Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WOMAN'S PAGE." Jewelry for Sports Wear BY MARY MARSHALL. Despite the recent decision of fashion | many horsewomen. should be of & con- that earrings may be worn on the golf | ventional sort. There must, of course. course and neckl be a tie pin, and the most conventional courts, there are conservative | of these are of gold showing no jewels. | sportswomen who feel that for actual | You may choose one in the form of a crop. or A crop with a stirrup. Since the regulation mannish shirt is still considered most appropriate for riding. there must be cuff links, which are preferably rather inconspicuous, of plain gold showing some appropriate em- blem—horseshoes or stirrups, for in- stance. And as some women feel undressed without some sort of bracelet there are specially designed bracelets for the equestrienne. Some of these are made | of gold links with three French crystals | set between the links, with & miniature horse depicted through the ecrystal. Others show tiny bits and horseshoes | in lien of links. Sweater chokers, which have been | shown by Lanvin, Vionnet and other | influential French dressmakers, are made of amethysts, topazes and other light transparent stones. Jeweled or plain silver ornaments for the sports | hat are worn by some women for ac- | tual sports. though more often for the lmcn‘l}' semi-sports ensemble. Any sort of dangling jewelry seems rather out of place even for semi-sports | § |wear. Thus button earrings rather | | than the drop sort are chosen. and chokers rather than longer necklaces. | THE v | F N I T L SSART T | I know of nothing vou could use tht | OR STIRRUP DESIGN. Ts would so effectively tone up a frock of | BRACELETS WITH HEADS OF Which you have become a little tired as DOGS OR HORSES ARE WORN one of the new berthas made from BY THE HORSEWOMAN OR DOG Jeorgette or some other light fabric. LOVER. CUFF LINKS CHOSEN From one of the newest Freach frocks | BY SMART SPORTSWOMEN [ have secured a diagram-pattern for | SHOW ENAMELED GOLF BAGS. One of these berthas. and if you are in- | GAME COCKS OR HORSESHOES. ferested I will gladly send it to vou with a sketch of the bertha as actually | sports wear only the most sportsman- worn and directions for making. Please | like ornaments are appropriate. remember to send stamped, self-ad- For riding there are certain neces- | dressed envelope. sary pieces of jewelry and these, think BEAUTY, CHATS 1as to allow you hot tea and toast, but it should start any plans for reduction. | No man or woman in ordinary health | —_— ! | Anxious Mary—Get your doctor to need be afrald of going Without 100d. | e the moles and there will be no 1 should rather like to make this state- scars afterward. ment even broader and say that no one M. A. F.—You can treat your skin | need asting, . |successfully at home after you have Baialomd o » since intelli- | V728 how to do it, so have a few gent fasting is the cure for S0 MANY | treatments first at the very best beauty | Kkinds of disease. Fasting is almost in- | parlor you can afford. You will need | stinctive; animals a good cream, one that nourishes, and | 4 and birds often | & B0 T4 be ‘made from almond or | olive oil. You can hardly get one of | these made up unless you pay & very | high price for it, but you can make it 1yourself with very little trouble; and 1 shall be glad to send you the formula |upon request and receipt of a self- |addressed, stamped envelope. This | high-grade cream will not grow hair, | and you will need an ofl cream when | the skin is as dry as yours. College Girl—A gain of two pounds | /& week is excellent, so keep on uungi the olive oil until you have built up |vour weight to normal. wil Bt faiter, and i 3o canpot get not faf you cannot get ve organs are allowed to|a special diet you can eat less of | ter their both stomach | ev that is fattening. These | . | will include foods. " BY EDNA KENT FORBES Fasting. ¢ &d £ all the starchy and sweet L ¢ i - Tamale Pie. g8 i B 8 g g | uls of salt in six cupfuls of | | Cook for 45 minutes, | tell the difference between a normal. | Brown one chopped onion in one table- | wholesome craving for food, and an un- | spoonful of fat, add one of ham- | natural one. | burg steak and stir until the red color So, though fasting is not a cure-all. | disappears. Add some salt. pepper and | is almost always a good thing and | two cupfuls of tomatoes. A sweet pep- | practically never harmful. If you are per is delicious as an addition. Grease | overweight, by all means fast, for that's | a baking dish, put in a layer of the| the first step in reduction. If you've cornmeal mush, add the scasoned meat any doubts about yolr health, ask your | and cover with mush. Bake for half doctor. The fast may be modified 50 'an hour. This serves six people. g, §§ The Daily Crbss-Word Puzzle (Copyright 1928.) . Bouthern Btate (ab), . Pinish Period International language, Exist Entwine. Rub out Fortification Inhabitant of part of Italy. Comparative suffix. Vuigar fellow. Chalice . A Blate (ab) . Note of the scale. . The children’s friend Placs where Baul went. Am able . Aceording o. . Human being. . Exist Always Meausure of cloth, Flat surfaces, Headdress. Female sheep, Vehilcle, Batlor Colleetion of facts, 4. Nelghbor'iood of a crime. African animal, Channel Yiow back Biberian gulf A Blaw (ah) Comparative suffix Goddess of earth A HOT DRINK FOR COLD DAYS During the cold weather children and grown-ups need energy food. | Here Is & hot fo00 drink thet is so nourshing, so casily digested snd yulluy wselmllated that you will eel new energy and w pleasant glow of warmth stealing over you ! almost before you finish it Ury this Prize Recipe: In botom A eup mix two or three Weaspoons Toddy und one enspoon water; il cup with hot milk; or hot water Wil ok or \wo Uablespools evep- orated milie, strring briskly Your grocer sells Toddy in handy % M, 1 ih 2 b cans for home use Wilte today for free folder “En- Joy MMe” giviig reducing d welght-gaining diets for Devoured. . Northern European Hatl New England State (ab) Bunfe Brown Wing of & house God of Bubyion Unit of energy Period of time Continent (b Elarted. Wonden shoe ., A sort or kind Down. Pull sway. Weird. Printed notice Answer 10 Yesterday' Puzle. HE EVENING WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered 01 8 Patent Ofce Wheni nearly every back yard had its balsam vine, and how your mother | allowed the balsam to grow in bottles? The plant was used as a remedy for all | sorts of ailments. NANCY PAGE Gay Flowers and Leaves pron Pocket GANKE. Waists are coming back in. If you don't believe it look at Nancy as s)wI ties this little apron around her. Time was when you couldn't have made Nancy, who has a flalr for clothes, define her waist line. But who wouldn't be | | | | | | | apron like this? It is made of wash- able white organdy with a medium wide waist band and broad ties. It seems to belong with the organdy frills on Nancy's new afternoon house frock. ‘The pocket is the distinguishing feature of the apron. The flower is of patterned material and the leaves are of plain dull green. The pattern is cut, the edges turned and then the applique is stitched in place. The flower becomes the pocket with an opening left at the top. This same idea could be applied to a smock or a house dress. A firm material like broadcloth could be used as the base with the applique ! of English print. This would be es- pecially pretty for the flower. Even slender folks can have walst lines. If you would like to develop one send a letter to Nancy Page, care of The Star, enclosing a stamped, self- addressed envelope and ask for her leaflet on “Reducing.” 1Copyriht 1928 DAILY DIET RECIPE Egg Sauce. Hard-bolled egg yolk, 1. Meited butter, 2 tablespoons. Balt, ¥ teaspoon. Mustard, 1/16 teaspoon. Cayenne, 1/24 teaspoon. Vinegar, 1%, tablespoons. Beaten raw egg, 1. SERVES THREE PORTIONS, Mash hard-bolled egg yolk In sauce- pan; add butter, salt, mustard and cayenne; mix thoroughly: add vinegar, Bet over fire and bring to a simmer. ‘Take from fire and most carefully stir in beaten raw egg. When well blended return to fire, stir and heat until thick as mayonnalse, Good on cauliflower, cabbage, etc DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes protein, some fat in the egg yolks, fron, lime and vitamins | A and B. Can be eaten by adults of | good digestion who are average, under | or over welght, e e i ‘The place of the married woman worker in Government service 15 always & hitterly contested question In Wash- ington, but under civil service the wom- an with the best grade gets the job, married or single. | and helpfulness and who are overflowing with the milk of human kindness. | perpetual wrangle. | peaceful home. ‘| for both parents perpetual wrangle. STAR, WASHINGTON, D, €. TUESDAY, DOROTHY DIX’S EETTER BOX [ Advice to a Popular Girl Without Woman Friends. Why Quarreling Parents Should Not Live Together for the Sake of Their Children. [)EAR MISS DIX: I have been very popular with boys all my life, but never had a girl friend. Now I am going to be married and my fiance says that after I am married I will need woman friends. Do you think it is worth while bothering with them? PANSY. Answer: I am sorry for any girl, Pansy, who hasn't girl friends, because she has missed one of the keenest pleasures that life can give her. And I am sorry for any woman thateother women do not like because it shows that there is something lacking in her character. Men see only the outside of a woman. They are attracted to her by her rood looks, by her pretty face, her shining eyes, her glossy har, her slender, willowy figure. They seldom seck to know if there are brains in her head, and if there is kindliness and genercsity in the heart in that lovely slim body. But | women look into another woman's soul and they are drawn to her, or repulsed, by what they find there. It is easy for a woman to deceive men and pretend to virtues she does not | possess, and to affect to be what they want her to be. But no woman can fool another woman. Women have in their sex the touchstone that tells them infallibly whether she is to be trusted or not, whether she is sincgre or not. You will find that good women always have many woman friends, and by good women I mean the women who ar= full of tenderness and love and S,v'flpfirlihlz u you will invariably find that the women who are vain and selfish and narrow and predatory, and who are out for themselves and what they can get, never like women, mor are they liked by other women. They never have woman friends. So whether a woman is popular with her own sex or not is as good a line as you can get upon her character. You often hear a woman say that a woman's best friend is a man. Never was there a greater fallacy. Men are fair-weather fricnds. They like a woman to be always at her best, to be always happy and cheerful and prettily dressed and ready to amuse them, but let trouble come to her and they fade away like mist in the sunshine. They don't want to be bothered with the woman who weeps on their breasts, and who tells them her troubles, and who has to be helped with money or advice or sympathy. They don’t want to sit by sick beds and listen while a woman tells them her symptoms. It is only your woman friends who come to you in your hour of sorrow, and let you cry out your heart to them. It is only your woman friends who will listen with divine patience while you tell them over and over again of griefs they | cannot heal, and situations they cannot mend. but that they know are someho miraculously, less hard to bear when they are talked out with one who pitie: even if she cannot help. And it is only your woman friends who keep long vigils | in your sick room. ‘There must always be things no woman can say to any man because he | could never get her point of view on them, and so she must “orever go lonely | unless she has # woman friend to whom she can open her heart. So, my dear Pansy, I advise you to bother with woman friends. They are the best paying investment you will ever make. .DOROTHY DIX. “ e e e EAR DOROTHY DIX: I think you are mistaken in advising husbands and wives who cannot agree to stay together for the sake of their children. | I am the victim of such an arrangement. My father and mother were in a Our home was a place of discord and we children were constantly called upon to take sides with one parent or the other, and had the other parent held up for vituperation before us. I think of my youth with horror, and am sure I would have been better off with either parent in a quiet. So I say that when people cannot get along together they had better part for the children’s sake, as well as their own. A B. C. Answer: I think you are right, but my contention is that because a husband and wife have ceased to love each other is no reason for their leading a cat-and- dog life together, and that it is perfectly possible for them to maintain a peaceful home for the sake of their children i{ they will exercise the same | amount of self-control that they do to get along with people in the outside world. I have never seen any reason why husbands and wives should not be gentlemen and ladies, and observe the same decencies of conduct with each other that they do with perfect strangers. And so it seems perfectly possible to e, | | even for those who have found their marriage a failure, to put it upon a basis | glad to wear a perky little tea-time | of friendship in which they could treat cach other courteously and refrain from | recriminations and quarreling and abuse. A man in business has to deal with many men whom he personally dislikes, and whose ways and manners get upon his nerves. Often his closest business associates are men who are utterly uncongenial to him, but because it is to his advantage to get along with these men he controls his temper and his tongue | and makes the best of the situation. Similarly & woman who wishes to be popular in society, who wishes to be | invited out to dinners and lunches and teas, and to be asked to serve on important committees, puts a bridle on her speech and refrains from giving vent to her temper, and making acrimonious criticisms. But I agree with you that, if husbands and wives are going to quarre! and make their home a perpetual battleground, the sooner it is broken up the better | for the sake of the children. To be reared in such an atmosphere shatters the children’s nerves, it destroys their every ideal and gives them an utter contempt Better one parent, or none at all, than two who engage in a DOROTHY DIX. EAR DOROTHY DIX: I am indeed a perplexed mother. Am I wrong in objecting to my grown-up children going around soclally with my divorced husband’s present wife? Some years ago when they were little it became necessary for me to leave their father because of his philandering. For 11 years 1 worked hard tc kesp a home for my children. Do you not think that the least that they can do is to turn deaf ears to the insidious advantages offered them by my prosperous successor? P. G. Answer: 1 am afrald, dear lady, that the children of today are hard-boiled, and that they are looking out solely for what may be to their own individual advan Therefore, instead of being flerce partisans of yours and feeling resentment against the woman who has taken your place, they consider only that it is pleasant to go to her parties and ride in her cars and wear the pretty clothes she gives them. But in their excuse you must remember that they probably take the modern young person’s attitude toward divorce—that it is & mere incident. hardly worth considering. and they have no reason to be prejudiced against their father, or his second wife, because you and he failed to hit it off together. Probably they don't consider you a victim of their father's perfidy, but as having been foolish to break up & marriage because of a few flirtations on his part. Anyway, there is a new etiquette of divorce now and it is the proper thing for former husbands and wives to meet on terms of perfect friendliness. = At least, that is the way it is done in our best wielly DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 10028.) PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. so low that freezing to death is the common outcome. Just what would Mr. Stefansson have a fellow do. then, when caught out in a terrible blizzard (terrible, as we say here in the temperate zone) and has Jost his way? The best thing, he says. is to bulld yourself a snow hous But if you don't know how or if the snow is 100 50ft togeut into blocks, then the next best thif is to find & small stone Braving the Blizzard. T like to watch children 6 or 8 years old braving the snowdrifts. It scems to | me that they play the part as well as | we grown-ups do, for the youngsters, being naturally entitled to their herolcs, | suit the role. There 18 no danger to life from a blizzard as long as you keep your head, says Vilhjalmur Stefansson, in “My Life With the Eskimos.” Then this unro- JANUARY 24, 1928, mantic polar explorer goes on to ex- plain that many white men freeze to | death in the North chiefly due to an- | other of their superstitions about cold | (I use Mr. Stefansson’s words), to the effect that when you are caught in a or plece of sod or anything you can brush free of snow and sit on this with your back toward the wind, your head Testing on your knees, and take a nap Mr. Stefansson assures us that a per- son caught out in A blizzard is safer storm without shelter you must keep moving continually, because if you stop and sit down, and espectally if you go to sleep, you are sure to freeze to death. ‘The Eskimo rule, which 1s exactly the opposite to this, Is the sensible one Just as soon as you make up your mind that you are lost, stop, and don’t move until vou know where you are going. A white man, following this principle, will walk about until he is thoroughly exhausted and usually until his clothes are wet with perspiration. The time finally comes when he has to stop through weariness and sleepiness. His powers of resistance have been brought squatting down, as he directs, and sleep- bearings and reach shelter. 8o another of our hallowed supersti- tions 1s exploded. (Copvright 1098 ) . Between 1860 and 1025, gold pro- duced in the world amounted to over 15 billlon dollars. Eye Bath Sure Beauty Aid Il you want your eyes to he elear and beautiful heed the ad- vice of twelve thousand oculiste who recommend the eye bath, Onee y of wash realize why Iy Bath, has bee an absolute essential with thousands of well groomed women, wheat cereal a ar hurmless hath cleansers, amed eyes brightuess sparkle and look alive aml dane ing. plete with eye cup dreaning ta nt S0, Ao in larg HOUSE COFFEE cundies, cakes, ete Toddy, Inc, Desk 2, Buftalo, N. ¥.—Advertise: ment . i TheFlavor is Roasted In! w4100 We ommend Iris, Try it today, PEOPLES DRUG STORES © 191, P, Ca, Ine. ing. if posaible, until he can get lll-\l that will bring them back. YOU KNOW OATMEAL—NOW TRY POST’S WHEAT MEAL THE QUICK-COOKING WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY, BY LOIS Coiffure for a Round Face. Dear Miss Leeds: (1) I have a round, | full face. I wear my hair parted on the | left side, water waved. with the ends curled up around the sides of my face and on my forchead. I am inclosing a sketch of my coiffure. Do you think it is becoming or would you sugwest some other way to dress my hair? (2) 1 am 17 years old and weigh 114 pounds. Is this correct? (3) I am | slightly bow-legged. Will exercise remedy | this? ~(4) Are the girls arching their eyebrows In a narrow line now? 5) I | have a small wart on my lip. (6) My | fingernails are just long enough to <how over my fingertips. Is this too long for one doing stenographic work? (7) I have light-brown hair that tends to be wavy and gray-green eyes. What colors are becoming? (8) Will washing the hair with laundry soap injura it? | (9) 1 use baking soda In the water when 1 wash my hair. Does this tend ' to make it coarse and brittle, as some people claim? Will a diluted peroxide | rinse lighten the color of the hair? (10) Which 1s best to curl the hai1, a ga2s fron or an electric iron? KATHRYN K. Answer—(1) According to your sketch your hair covers your forchead rom- pletely down to the eyebrows. This makes your face look shorter and wider. Keep the side part, but allow som~ of your forehead to show. as this will make your face seem more oval than round.” Otherwise, I think your present "?O:lflun Lssgr)rodtm; your type. 2) If & {you are 5 feet 2 ‘inches tall, yo intelligence lests are DeING| oione's, correct. (3) No: exomcte soor not straighten your legs at your age. If you wear dark or medium-colored hose and medium heels your legs will not seem as bent, however. (4 No. | ;g; };2:;: a physician remove the wart | you. not try it yourself. (6) No; I think your nails :r:ya gnll:d length. You should learn to strike the | keys of your typewriter with the balls | of your fingers and thus save your | nails. (7) If you have a medium com- i plexion you will find the following | colors becoming: Cream, bronze, medium | tan, pale yellow, dark and medium | biue, dark green, reseda, pink-gray, lav- | ender, dull brick, rust, flesh, peach and | black. (8) Yes. Use pure castile soap shaved and melted to a liquid for your | Muvver say, “Take baby out fer a| airin’,” but I can’t see no place fer the alr to get at her. 1Convright 1928 BRAIN TESTS No. 2 ‘These given at most of the leading univer: | ties. Study them, try to answer them, | and. if you can't or are doubtful, refer | to the correct answers. This will give | | you a slant on your mental rating. carly every group of intelligence nlcs"‘s ng' usedyin‘ leading universities includes the meaning of words. Cer- tain words are given in a groun, as base ball, marble, world, orange, bubble. Then appears a list of certain qualities, as round, large, heavy, white, solid. | One of these words (in this case the word “round”) expresses a quality which | all the objects have in common. Study the following lists and see if | you can determine the proper qualicy of | each group: | | (1) Grass, leaves, pickles, emeralds and shamrocks are plants, gems, soft, | green, valuable. | (2) Churcbes, houses, garages, schools | and theaters are dwellings, brick, large, | | tall, buildings. | | (3) London, Paris, Cairo, Athens and | | Rome are seaports, capitals, countries, | inland, European. | (4) Birth, death, growth, pain and error are sudden, desirable sensations. inevitable, enjoyable. | (5) Beets, pepper, salt, carrots and | turnips are vegetables, seasonings, deli- | | cacies, edible, expensive, (6) Gold, platinum, silver, mercury and aluminum are heavy, solid, white elements, alloys. Answers to meanings of words: (1) Grass, leaves, pickles, emeralds | and shamrocks are green. i | (2) Churches, houses, garages, schools | and theaters are buildings. (3) London, Paris, Cairo, Athens and | Rome are capitals. (4) Birth, death, growth, pain and error are inevitable. (5) Beets, pepper,’salt, carrots and turnips are edible. { (6) Gold, platinum, silver, mercury | REPLIES TO READERS. Is Hickman Insane? | Reply. | atal discase infantile yaraysis was tad 3 But | simply can't make K by insaie * i D MOTHER. | That's whaj everybody is asking, whether they have little daughters in | the tamily or not. And it isn't very| |easy to answer. First of all these things occur so rarely evervbody is| | wildly excited when they happen. It! doesn't mean that there is a crime and alumnium are elements. wave: and if there were, how should we | (Copyricht 1928 ) explain that? | It won't help much to say that youth | S is demoralized, and this shows what Indian children are so much heavler | will happen if we let down standards | than white children of the same age | Of behavior. Unquestionably we must that the usual height-weight-age tables ' keep eternally watchful to give young do not fit them. people proper standards of behavior in every respect. Yet few of them need | to be impressed with the solemn value of human life and the awful crime of | murder, even though it is true that ! many children at times have murder in their hearts. Every child must be brought up with defenses against Ms. evil passions, for they are there and: real. And normal children brought up under good conditions develop these de- | fenses. They share. as far as their| emotions are developed, the horror of | crime. ! That boys like Hickman are abnor- mal there is no doubt. The trouble in getting the layman (and that means everybody who doesn’t see profession- ally many cases of the abnormal in| mind in one way or another) to see| the case rightly is that he thinks of murder as the worst possible crime. and S0 a person capable of that must Iexlremr]s‘ abnormal, be afflicted the worst possible form of insanity. And this boyv evidently isn't that. But you can't judge how queer or abnormal | or insane a person is altogether by what he might do. especiallv not by what he might do to injure others.| which we then call a crime. Undoubtedly many who commit sul- cide are mentally deranged: others are not so. There would be little sense in asking how abnormal a person must bs before he would commit suicide. And what is true of sulcide is true. | though differently. of murder. These| two crimes are. as a rule, associated with different forms of mental disorder | We heard much about this when the | Loeb and Leovold trial was on: and in some sense Hickman is repeating that case. and says so. lLoeb and Leopold were exceptionally able boes with ex- ceptional advantages. Perhaps neither would have gone to such lengths withe ont the stimulation of the other | Hickman's fs the more typical case, in | that he followed his bent alone. As/ vet we don’t know the truth about him | and won't know it until he is examined | !\;‘dn competent specialist in mental dis- | order. I have read the unpublished med- | fcal reports in the cases of Locd and | Leopold and know how full of abnormal ' Is TROUBLE! Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Grapefruit. Wheat Cereal With Cream. Scrambled Eggs. Bacon Curls. Toast. Doughnuts. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Cheese Souffle. Stewed Tomatoes. Clover Rolls. Preserved Peaches. Sponge Cakes. Tea. Lamb Chops. Baked Potatoes. | Creamed Carrots, | | Prune and Cream Cheese Salad. | | “cCottage Pudding. Fruit Sauce. | Coffee. DOUGHNUTS. One egg. one cup Sugar, one tablespoonful melted lard, beaten together: dissolve one teaspoon soda and two of cream of tartar in one cup milk: add little salt and nutmeg, flour to roll soft. Use bread flour, CHEESE SOUFFLE. Two tablespoonfuls butter, one cup milk, one cup grated cheese, | | one tablespoon flour. one-half H cup stale bread crumbs, three eggs. Make white sauce of but- | ter, flour and milk: add bread crumbs and cheese, then well beaten volks, last the whites beaten Stff, put in buttered dish, bake about 25 minutes in mod- erate oven. | i i | | COTTAGE PUDDING, FRUIT SAUCE. Cream one-eighth cup butter with three-fourths cup Sugar. then add one beaten egg and one-half cup milk, one and one- fourth cups flour. TWO teaspoons baking powder are then com- bined with the liquid, and this batter is baked in shallow pan and cut in squares for serving one cup add one pint strawberrios, Heat white of egg sty and place on top. U .Vhen children’s appetites vanish . .. the deli- cious flavor of this whole is the magic Ty and thats a To Usera of Percolators Seal Brand is offered sspecially fnru-l for wse W percalators, t Arings out tha fner, fubler favar of the cofien dsh bor Soad Brand Percolaser Cogee, FEATURES." MILADY BEAUTIFUL LEEDS. shampoo. (9) Yes, the baking soda tends to make the hair dry If you use too much of it. Use soft water rrain water or distilled water) for your sham- POO to get the best results. [f you must use hard water, put a little lemon jaice in the last rinsing water to dissolva the sticky soap curd that forms on the hair. Yes, peroxide is a bleach and will lighten the color of the hair, vut I would not advise you to use it. Instead use a spectal blond hair rinse that you may buy ready prepared or else make up yourself from the recipe given in my free leaflet on “Care of the Hair.” (10) It will spofl the natural wave in wroNG RECT [Zo 14 o your hair to use heat in curling it Continue with the water-waving combs, using a curling lotion to hoid the wave. For home use the electric curling ‘ron is b-tter than the one heated In the gas flame, although in beauty parlors marcel irons are frequently heated by gas. LOIS LEEDS. Homemade Sachets. Martha H.—As it is contrary to my policy to recommend any proprietary articles, I regret that I cannot help you select some good brands of sachet powders, but here are two recipes that Ou may make up yourself: (1) Rose sachet—Four ounces dried rose petals, <ight drops ofl of geranium, eight drops oil of rose, five drops tincture of am- bergris. (2) Lavender sachet—Ome ounce lavender flowers, two drams ben- 2oin, eight drops oil of lavender. LOIS LEEDS. (Copyright 1928 ) KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY PROF. JOSEPH JASTROW. symptoms these bclys were. But there are hundreds of boys quite as abnormal, and more so, wWho never went to the length of committing murder nor any- thing like it. One can't teli what form - place all such boys in institutions for {life, for there isn't enough evidemce for that in many cases. If you go to the books vou will find these cases put down as “psychopathic personaliiy.” They are pmms. and many ths app! the condition of the feeble-minded. Many have fair minds. A few are superior, and certainly in the case of Loeb and Leopold we are dealing with the rare case of decidedly superior psychopaths. Hickman secems above jhe average in mentality. When these psychopaths are merely a problem to therr families and to the small eircle in which they must find a place the public at large doesn't troudle itself much about them. Med- ical specialisis know of them. and are ofien worried for fear they may break out in some serious ofense. Some psy- chopatns simply ruin their o lives and stop there. There is & small group of tramps who vagrants. Thes They break many laws of our social code; they are often sex offenders; they may get into trouble. or they may just escape it. They are decidedly ab- normal people. perhaps much more so than is Hickman. But if the psycho- pathic tremd takes this ghastly form ot wanting the experience-of knowing how it feels to commit murder. naturally we are all excited. ItS hard to view the case as one of a group that might be guilty of very different behavior. Now what is the true inner trouble with most of these psychopaths, whether they show their abnormality in one way or another? It is that they lack narmal have ¢ gS. o s “part of them is dead. " - been capable of being arowsed:~ are cruel because uafeeling. THey make no normal contacts because of this ex- treme self-centered nature. . Abnar- malties of emotion must be earefully watched. It is only people with right feelings who will do the right thing Perhapes some day we enough to detect these tendencies in th before they out into social crimes. But such peo- ple will always be problems. and some «v!“‘!‘hrm are built that way to begin with, Conrrisht Two million automobiles departed this world last year. the average age of the scrapped cars being almest elght e s s Guaranteed pureimpoerted POMPEIAN OLIVE OIL Ssld Everywhere will not better it~ fact! lnl&\nd'l‘nhollh‘lmmm