommy, I'‘am going to marry you because I love you. I am not going ou for a meal ticket because 1 make as much money as you do at a profession that I like and take pleasure in following, so I am amply able to support myself. I am not marrying you because I am lonesome, or because I don't want to be an old mald, or because I feel that I lead a narrow life. to ma “On the contrary, I think that the woman bachelor with a good trade and a good salary, who is free to go and come as she pleases, has a far casier time of it than any wife and mother. So I'm marrying you for nothing else on carth but because I love you. Get that? | “And I am going to do my very best to make you a good wife and a | z00d home. I am going to put just as much intelligence and work into | running my house as I did into running an office. I am going to use just | as much tact and diplomacy in handling you, and Kkeeping you pleased and | satisfied with me as I have done in getting alons with my bosses when I | had a good job that 1 wanted to keep. So that's that. “Now all I ask of you is fair play. A square deal. That is all I will stand for, and unless you are prepared to give it to me, let's call this deal off before we mess up each other's lives. “I want a husband who will be a companion to me, who will find me interesting enough to spend most of his evenings with, and who will feel that I add to his pleasure when he takes me out. “Don’t marry me if you have any idea of dumping me down in a house by myself while you step out alone, or if you are going to feel that you are :llkc l:: prisoner locked up in jail every evening that you spend at your own reside. “I have been used to making my own money and having my own pocketbook, and it would not be possible for me to humiliate myself by pan- handling a husband for every cent that I spend. i “Don’t marry me unless you are prepared to go 50-50 on the financial proposition, for I shall consider that as your wife I am your partner and am entitled to half of the profits of the firm. And I shall also consider that if I perform properly my part of the work as wife and mother and housekeeper, I shall earn by my labor all that I get. .« 5 “IT may be that we will not make a success of our marriage. There are temperaments so antagonistic that they cannot adjust themselves to each other. I have known good men and women who fought together like cats and do Sometimes men and women develop mean little traits of character after marriage that they did not show before marriage. “Sometimes marriage rubs the gilt off the gingerbread, and the man finds out that the pretty dainty girl he married is a lazy sloven, or that the one who was so amiable that butter wouldn't melt in her mouth’ is a nagger and a shrew. Sometimes a woman finds out that her gallant lover is a brute or a grouch, or a tightwad. & | opening perform- the yarn. |2 | was the presidential party en route Where are you | Kkid? Bring ya boy friend, Dumb Dan, | up_to"th" house and let's throw a pai o i that seems to be es, old man, The good stuft what they want today “I see no reason why an innocent man or woman, who had mad A . - ) L | mistake in good faith, should pay for it with a lifetime of misery. t | see that morality is served by people living together who bring out all that | is worst In each other, and so, if after we have made an honest effort to make our marriage a success, we find will b; f;\_‘r ‘lll! to part and go our ways in peace. “I shall expect you to be as faithful to me as I am to you. Patient Griselda who will forgive your side-stepping. o P may grow tired of me and cease to love me, another woman. “If you do, I shall expect you to 0, the world a penniless old woma “These are my demands. And he took them. n. of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER is over their heads. G'bye, we open in Stamford next Sunday night.” This reminds us of an amusing in- cident in which the reverse was true. Scmetimes the rough stuff is “over their heads.” ~ After the tremendous success of Jimmy Gleason's comedy, “Is Zat_So?’ in HEY, RoMy, BRING this country, Jim- YOUR BOY FRIEND. AND LETS THRowW A PART Y. mous old theater in Shaftsbury ave- nue. I dropped in- to Jimmy's dress- ing room several days after his had when the comedi- an literally shoved a small pamphlet into my hand con- taining a glossary f slang words and phrases. Had to have ’em printed and ex- plained,” sald Jimmy, “because we wore afraid the English audiences wouldn't understand our stuff.” It was interesting to note that each patron of the theater, as he entered, was_presented_with a copy of the small folder. When an actor “pulled” a line more picturesque than {llumi- nating, the patrons simply had to glance at the glossary. Sometimes the laughs would be a bit tardy in arriv- ing, due to a search for the particu- lar line, but Londoners soon became tamiliar with some of our American- ese. S0 much so, indeed, that the lit- tle English flappers are as expert in using the phrase, “for crying out loud,” as their American cousins. * kX A member of a local golf club has just returned from a trip to Califor- nia, where he went on business. Dur- ing his visit he played considerable golf. He was telling the boys all about it over the last week end, and doubt- less with some elaboration and embel- ishments. One of those “stralght- m-the-shoulder” golfers finally said, “Tell us the truth, Mac. What was your lowest score out there “Why,” was the reply, “I nearly got 3 on the so-and-so course.” What do you mean, ‘nearly’?” ked the first one. Well,” answered the second, “I got an 85." = MODERN JULIET: * ok kK Youth has a_way of crashing all barriers. Saturday afternoon two mo- tor cycle policemen dashed up the Avenue. Immediately behind them came three automobiles with screbch- ing horns, Some of the traffic officers, probably under the impression that it to the Mayflower, held up cross-street traflic momentarily. Even they were compelled to smile wehn the trio of s proved to be nothing more than a party of hoys and girls on the way to a foot ball game. Hamburg-Sausage Stew. Combine one pound of hamburg steak, three-fourths pound of sausage ind one-half a cupful of uncooked and pat into small balls. Add to one can of tomato soup diluted and’ allow to simmer slowly for one and one-halt hours or until the rice is cooked. A little onion may be added. e Prices realized on Swift & Company ~ales of carcass beef in Washington, D. C.. +“weel ending "Saturday. November BUh: \ shipments #0ld_out, ranged from 13.00 nts to 25.00 cents per pound and averaged 1783 centy ver v Advertisenient. ts b ound,— and honest enough to divide with me accumulated during our marriage so that I may not be thrown out upon I cannot it a failure, I think the decent thing o 1 recognize that you You may even fall in love with be man enough to come and tell me whatever property we have And you can take them or leave them.” DOROTHY DIX. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Cosmetics and Youth. The age when girls begin to think about cosmetics and beauty treat- ments seems to have been pushed back into the early 'teens. Time was when the unadorned beauty of youth was sufficient for the average school girl, but now, judging from the let- ters I receive from girls of this age, she is anxious to obtain advice on the correct shade of powder and rouge and lipstick for her individual type and she wants to use facial creams and eyebrow pencils. She rebels be- cause Mother does not wish her to use cosmetics and Father objects to her reducing diet. Simply to tell her that she must not do these things is not sufficient. She wants to know why she should not starve her figure into boyish lines or paint artificial roses on her cheeks or whiten her nose? She suspects that these practices are condemned by the older generation in a puritanical spirit, just because they add to beauty. She | does not realize that there is a sound | scientific basis for the objections ad vanced by her elders. As a matter of fact, many things that girls do with the idea of im- ?rovlnu their personal appearance urn out to have the opposite effect. Take dietlng to reduce for example. When a girl reduces her weight below normal for her age and height she loses the graceful lines and propor- tions that are the charm of the fem- inine form. Her figure becomes bony and awkward. The hands, wrists, feet, ankles, knees and collar bones seem disproportionately large because the fleshy parts of the body are under- developed. The shrunken muscles are not strong enough to hold the heavy, bony frame-work in a corect position, so that various postural defects ap- pear, including prominent shoulder blades, hollow back, protruding ab- domen, flat chest and knock knees, Besldes making the body us:y, derweight un- is a serious menace to WHY WE DO WHAT WE DO BY DR. MEHRAN K. THOMSON. Happiness is like love, We all want it. We all talk about it. But none of use know exactly what it is. Happiness and love are so closely related in our minds that we seldom think of one without the other. We assume that one depends on the other. Each is an attitude of mind. No long argument is necessary to convince us that happiness is desir- able. The Federal Constitution places it among the inailenable rights of an American citizen. The framers of the Constitution were wise enough to guarantee only the “pursuit of happi- ness” and not the thing itself. The pursuit of happiness, however, is about as fruitless as the quest for the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. No one has successfully pursued either. It is the common verdict that happiness is never found by seeking it directly for its own sake, but that it may accompany any useful objective; that the way to find happiness is to forget it and throw vourself wholeheartedly into some worthwhile project, so to direct your life that all your desires and forces function smoothly. Harmony of desire and effort and the ahsence of internal strife seem to be the chief essentials, SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Well, they 'cided to let baby suck fer fumb: Her stopped vellin’ right away, but her still lettin’ out a big sob once in a while so they'll know her ain’t run down yet. (Copyright, 1927.) THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Tuesday, November 8. Except early in the morning, the planetary influences of tomorrow are unfavorable, according to astrology. It should be an auspicious day for planning projects rather than execu- ting them, for the vision should be clear. Mental activity should be stimu- lated by the planetary rule before noon and the day should be favofable for students. Business matters should be con- ducted cautiously, and it is well not to venture out of routine channels. Under this direction of the stars aviation should benefit, the rule mak- ing for development along safety lines. This is not a lucky sway for open- ing new shops or starting new busi- ness partnerships. Mercantile activities are better \dlirected by the stars than manufac- turing enterprises. Wise tradsmen will benefit by con- servative buying and avoiding over- stocking their shops. Storms at sea again are prognosti- cated, and ocean travel may be dangerous at various times in the next few months. Next month, in which there will he two eclipses, is held by London to be a time that presages political troubles. To the eclipses is due the prophecy that the United States will suffer from more than one earthquake. Gain in time of transporting malls is to be attained through a new in- vention, it is prophesied. Persons whose birth date it is have the augury of much pleasure, includ- ing travel and change, for the coming year. 1 hildren born on that day probably will be successful in financial matters. but they may be too impatient to stay leng in one position or vocation. (Copyrieht. 1927.) —_—— Pork Shoulder Pot Roast. Try out the trimmings of a small pork shoulder in a pan suitable for the roast. Remove the cracklings and all fat except one tablespoonful. Add two tablespoonfuls of flour and brown slowly. Add one medium onion sliced. Brown slightly, then add two cupfuls of canned tomatoes. Season the meat with salt and pepper and add to the mixture. Cook in a fireless cooker or simmer on the stove for 4 hours. LEEDS, health. It is the underlying cause of many beauty problems, such as fall- ing hair, blemished complexion, sal- lowness, dull eyes and pale lips. The lavish use of cosmetics to con- ceal such defects is a short-sighted policy. In her ’teens a girl should have a naturally clear skin, a good color and bright eyes. If she does not there is something wrong with her habits. She may not be eating the right food or getting enough rest .or exercise in the fresh air. If she makes a daily practice of using quan- tities of face powder and rouge her skin will soon become coarse and roughened by pimples and blackheads. Later in life the skin on the face thickens and takes on a yellowish tinge so that it is advisable to add a touch of coloring, but while the com- plexion still retains the transparency | of youth it is foolish to mar it with | rouge that really cannot_counterfeit a healthy, natural color. Face powder when rightly used is not harmful to the skin, but it must not be piled on layer upon layer. Old make-up should be carefully removed before the face is dusted with fresh powder. At bed time all make-up must be thoroughly removed, Here is a clue for at least one in- terpretation of why we want to be happy. If happiness is the result of the harmonlious expression of the whole self, then the desire for this harmony and happiness itself are one and the same thing. We want to be happy because we want to express our major impulses and Interests in a vital way. Therefore there is a distinction ~between happiness and pleasure. A man may have many pleasures and be thoroughly unhappy. Conversel he may be quite happy At Luncheon ~ ea is na{ionally accepted as the ideal luncheon beverage. In hotels and restaurants ask f¢ e "SALADA" Beautiful . Silk Stockin(qs Stockings in = FASHION HUES FOR EVERY FROCK DEexpALE Hosiery, sheer and silken up over the knee .. . exquisitely de- signed in the latest fashion tints. Autb:nuc in each s':;ml‘: colors and it o et b throughout America. $1.50, $1.75, $1.85, $1.95, $2.00, $2.50, $2.95,$3.95 DEXDALE 1348 —F St. N. W. Ovwned and operated by DEXDALE HOSTERY MILLS, Lansdale, Pa. To Keepthat Schoolgirl “Complexion By VILMA BANKY ® 1927 Fanchon Beauty Features Don’t gamble with your Made of true without indulging in any specific pleasure, Pleasure is relatively brief. It is confined to a single act or group of acts. Happiness is relatively per- manent and involves the total person- ality. In other words, you might get pleasure from indulging any specific impulse, but to insure happiness the act must be in line with the ideal self, whether good or bad. The most miserable man is the *“Jack of all trades” in matters of conduct. He is like a house divided against itself. He has no inner peace and harmo: And where these are lacking happi ness cannot exist. We want to be happy because we crave peace of spirit, and normal, healthy expression of the will to live. skin. Use only a true complexion soap KIN cleanliness is the modern basis of beauty. The rule for that schoolgirl complexion is never to leave powder, m ke-up or rouge on your face over night. Now beauty experts urge careful washing with soap and water, regu- larly, each night. - But be sure you use only a true complexion soap. Be sure it is a beauty soap, one made for that pur- pose and no other. For otherwise you risk much. Palmolive Soap has changed the world’s conception of what a beauty soap should be. Before its creation all soaps were adjudged too harsh for women'’s faces. than the best, cosmetic oils, made solely - for ONE pur- pose, to protect the skin, Palmolive is the most widely urged soap in the world today for complexion use. In Paris it is supplanting domestic soaps. For true skin beauty, get Palmolive today. Cleanse the skin with its balmy olive and palm lather regu- larly, and particularly at. bedtime every night. Do that for one week. Note how much better your skin. Costs but 10¢ a cake. Take care that you get the genuine Palmolive. Green soaps represented as of olive and palm oils are not the same. They are but crude imitations. The Palmolive- Peet Co., Chicago, U.S. A, fresher than the rest, passes the test of economy. In the Triple- sealed carton— Sure of Himself Now! “ANYTHING that gets results, was all thethought Iever gave to laxatives. Ir those days my perspiration wasso acic it used to rot my clothes. Thenadoctor tipped me off to those wonderful littlc sweeteners— CASCARETS So Clean Inside, No Fear of Perspiration Offense, However Over-Heated Once a_person realizes the wonderfu properties in cascara, no other laxative in the market would ever be consid k to “clean out the bow- of things will do that. But a little natural cascara purifies the sys. tem clear throuzh. Cleanses even the pores of your skin. Renders perspirs tion as inoffensive as so much dew The old-fashioned way was “salts. They get action, but they take the mu cous membrane along with the waste matter} Minbral oils are gentler, but they leave the bowels with a film of poisons for the blood to carry off through the pores. But when you cas- carize the system, you get rid of all the poisons by normal muscular action of the bowels. If you have the habit of taking medi- cine for ‘constipation, or even for auto- intoxication, stop it. For a candy cas- caret is a delightful form ‘in which to take cascara; children love them, and the taste tempts most grown-ups to have “more.” And w a comfort to know you are in that clean, wholesome condition that does away with any need of deodorants, even in warmest weather! Try a cas- caret tonight—see how you feel next day, and for days after! With the skin fresh and fragrant. All druggists, 10c and 25¢.