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WOMAN'S PAGE.” Chairs of Beau BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1928 THE DAILY HOROSCOPE ty and Comfort Sunday, January 28. Astrology finds tomorrow a day of uncertain rule with beneflc aspects strongly dominant. Under this planetary government, the average mind is supposed to be open to ideas relating to the spiritual world and for this reason the church and the clergy should benefit. Music tomorrow is subject to the best direction of the stars, which seems to promise its salutary effect in religious services, Women interested in charitable and philanthropic projects are well directed while this configuration prevails. Movements of national scope will be ! projected by women who will make 1928 noteworthy for large achievements, the seers prophesy. ‘There is a sign read as indicating a general awakening to spiritual and in- tellectual forces Science is to prove that the faith of the mystic has a foundation in reality, it is foretold. Because astrology has to do with the universe instead of a minute portion of it, the seers prognosticate that it will be helpful in the search of the spheres for exact knowledge. Tomorrow’s planetary rule is most favorable to romance and presages good luck to those who become engaged un- der this rule. According to ancient lore good luck MOrTow. attends the wearing of new clothing to- | Fashionable Folk by dJulia Boyd - The evening is most promising to those who desire to make constructive | plans or to launch important reform | movements. | Persons whose birthdate is tomorrow | have the augury of a year that brings | fair fortune, but they must beware of | ,a tendency to neglect business mat- | ters. Children born tomorrow probably will be endowed with investigating minds. The subjects of this sign in- | variably are most gifted and popular. | IMPORTANT THAT ARMCHAIRS BE STATELY, IN CHARACTER. The fact that it is correct to speak " an armchair " one without arms immediately es a difference in rank between ds of s. Th t0 be occupied by dienitaries alwavs have been. armchairs. usehold sits in_the ng room set. U: ated as father's nd mother's chairs have arms. and the me “armchair” is given today to the s of luxury form part of the gs of living rooms. And so it is impor! that arm- | s should be stately and dignified also should be co unging chairs. Unfortunately, there Te many uncomfortable “easy chairs™ ven those that are not so pronounced 1 as 10 be termed lounging chairs. uncomfortable ying an “easy it in it and be assured is practical way that the chair ilv is a restful one to occupy. 1t chair is for a certain person nd not for general use. the chair must > selected with this in d. For a arge person a chair must be large to = comfortable, and for a small one a nall-sized armchair must be picked ut. The height of the seat is another matter of importance, for long legs will quire a higher seat than short legs. : BEDTIME STORIE Chatterer Wins. fears and etrife auite so dear as life. —0ld Mother Nature. Chatterer the Red Squirrel was in a | Josition 1o appreciate this. Nothing | mattered to Chatterer now if he could | out save his life. He was on the ground, inder a little pile of brush, at the foot “f a tree. Just a little way from him te the Marten and Terror the oshawk were quarreling over him hatterer wasted no time whatever. As| oon as he had fairly recovered his weath he began to look around and | onsider what he should do next. It rouldn't do to remain there. Spite the darten wouid be almost eertain to ome and eniff at that pile of brush, Then he would tear it all apart. No, T must get away from there as| ily as he could and as far as he| > HE TRIED 70O TEAR THE LARGER WITH HIS GREA TRANCE CLAWS. reetnps U the certain tree wher @ hole in which he would be aby 1 pate ree couldn’t be far - would be 1 was utely But | un the | e and | v have | ter bim, but | vwr bim-—well, atterer decided |older persons. They are not relegated [Joan looked the kimonos over with a DIGNIFIED AND | Too wide a chair that brings the arms too far from the sides of the person | occupying it never means real comfort, | any more than a seat that is too! narrow spells comfort for a large person. | The ultra-modern folding chairs that | come under the classification of “tuck- | away” furniture, and which are con- veniences in small houses, hark back to \ (Convrizht. 1928 ) ]‘ NANCY PAGE l The long Winter afternoons were | Nancy Sews Industriously On Tiny Kimonos. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. just the thing for Nancy. Once a week | she went to the prenatal class. And at the very earliest of foldstools. These least two afternoons a week found her | could be taken apart and s earried | sewing in front of the open fire. Joan | about with the other portable posses- ' played contentedly at her feet and sions of the distinguished owner. The |asked her what she wa: making. “Some | chair or stool was a cherished possession | | placed on a dais at the head of a table during a meal and by the bed during the night time. This is undoubtedly | the origin of the “bedside” chair, seldom called by that name today, however. | Some interesting features of old-time chairs of distinction were the canopy and the hinged seat, sometimes locked, | showing how precious was the chalr, | and how much honor was accorded the one permitted to occupy it. The throne | chairs of monarchs and high dignitaries today have canopied tops frequently: these are relics of old types, giving to the chairs added dignity and formality. In bygone days canopies shielded occu- pants from draughts and indicated that the person must suffer no discomfort. | In our fireside wing chairs we find a | trace of this feature. That is why | & such chairs are delightfully suited to |kimonos, ducky, for a new cousin. to sucha use, however, as wing chairs | Critical eve and picked out the flowered come in many models and are favored |°ham5 et her """"“‘a e in decoration for their ty » me kimono was made 4 fhete ettt type as well 5 | o nnelette with & turned back band | forming cuff and front closing. This| band was buttonholed in blue wash- able silk. The flowered and dotted challls kimonos had narrow bindings | of plain color. The white flannel one | was feather stitched in blue. They all tied with washable ribbons. Being cut roomy they would slip over night the very tree he had hoped to reach. | He tilted his head back and looked up. Yes, there was the hole that meant safety and rest and comfort. Chat- terer looked this way and looked that | way and looked the other way. Then he scrambled out of that hole in the | BY THORNTON W. BURGESS !He could get a paw in, but that was| {all. He tried to tear the entrance larger | |at it { went off o hunt for mice. | ground and flashed up the tree | At the entrance to that hole, which was just big enough for him to pass through easily. he paused. Then he! did a foolisk: thing. ~Yes, sir, he did a foolish thing. He turned that tongue of | his loose. He barked his scorn of and contempt for Terror the Goshawk and Spite the Marten. Then he whisked | into the hole and down to a soft, com- | fortable bed at the bottom. | It was only a few minutes later that Chatterer heard claws rattling on the bark of the tree. He knew whose claws they were, but they didn't frighten him a bit. A moment later Spite the Mar- ten was at the little round doorway. with his great claws. He tried to gnaw | But the wood was tough, for it| was an old knot hole. Finally Spite gave up. And so it was that Chatterer won in the race for life, while E])!lt:l The Daily Cros (Copyright 8 Contusion 9 Collegiate degree (ah) 10, Wrath Bouthern Employ Prefix it Certaln elements Minute organism Blate (ab ) Very good Preposition Murmmunllnn dignitary A Blate (ah ) Western Blate (sh ) Tudestructible unit Center Down Purt of Britain gowns or simple slips. Peter thought | had ever made little slip I'm going to make. Star. envelon they were the prettiest things Nancy “Wait until you see a ‘That will be just sweet.” was interested in more than sew. i concern w ; el Child Care. 1 (Conyright, 1928 ) s-Word Puzzle 1928.) Bting Provcun, Wing of a house, Buperlative Mineral springs. Father Conjunction, Twist Mineral rock Munner Traveled through water In case 1hat Consclous Intelligence Belf Obstruction Indefnite article, Company (wh ) Willie Willis ny II:;I'I:H—I.-I-.II LEN. Mountain in Crete Behnld Erwalian city Chinese weight 6 Betore 1. Dispatch UThat new boy ain't got no sense | baby, and about her thinking of Tom and John and Benny first. | and making much of them. But when it is another man's children, then it is & Advice to a Mother Who Proposes to Marry Off Her 14-Year-Old Daughter. EAR MISS DIX: have three beautiful children, a small home and a little money. woman in my position marry again., or will I be better off staying home with the children and call it my lifework? Naturaily I crave the companionship of a husband. Also I know that when my boys grow up they will go off and leave me alone. WONDERING WIDOW. Answer: There is, perhaps, no problem in the world more difficult to decide than whether a widow with children should marry again. There are a thousand different angles to it—a thousand cogent arguments that can be urged with equal force and equal convincingness both for it and against it The widower's proposition is simple beside it, because his home without a wife at the head of it is like a ship without a pilot at the wheel. He can't look after his business and look after his children at the same time, and his need of a housekeeper and a mother for his motherless children is so imperative that there is no room for argument about whether he should remarry or not. But the widow can make a home for her children. clean and well fed and well taken care of. and if she has enough money upon which to support her family comfortably, marriage is a thing she can take or | leave alone as she chooses. A husband is a luxury and not a necessity. For a woman so placed, the chief argument against remarrying is the danger that the new husband will mistreat her children. Cruel stepfathers are Just as common as cruel stepmothers. Men are just as apt to be jealous of their stepchildren as women are, and when this occurs it not only wrecks the happiness of the child, but of the mother. ‘When they are his own children, a man ‘applauds their mother’s devotion to them. He may tease her a little about his nose being put out of joint by the | He may accuse | her of spolling them, but in his secret heart he likes to see her cuddling them different story. The stepfather's jealousy often makes him deal harshly with his step- children. He isn't willing to make any excuses for them, or to grant them any of the indulgences of youth. Often he makes their mother afraid to show them any affection. Often they are driven from home. Often their characters are warped for life by the injustice shown them. And when a mother sees her children being thus mistreated her heart is indeed broken. On the other hand, children soon grow up and leave the home nest. That is the law of naturt, and no right-thinking mother would bind her youngsters to her if she could. She wants them to follow their fortunes, to marry and set up homes of their own. 8he knows that every young couple has a far better chance of hitting it off together if there is no mother-in-law on the premises and that while her dutiful children may ask her to live with them, it is better for all concerned, herself as well as them, if she refuses. But & woman's children have generally gone about the business of life for themselves while she is still in the early 40s. This leaves her a long life of loneliness and emptingss if she has remalned a widow for their sakes, and that makes the sacrifice seem out of all proportion to the problematic good that has been gained, for, of course, there {5 always the chance that the stepfather may be a good and kind man who will be a father to the children Therefore, 1 think that as a general thing the young widow does well to | marry again f she finds o man she loves. and who is broad-minded and of a genial temperament. Buten woman should pick her second husband far more | carefully than she did her first, for her children’s happiness is involved as well a5 her own. DOROTHY DIX. [)EAR DOROTHY DIX: My daughter, 14 years old, is engaged to & young | man of 23, He I8 a very nice young man and her father and I think it all right for them to get margied, but his mother is up in the air about it. She | says my daughter {5 too young and that her son is a good boy, but not capable of supporting & family, as he only makes $25 a weck, and that he fs very changeable, and that we are ruining him. She says that if my daughter was 18 or 19 she would not object to the match. What shall I do? I'am at & loss. DUTIFUL MOTHER. Answer: You sign your letter “Dutiful Mother." You showld sign it “Crazy Mother,” or “Cruel Mother,” or “Inhuman Mother,” for you are all of these and more, If you are alding and abetting your daughter of 14 in getting arried AT Why, even the Iaw thiuks more of your little glrl than you do. It tries to protect her from the folly of childhood and it is almost an unbelievable thing that her own parents are the ones to deprive her of that protection by giving their consent to her marriage. You know, as well as I do, that no girl of 14 knows what love really is, or Is capable of belnig in love. She may have a crush on a boy, but it 1s a passing nd she will be 1n love u dozen times before she 1s 20, At 14 she hasn't luytime, She hasn't had any girthood, and if you marry her off now you deprive her of the happlest time of a weman's whole life, the only care- free time. ‘That fs not only u cruel thing to do—it fs & disastrous thing, for sooner or later she Will realize that she has been robbed of her birthright, and then sho will take her pleasures with a ruthless hand Furthermore, when a girl marries too early you lay upon her shoulders | burdens too heavy (o hear A girl of 14 has not the wisdom nor the knowledge | to cope with the difficulties of marrtage. She Is oo Immature for wifehood or motherhood. | Such o marriage as you propose 1» bound to end In misery for your child | Have pity on her and save her from the sacrifice you are contemplating making of her DOROTHY DIX J)FAR MISS DIX: 1 have been going WIth & YOUNE man for the last 10 years Have been engaged to him for more than elght years. He iy ovorything that 15 sweet and attentive and scems to love mo #s much as ho ever did, but he alwiys clulms Ut e 't able to marey, thal o mist got better eatablished | n his professlon. T am alone i the world and have broken down in my work, and the doctors suy that T must have rest. Don't you think, if he veally loved | me, that hie would want to marry me now and take care of me? A NURSE FRIEND Answer: L certainly do and 1 (hink that you will be very wise to break off your engagement Evidently the man finds 1t pleasant (o enjoy your compntonship without paying the price of Daving to support you. 1 don't think you will miss much 1f you don't get him, because @ man who I that egotistio wnd seltish mukes & poor husbund DOROTHY DIX Wanyright 1028 ) marcasite or orystal ornament decoratea Ita apex A New Triangle, | about what things is worth, He tried {10 trade me seven old stamps for o L goud horse taoth | WLowriishi, 10200 The latest feminine triangls 1s her [ handbag. 1L 1s & new ver of the st tatlored envelope, different ‘onty In [ modernistie shape for a bag The tris chnpe Buede, satin or velvet glve It angle motif s also fashionable tn searls Varying degroce. of tormality and a | lor wear under (ur coala, Oallot 14 the deslgner who has taken | this anolent aymbol s an appropriately | 1 am an attractive young widow in my early 30s and Should a | She can keep them | | Greeks and Arabs who named Today in shington History BY D D A CRA! }3 January 28, 1801—It was reported today by the city commissloners that the net proceeds of the loans to the city by the State of Maryland have been $169.873. The Maryland Legis- lature authorized two loans of $100,000 each for the purpose of providing money to complete the publie bulldings in Washington. The loan was in United States 6 per cent stock at par, bearing an immediate interest of 6 per cent. As_security the commissioners in thelr official capacities gave bond 10 the State for the amount of the loan further bond of $200,000. After the first loan, several years ago, it was found that the market price of the stock was 801, so that the sale of the first lot placed on the market, which was $20,000. brought to the city only $16,503. Later, when it became evident that there was no market for city property and eflorts to borrow money in Holland had failed, the com- missioners applied for a second loan of $100,000 from Maryland, which was granted on the same terms, in ac- cordance with the act of Congress. But it was found that the market for | the stock had only slightly increased, {and the amount realized has been only about 84 cents on the dollar. It will be recalled that the second Maryland loan was requested a little {more than three vears ago, following | the financial collapse of the Morris- Greenleaf-Nicholson real eftate syndi- cate. ‘This brought about the inevit- able result of endless litigation, the clouding of real estate titles in the city and the depreciation of public confi- dence in values. It is feared that it will be several years more before con- fidence is restored. The real estate market is still very poor. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. The Weakly News. EXTER! Misterious Disapeerants! Shorty Judge hasent bin saw since | his father cawt him steeling a ride on the back of a ice waggon 2 days ago. | However it is being kepp in the ho e. ! ART NOTES. Sattiday afternoon _Benny helped & m getting so mutch witewash on himself including his face and hair the cook | neerly faited wen he came up the celier steps on account of thinking it was his ghoast. Potts POME BY SKINNY MARTIN. Watch Your Helth. Never take reckliss chances Wen yon can just as easy refrain, T once got cramps in my nuckel Playing marbles in the rain. } CONVERSATIONS BETWEEN | FAMOUS CARACTERS. { Glasses Magee. Wat would you do | it you was a millionair? § Leroy Shooster. 1d always have | something except rice pudding for diz- zert. Wat would you if you was? Glasses Magee. Id wipe my hands and face on nuthing but guest towels AVVERTIZEMENT. Garrets and atticks cleened by ex- perts. After we get through with them you can take your guests up with a cleer conscients. Rates 10 cents a hour with rites to sell enything thats left over to the junkman or 13 cents a hour with no rites. The Ed Wernick and Lew Davis Cleening Co. President, Ed Wernick; Secretary and Treasurer, Lew Davis. BY D. €. PEATTIE. Who does not know that Winter is| | the time of the vear to see the stars | at their most brilliance? Who, home- ward coming, has not paused. latch key | in hand, to gaze, till a crick develops | in the neck. at the whirling worlds, | the suns of outer space? | But I must confess I have made little progress in learning the constellations. | Drace, the dragon, writing an S upon | the sky, I know, and the chilly, hud- | dling sisters, the Pleiades. The Great ' Dipper, or the Plow, as the English | call it, is easy to find, but the Little Dipper must sometimes have dipped | deep in the dark ether. for I cannot | always locate it. ‘There are a few other constellations any one can find. such as Orion, the Hunter of the Skies. Any one can see his glittering belt. It takes more ima ination to see the whole man. the fiving feet, the bow str ed taut, the ar-| row ready to fly. W not much r mble the them saw anim or pictures of animals, m conventionaltzed forms, like the square dogs and bears that children draw the geom it was e Because 1o perceive swans, lions and | goddesses. 1 A | Well, the tat! ‘MUs A fals tradle. Now fer My Neighbor Says: Vinegar used i water i which b Ploks and green ootton materialy are vinsed makes was ferinla af (hese colors brighter After squeesing the juice fram & lemon save the skin and after poeling potutoes yub it over vour || fingers 10 will remove all dis- i colovations Do not wse water we | Soap Wntil after rubbing your hands With lewon Heat soap flakes to o foam o egi beater. Fower flakes and betier suds | | ) the potishi of the din g room table perfect, vub every thiee days with a mixture made of equal parta of olive ot and turpentine. Apply With a flan- nel eloth and palish With a clean flannel cloth hn Apats on other furniture way be treated tn the BAMIe WAY, and in their iIndividual capacities a reported he is meerly | witewash their celler, | are these con- | & | stellations named after things they do In ¢ etrical patterns of the stars | g, FEATURES:." The Sidewalks A local husiness man has told the writer that he will never again give any one a letter of introduction. Four or flve years ago a promising looking chap requested a letter from him to whom it might concern. The stranger was an agreeable sort of fellow and personable, so that the gentleman to whom he appealed wrote a letter laud- ing the merits of the bearer and begged “to whom it might concern” to give him a job, or at least a hearing. In the meantime the youth fell in with a disreputable outfit of night- hawks and the letter was never used. One escapade led to another, until the youngster was finally ~ haled up before the police. In one case sen- tence was suspend- ed. Then the boy bethought himself of the letter of r e c 0o mmendation. several business men in town. One of these men familiar with the young fellow’s rec- ord imme d iately called up the writer of the rec- ommendation and . informed him of the incident. ‘The kindly disposed writer, as may be imagined, was shocked at the infor- mation. Unfortunately the boy still possesses the letter. The writer would give $1.000 to have it back and insists that he will never attach his signature to another one. *xxx with stores in Washington has a uniqte method of computing the possible num- ber of customers it may depend upon. When a tentative site of a store is dis- cussed, an employe is stationed at that point to “clock” the number of passers- by. While this of itself does not indi- cate the trade they might expect, it affords a basis upon which they may figure a percentage of patrons. In addi- tion to this (a bit of psychology, per- haps), this company endeavors so construct the entrances to its stores that the customers enter without having to encounter a step. “Giant oaks from acorns grow."” . Not all visitors to Washington are tourists. Many of them are jobseekers Wwho beslege members of the House and Senate for a place on the pay roll of Uncle Sam. There is always an end- less queue of such folks who make life miserable for the legislative solons on the Hill. Just the other day a member of the House complained that if he had the authority to appoint 100 constituents, he still would have 900 more knocking at his door. “It reminds me,” said he, “of the fellow who came to Washington years ago to see President McKinley about an appointment. ‘I went to the Presi- dent,’ said the applicant, ‘and was told there was no vacancy. So I strolled along the shore of the Potomac and saw Reducing Baths. ss Leeds: Please give me 3 e on Epsom salts baths for reducing purposes | thing possible to reduce and have even j8one on a special diet, but still I do not lose even a pound or two. I have been advised to take Epsom salts baths. Will they help any? MRS. A T. Answer: No: the Epsom salts bath will not help vou where other reducing measures have failed. If vou wish re- ducing baths you will find a series of Turkish baths more effective. They reduce weight by profuse sweating. and the massage and hot and cold shower baths that go with the Turkish-bath treatment are good. But if you con- tinue to overeat the excess fat will, of o course, come back. If you have given trial to reducing methods by ing and exercise, such as I describe free leaflet on “How to Lose 3 and still are overweight, I advise you to consult a physician. It may be that the surplus flesh is due to some d: bance in the glands of in nal secretion. Do not take an drugs without a doctor's adv LOIS LEEDS. Pimples on the Limbs. Dear Miss Leeds: My legs are cove ered with small, red pumples that are more prominent in the Winter than in the Summer. They are very red after jOl “I'm Leaving." Efe marched into the affice of the pal one morning and said eu v “I'm leaving. " “You are leaving school? Why " “Oh, 1 don't see any good of stay- g I'm not learning anything. and 1 might as well be workmg 1 can get A Job Here's my papers " The birth certificate plainly set forth that KEfle was old enoush to leave school, The pink letter said that the man in the laundry would give Effte a 100 marking tickets “Effe. you ought not to leave schoal VO'L ATe Very young o start out carn g A dving. You are not fy tor work of any kind fou will get will not even feed vou What makes you think you are sup parting yourself when you can eount money as well as the rest of us® hat you ave wearlng cost move tha LN O, my father can keep me BOINg to work fur a little to start, and then later Ul take a better posttion I'm Changing the date, | he presented it to | One natonally known _corporatio | I have taken every- | el This 88 a week 8 Nfe p of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. the body of a man floating In the <5z, I recognized him as a watchman in the Treasury Building. I rushed back to the President, told him of the va- cancy and asked for the job. He said ‘You're too late. I've just appointed the man that saw him fall in. *x % The most beautiful girl in America! Who 15 she? s she Miss Dailas or Miss New York or Miss Chicago or Miss Los | Angeles? Every year we are treated tos | an_exhibition of beauty. Oodles of pt chritude. Nothing else but. The win- | ner of the competition s acclaimed the | most beautiful girl. Usually she re- celves a contract o appear in the movies, signs a flock of letters recom- | mending this and that, only to v: h ultimately into innocuous desuetude, Brown or blue eyes, seductive eurls, a | manner, a scrappy little noise or per | haps Grecian profile, an argumen: among the judges and 2 blue riooo The most beautiful girl in America! How much better to rate her the mo; beautiful girl on exhibition, for xquisite creatures never enter for all or seek the doubtful dis tion of being the biue ribbon paby of the lot. Not long 220 a New York artist was the guest of he writer. Cap- counter stood a girl of perhaps 20. At sight of her our chivalrous ‘riend raised his hat and bowed. As she turned to slip a “hot dag” be- tween the wide-open spaces of a c | pacious roll, our companion whisperac ‘That is the most beautiful gir; I have ever seen. Beauly of the pumst type. | T am going back and let her lig in m | mem She is worth a nagazne | cover. A few months later her fea- ftures’ adorned countless newsstands throughout the country. | “As a matter of fact. any sunny day in F and G streets will produce enough feminine beauty to make Miss Bird Miss Hoboken turn sea green once coerced into the thank- | less task of joining Howard Chandler Christy and Arthur William Brown as | judge of “the most beautiful radio girl.” | How beautiful a radio girl should be none of us had the siightest idea. Ap- . proximately 39 girls sought the honor. The judges finally reached a hopeless | deadlock, and Danie! Fronman was sum- | moned to aid in untangling what ap- peared to be a knotty situation. After calling each other names, the judges | concluded that the best way to solve | the problem would be to toss nickels | The result was that the 29 girls who didn't win regarded the judges as a | group of dummies who were probably | bribed to vote for the thirtieth. We still | maintain that the fourth girl from the left had it over the rest. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. I take a bath. | quite a nungber of {old and wi I i | Answer: The treatment for the small | pimples includes thorough cleansing of | the skin and the use of an oily appli- cation. The fact that this blemish es worse in Winter seems to show ,tmt the skin needs an oily lubricant. ! Ordinarily the skin becomes drier m cold weather because the oil glands are less active then than in hot weather. Every night wash the skin with warm water and a pure. mild scap. Rinse well fr clean. warm water, then :n | tepid water. Use a bath spray for possible. Dry the a little olive oil or w! Do this at bed! 1ing rub your legs ir | coarse. dry towel and dust boric acid. The skin will | se ve at first. but ss. Wear white stock: iy | wear colored ones be sure that the dves lare fast. You seem to be consider- | ably overweight. If you are 5 feet tall fyour correct weight is about 133 pounds: if you are 5 feet 6 inches tall. | You should weigh about 143 pounds (1f you are & feet tall vour presen ¥ LOIS LEEDS A Large Nose. Dear Miss Leeds: I have a large that ruins my appearance 1 do to make it sm | shape? ! i medium complexion _and brown What colors should I wear ANXIOUS. hair eves, an operation Xpe would searcely R v as de worth w is extrem 2 n ¥y a cia X YOu are oversensi | Becoming coloes for y beige, cana: red. * rose, peach ! work" said Bfte ving " on ver worki of any job anywh Tm leaving.” was the pression of her mner at Ine dav she marrted leaving hen one day leaving.* g for such boys and leave sehool Reep o0 We put them i state 1 ans Ity o for VANOuS reaso: Couldn T we Xeep & 10t of them work: happily 1 we Took A httle troudle fallow them wp and establish them e until they took oot ke see State voeat State m the land I save & tremendous waste of < N wou ey 19 E0e e ' shamie. vased BV gt “Bul you will never be beiier nuied | for a good poasition 11 you leave sehow Every vear you study well means maore maney to you lager Tlm leaving,” said Efte and away ahe went Three weeks later she walked t laundry office and said. “Twm leav- g Pmonot going (o work ke a dog o 86 W week CIEOY mare than you'te worth, Dan't sop ol our aepount, ™ Bl camio 1o sehool and asked for her reeard UL need 18 10 get & kb I the department stare. Dw going W wrap bundles. Theres a ohance for promotion there " TWo manths at convineed Ko W no wachine she. Wrapping bundies What do you think T leaving " saidt of the u'.llm\“ sohoal we have here SAIE the wray haned supertntendeat, & patient and wmueh Wied woman sand | [ e perpiving man behind (e deak. | You need a Wt of traming. 1 woud | AdVISe YOU G0 ataY and take advantage | hydiate, o, AR be eaten nto | cups nund SERVES OR 4 PORTIONS QUi mantmalons W press. AN them 10 the can ol puneapde. Heat B R N Well 10 dissalve wanihmaliows. Child Jdust befre serving and when wixs Jlare B very oold beat with a wh 88 boater wnil lght and lse gea DILT NOTR Reolpe furnthes fder 3 e carbos AN Vitamis A and B A chiddren over & and AU QF AVETAER, over W wader weight