Evening Star Newspaper, August 7, 1928, Page 29

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WOMAN’'S PAGE, MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOTIS LEEDS. + Treatments for Oily Skin. Dear Miss Leads—I have a very oily skin. years and now the pores are terribly enlarged. Witch hazel does not con- Grate- tract them. What can I do? fuily. Answer—I in your teen guess you h: growing the S. M fudge that you are a girl and if this is a correct a good ehance of out- oliness in a few years. During adolescence the oil glands in the skin are often overactive, but this symptom passes. It is, of course, necessary 1o give the complexion the right care also. Wash your face every night with tincture of green soap, which you may buy &t & drug store. Lather well and let the soap dry on the skin before you rinse it off tho: oughly in clean warm water. bathe your face for several m in ice water or rub with ice. In t morning wash your face with cold water, dry and pat on an astringe: Jotion, such as the follo: O ounce of rose water, one ounce Cologni water, thirty grains sulphate of zinc. very, It has been so for two four ounces rose water. Besides local treatment you must be careful to avold constivation. Drink plenty of water between meals and eat plenty of fresh fruit, salads and succulent vegetables daily. LOIS LEEDS. Correct Measurements. Dear Miss Leeds—I am 18 yea 5 feet 6 inches tall and weigh pounds. My measurements are: Bust, 31'%; hips, 33; calf, 12'.; ankle, 9. Are these correct? I have dark hair, blue eyes and medium complexion. What colors may 1 wear? EDDIE Answer.—You are about 20 pounds below the average weight for your age | and height. Ideal measurements for your height would be: Neck, 13!, : bust, waist, 27; hips, 37i; thigh, 20: or 14: ankle, 8. You should our ankle at the smallest Blue in medium. Delft and are becoming to your type. Flesh, rose and peach are also excellent You may also year browns, tan, black, deep cream, 3 dark green, dull orchid and bright red s trimming. LOIS LEEDS. Scars From Pimples. Dear Miss Leeds i anything can be done for scars left by pimples. ADIE F. | Answer.—If the skin is in a healthy condition the scars should heal them- | selves in a reasonable time. If. how- | ever, you have scratched open the pim- | ples and they have become infected, | the scars will probably remain longer. | Rub a little healing salve into them every night at bedtime. If the scars are disfiguring and persistent, it may be advisable to have a skin specialist ve you special ray treatments for | them. LOIS LEEDS. 1928 rs old. 109 (Copyright. WORLD FAMOUS STORIES MR. PICKW ICK DRIVES BY CHARLES DICKENS The chaise was-a curious little green box on four wheels, with a low place like a wine-bin for two behind, and an elevated perch for one in {ront, drawn by an immense brown horse, displaying great symmetry of bone. An hostler stood near, holding by the bridle an- other immense horse—apparently a pear relative of the animal in the chaise —ready saddled for Mr. Winkle “Bless my ‘soul!” said Mr. Pickwick, as they stood upon the pavement while the coats were being put in. “Who's to drive> I never thought of that” Oh, you, of course” said Mr. Tup- man. “Of course,” said Mr. Snodgress. 2" exclaimed Mr. Pickwick. ‘Not the slightest fear, sir,” inter- posed the hostler. “Warrant him quiet. sir. A hinfant in arms mighy drive him." “He don't shy, does he?"” inquired Mr. Pickwick. “Shy, sir? He wouldn’t Shy if he was to meet a vagginload of monkeys with their tails burnt off.” The last recommendatiop was indis- putable. Mr. Tupman anfl Mr. Snod- grass got into the bin; Mr. Pickwick ascended to his perch. and deposited his | feet on a floor-ciothed shelf, erected be- peath for that purpose. “Wo—o!" cried Mr. Pickwick, as the | tall quadruped evinced a decided incli- | nation to back into the coffee-room | wingow. | “Only his playfulness,” said the hostler encouragingly. Mr. Winkle climbed into his saddle | with about as much difficulty as he would have experienced getting up the side of a first-rate man-of-war. | “All right?” inquired Mr. Pickwick, | with an inward presentiment that it| was all wrong. “All right,” replied Mr. Winkle faintiy. Away went the chaise, and the sad- dle-horse, with Mr. Pickwick on the | box of the one, and Mr. Winkle on the back of the other, to the delight and gratification of the whole innyard. “What makes him go sideways?” said Mr. Snoderass in the bin to Mr. Winkle in the saddle. “1 can't imagine,” replied Mr. Winkle. His horse was drifting up the street in the most mysterious manner—side first, with his head toward one side of the way and his tail toward the other. Mr. Pickwick had no leisure to observe either this or any other particular, the whole of his facuities being concen- trated in the management of the animal ttached to the chaise, who displayed various peculiarities, highly interesting to a bystander, but by no means equally smusing to any one seated behind him flattery: the more Mr. Winkle tried to get nearer him, the more he sidled away; and, notwithstanding all kinds {of coaxing and wheedling, there were | Mr. Winkle and the horse going round |and round each other for ten minutes, {at the end of which time each was at | precisely the same distance from the | other as when they first began—an un- | satisfactory sort of thing under any cir- | cumstances, but particularly so on a ;lonel_\‘ road, where no assistance can be procured. “What am I to do?” shouted Mr. | Winkle, after the dodging had been | prolonged for a considerable time. “I can’t get on him.” “You'd better lead him till we come to a turnpike,” replied Mr. Pickwick. “But he won't come,” roared Mr. ‘Winkle. “Do come and hold him.” Mr. Pickwick was the very personifica- tion of kindness and humanity. He threw the reins on the horse's back and, having descended from his seat, carefully drew the chaise into the hedge, lest anything should come along the road, and stepped back to the assistance of his distressed companion, leaving Mr. Tupman and Mr. Snodgrass in the vehicle. ‘The horse no sooner beheld Mr. Pick- wick advancing toward him with the chaise whip in his hand than he ex- changed the rotary motion in which he had previously indulged for a retro- grade movement of so very determined a character that it at once drew Mr. Winkle, who was still at the end of the bridle, rather quicker than fast walking, back toward the inn. Mr. Pickwick ran to his aid, but the faster Mr. Pickwick ran forward the faster the horse ran backward. At last Mr. Win- kle let go. The horse paused, stared, turned around and quietly trotted home, leaving Mr. Pickwick and Mr. Winkle in dismay. A rattling noise at a little distance attracted their attention. “Bless my soul,” said Mr. Pickwick, “there’s the other horse running away!” It was but too true. The other animal tore off with the chaise be- hind him and Mr. Tupman and Mr. Snodgrass in the chaise. The heat was | a short one. Mr. Tupman threw him- | self into the hedge and Mr. Snodgrass | followed his example. The horse dashed | the chaise against a wooden bridge, separating the wheels from the body, and finally stood stock still to gaze upon the ruin he had made. First, Pickwick and Winkle extricated Tupman and Snodgrass from the | hedge, thankful they were no worse | hurt than torn clothing and bramble | scratches. The next thing to be done | was to unharness the horse. ‘This com- | plicated process having been effected, | the party walked slowly forward, lead- Another strong astringent is three tea- spoonfuls tincture of benzoin, one ounce witch hazel, three ounces glycerin and yellow, blue green, | Please tell me if | EVEN Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “The reason I'm eatin’ on the porch is because mamma didn't like it about me skinnin’ a skunk Mr, Brown caught | in his henhouse.” (Copyright, JMMERTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. 1928)) | Those who follow ornithology far enough to reach the covers of ornith- |ological books and learn the Latin Inames of birds, are bewlldered, indeed |annoyed, as I was only today in try- ing to identify a peculiar color vari- |ant of a song sparrow, at the way that scienticts have split up well known spe- cies into subspecies or varieties. Halr splitting is the epithet that might be | quite literally applied to these subspe- | cies based on plumage. Thus there are, 1 find, 11 subspecies of SOng SPAarrow, nine of screech owl, 11 of horned lark |and six of junco. On second thought, however, almost any one will allow that the birds have |a right to vary. The human race is, #o- | ologically. all one species; but it is strik- | Ingly dissimilar i superficial regards in Greenland, Brazil, Europe and Africa. And these variable bird species we have a right to regard as species that are evolving, now, under our observation. True, intermediate individual birds link the subspecles together. But in the course of time, measured in its long sweep, the intermediate forms may die out, and the extremes, left isolated, will be called distinct species. On every hand we see this evolution, in plants no less than animals. At our own back doors violets and blackberries and hawthorn bushes show a constant | tendency to vary from their ancestors, to produce new, isolated forms. Many are the experiments that nature is for- ever trying: some she casts into the discard at once, some after many cen- turies, some after eons. Probably no forms of life have persisted unchanged from the beginning of time. All life is in a flux, a state of change. Even man is just an experiment. The stars may look coldly down some time and see strange creatures walking this little planet, strange plants waving their fronds in the air. But, mayhap, the two-legged thing will not be there at all. BRAIN TESTS Recognition of words is a peculiar ability which some persons possess to s marked degree. It s often possible to decide immediately whether or not a certain combination of letters form an actual word. For example, any one will recognize “shell” a8 & true word, and will also know that “grhgp” is not a word. The lack of vowsls or the presence of unusual consonsnt combinations give immediate &rool of this. In the list that follows some real words occur, and others of the letter combinations are not words. Go through the list and cross off all that you do not believe are words that ap- pear in a dictionary. It is not necessary to define any of them—just cross out those which are wrong, allowing your- self four minutes. . banth . quarkel zest . segpen . emlit All of the actual words that appear above may be found in an abridged dictionary. | The (1) banth; (2) 1 | lse words are: |quarkel; (5) asride; (7) atzel 13 | segpen; (16) rathler; (17) (14) emiit; aefour; (20) ablth; (21) agnux; (22) Besides constantly jerking his head up, |ing the horse among them, and aban- i,,.p]]_ All the others are actual words. in a very unpleasant and uncomfortable menner, and tugging at the reins to an extent which rendered it a ma! great difficulty for Mr. Pickwick to hold them, he had a singular propensiiy for dartiog suddenly every now and then to the side of the road, then stopping snort, and then rushing forward for some minutes, at & speed which it was wholly impossible to control. “What can he mean by this?” said Mr Snodgrass, when the Horse had exe- cuted this maneuver for the twentieth time I don't know,” replied Mr. Tup- mar it lJooks very like shying, don't 117" Mr. Snodgrass was about to reply, when he was interrupted by & shout Mr. Pickwick Woo" said that from “T've dropped m: A whip.” gentleman Bnodgrass, as g up on the over his ears. he would violence of shaking al e to plece exercise doning the chaise to its fate. ter of | (Copyrisht. 1028.) mosquitoes G STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESD OUR CHILDREN By Angelo Patri Injurious Thoughts. Thoughts are powerful. Don't take them lightly. Don't tell a child, “Oh, you pnly think so. Sflly.” What a child thinks makes all the difference in the world to his health,” his character, his success in life. Thoughts can eliminate fatigue. If a child is tired out, doesn't feel the strength to lift his feet, and someone says, “Oh, Skippy, you got the prize for throwing,” the fatigue vanishes, like snow in the sun. He is a new child, alive, eager, ready to g0, And if a child thinks he has failed on his examination and goes to his room in depression and weariness, refuses his dinner, says he's all right, just tired, and word comes in over the telephone that he has passed and is high on the list, what a change. . All the weariness, all the lack of interest,-appetite, vanish. He is hungry. He leaps downstairs three at a time: He sings in the bath- room. The thought of success has en- ergized his tired, jaded body. Some thoughts poison the body. Let a child brood in anger and he will soon have a fever. Let him brood in envy and jealousy and his stomach will re- fuse ‘to digest his food. The wrong thought has poisoned him. Worry will bring on severe indigestion and conse- quent illness. Fear will prostrate a child and bring on all sorts of disorders. Thoughts are the very roots of our be- ing. Try to train a child to know the in- jurious thoughts just as you would train WHY WE DO BY MEHRAN In the good old days when chemistry was alchemy, astronomy was astrology, theology was mythology and religion was mostly myth and magic, people looked for a cureall and believed it could be found. In this day of science we put very little confidence in the an- cient pseudo-sciences and yet not a few still belleve in a cureall. The wishes and desires that induce & man to look for a cureall exist today in added strength and variety, It is the great human urge to master the forces of nature by a simple formula, & hokus- pokus method of getting what you want, @ short cut to health, happiness and success. Life is too complicated. Health rules are too many and terribly complex. And what is even worse they often go con- trary to our desives. They require ex- ercise, strain and struggle. The cureall would eliminate the necessity of careful living and rigorous him to know a poisonous weed. You would warn him about polson ivy and carefully instruct him about its three bronze-red leaves and its bad effects on his skin. Warn him at the same time that greedy, covetous thoughts will have as_bad an cffect on his skin. Try to teach a child to censor the thoughts that dwell in his mind and reject those that do him harm. Don't encourage him to hold a grudge. It will injure his digestion. Don't encourage him to wish for things he cannot have. That will make him irritable and nerv- ous and uncertain. Don't teach him to worry either about what has happened or what i8 to come. Worry is poison as injurious as any that ever the Borgias knew. ' Teach the child to harbor happy thoughts. Teach him to face a situa- tion in all its woe and to look forward to the morrow to improve it, to turn it into something better. Teach him to look away from pain toward health, do- ing whatever is possible to correct the error and always looking forward to health. A mistake is not final. Search for the cause and then, with hope, cheerfulness and determination, lopk forward. Thought is a powerful force. Set the children a good example in controlling it and you and they will gain daily in goodness and power. Mr. Patrl will give personal attention to inquiries from parents and school teachers on the care and development of children. Write him in care of this paper. inclosing stamped, Addressed envelope for reply. (Copyright. 1928.) WHAT WE DO K. THOMSON. diotlnr and other restraining methods. Mankind prefers-to indulge all its wants and not gny the price, to get what it wants without sacrifice and toil. AY, AUGUST . 7, 1928: Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. Nothing so adds to the charm of a corner cupboard than to have & special setting for it. There must be the ap- pearance of balance. A cabinet on one side of the room may be balanced by a door on the other, or perhaps another If it is close to one window and quite a distance from another, there is the feeling that there is an awkward distribution of wall space. But as shown in the illustration. the cabinet between the two windows is so located that it not only shows off to advantage itself, but also lends attrac- tiveness to the windows and makes them a very important part of the room. architectural grouping in the corner to the right, there is no doubt but that it would be very delightful for an informal dining room and it would require only a table and chairs. The woodwork might be ivory; the walls, pale green: the interior of the cupboards, old red; the table, maple in drop-leaf style and the chairs also of maple with ladderbacks and rush seats. ‘What a boon it would be to know that we might dissipate all we pleased and then by taking a few pills could be re- stored to perfect health and vigor. All patent medicines thrive on this liuman weakness for a cureall. We look for a cureall because we are not willing to pay the price for our folly of reckless living and think we can find some way of defeating the in- exorable law of cause and effect, al- though we know from sad experience that it cannot be done. ‘We can believe in a cureall in a sci- entific age because this belief has very little to do with science or reasoning. It Is essentially an emotional affair and the emotions know no reason. They l}'? governed by imagination and desire alone. Straight Talks to Women About Money) BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. Shopping “Over Here." If you buy your diamond ring in Paris or Brussels, you will be asked about it when you touch port. Ameri- can jewelers must protect themselves, and the Government aids them. All sales of any size are reported to the American customs officials in detail. Smuggling of jewelry is almost impos- sible these days. e result is that it is cheaper to buy one's diamonds at home. This is just as true of other kinds of jewelry. High rewards awalt those who give information leading to the detection of smuggling. It is sald that not & few have grown rich divulging this mr;l of lil‘:lm-mnlun,‘. It {nlly seem despicable, but one act is not less un- dethanded than the other. Excepting a few articles, one may shop most cheaply at home. Hand- embroidered table linen, for example, is most expensive to Import, and so is any form of lace or embroldered work. Stuff that is 100 years old or older may be imported duty free in the case of * furniture and other household wares. But few housewives and shop- gers care to add ancient pieces to their ome. These are of concern to col- lectors, Clothes are bought abroad at higher prices, and they are heavily taxable. The duties vary on items of dress, but in all cases they are heavy and when dded to the none too cheap price broad they make shopping over here all the more desirable. Few shoppers abroad are informed about the reliability of stores and shops; few know which price is the “asking” one as distinguished from the selling price; few know similar facts of m) ce. As A result many are duped, pay excessive prices, or shop uneconomically for other reasons. Heavy articles or a profusion of pur- chases must often be shipped by ex- press or freight. The cost of ship- ment, insurance, and so forth, is not light, Frequently it makes one's ulti- mate cost far out of proportion to the value of one's purchases. Many shoppers forget that in proc- esses of manufacture, in styling, in tailoring, in designing and in all other things we are second to none. They often forget that we do what others do only at a greater cost. They forget that duties may double the price of one’s bargain. In fact, they forget that the large store in this country can import an article and sell it to us at a lower price frequently than that which we can buy it for abroad. Where experience is lacking reason will urge that to buy at home is to save, and to realize greater ultimate satis- faction. P;oinr {Ise. -of Trees. We have many millions of acres of forest left, says the American Tree As- sociation of Washington, which, for a stamp, will send you its restry LITTLE PIMPLES On Face. Formed Erup- tions. Itched and Burned. ‘' My trouble first began with little mnpm on my face. The pimples tered and scaled over and formed sore eruptions that itched and burned. They caused ment and were very embarrassing. The ttouble lasted about thr months. ““I used all kinds of remedies but| they did not do any good. I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and in about a month I was com- pletely healed, after using one cake Myrl Flowers, Oakland, Use Cuticura for every-day toilet purposes. Bathe with Soap, soothe with Ointment, dust with Tvlcum, DISCOVER CHIEF CAUSE OF TIRE “BLOWOUTS” Find Oil on Garage Floors With Gooseberries. Gooseberry jelly—To each pint of gooseberry juice allow one pound of sugar. About three pounds of goose- berries will make one pint of juice. ‘Wash the berries thoroughly, reject any which are unsound, and top and tail them. Put the berries into a preserv- ing pan and just cover with cold water. Bring to the boil, then simmer gently until they are soft and pulpy. Stir occasionally. Strain them through cheesecloth and allow to drip all night, but do not press the fruit or the jeily will not be clear. Measure the juice and allow one pound of sugar to each int. Put the juice into a pan with he sugar, stir until the sugar has melted, then boil for about 20 minutes, or until the jelly sets if a little is put on to a plate and left in a cold place. Remove all scum as it rises, put the jelly into small pots or glasses, and cover and seal. 5 Gooseberry preserves. — Wash _six pounds of gooseberriées and put them into a preserving kettle with about half a gill of water to each pound of the ruit. Bring to the boil and simmer until the fruif it through a fine sleve. the pulg and allow one pound of sugar to each pint. Put the sugar into & pre- sel kettle with just enough water to moisten it. Stir until it has melted, then bring to the boil and boil fast un- til the sirup forms a hard ball if a lit- tle is dropped in cold water. Add the gooseberty pulp, stir well, then boil for about 15 minutes, or until it sets. when cove! If this room could have the same | thi FEATURES. BEAUTY CHATS Modern Figures. - Do not take too much comfort, my slightly too stout reader, from the many recent paragraphs about the re- turn of the rounded and feminine fig- ure! The feminine figure of ultra-smart women today is not the feminine figure of the last decade, before we started our crage for belnsennl(ht up-and-down and boyish cause you read that busts are “back” and hips are slightly outlined. is no reason to fall upon the fatal to and the juicy chocolate cream! Pigures have varied in all ages; these days we do everyihing in a hurry, so we rush from one sort of figure to another in 10 years, whereas they used to take several generations to change. The l,yptlum went through various phases of such fashions, the female figures are shown with wasp walsts, again with well developed natural shapes, they are shown in inferior itions to men, :fia&n on terms of affectionate equality, e husbands and wives with their arms around each other sometimes. The Greek figure is round and well developed; the Turkish too soft and fat for Western tastes, the Victorians—well, we know all about those tight-laced, high-bosomed figures, we laugh at them enough. 'Today we are like none of these. The ultra-smart figure today, for which the leading designers make their styles, 1s that of the not quite ma- ture girl of 17 or 18. It is still a little flat, the outline of the bosom firm and round as it shows under the dress, the hips slender, arms slender and legs rather thin and anklcs and feet quite n. Immature grace. That is the phrase MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. “Let Me Help Wash!” One Mother Says: A miniature washboard from the five and ten cent store is just the proj equipment for laundering children’s t is quite soft, then rub | the liki Measure tested on a plate. Put into glasses and hose, ‘kerchiefs, laces, silk scarfs and e, Because the elevations and depres- slons of the board are smaller there is less wear and tear on fine fabrics than when the larger one is used. The chil- dren nlll: find itluuful in mdu'lnr{ clothing. I supervise WOl teac! them to wash the white clothes first. & few moments of supervision | Riece BY EDNA KENT FORBES for the “figure” we'll have for the next several years. Diet down to It if you haven't a good imitation of it. R. E. C—Not many people pluck hairs. from their eyebrows any more; they merely pluck a few that might be very much out of line with the others. It depends upon what the bleach is, whether or not it will hurt your skin. Lemon juice, cucumber juice, occasion- ally peroxide for superfluous hair b‘l‘el;chlnc—thm will not hurt your skin. Dimples—You are hardly over weight at 126 pounds, height 5 feet 44 inches, at 21 years, so I cannot see how you would need to reduce hips and legs. Rolling is a good exercise for re- ducing hips: for the double chin, try rubbing it with ice after bathing. THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Wednesday, August 8. Many strongly benefic planetary in- fluences rule tomorrow, according to astrology. Adverse aspects are subor- dinate but marked. Business conditions should gradually develop unprecedented prosperity in cer- tain lines as the Autumn approaches This is a good day for beginning new enterprises, _Aviation is to open many avenues of interest to commerce, since it eliminate: delays, but it will have a lasting effect upon the mental outlook of dwellers on_the earth, the seers declare. In the rising generation a new race is developing and it is to achieve su preme wonders, according to astrology What appears to be growing degen eracy is really evidence that good i soon to prevail and to eliminate evi astrologers declare. ‘Women are well directed tomorrow | business as well as domestic affair They should be calm and reasonab’ under this sway. Tomorrow is a fortunate wedding d. that presage: lasting love, but fortu: may be inclined to be fickle. One of the characteristics of the cor ing social season will be revealed in ti |number - marriages in which wom | ot wealth wed poor men. ‘Theaters and those who are employ |in them should benefit tomorrow, whi |is especially favorable to stage folk. ; Many changes in motion picture pr duction and management, so long forc told, will be evident in the Winter. Nev stars wiil replace those who hav. |achieved fame in the silent drama. According to ancient lore this is an auspicious rule for the hiring of maic servants or other woman employes. Persons whoss Dbirthdate tomor- row probably will Rave good luck in their financial affairs s\l through the coming year. They may Xave trouble with a lawyer or an associate in busi- ness, but they c1ould triumph over dif- ficulties. Children born tomorrow probably will have fine ‘alents that can be ap- to business as well as the arts subjects of Leo may be a bit stubborn, but they possess power to win whatever they desire. RS Growing Pecan Trees. In North Carolina, one of the States the; lnnugnmtulsjunulm- ope pot{tnt for ’s things to look im: maculate as for mother’s. . 1938, riculture at Raleigh, will issue circulars and bulletins and have provided a per- sonal service department. Leatrice Joy and a corner of the luxurious bathroom in= spired by the loveliness of this Pathé De Mille star. 2Thedeliciously smooth skin we mean by ‘studio skin’ is a great asset to a star. I am delighted with Lux Toilet Soap—my skin is like velvet after using it.%? Enjoy the porch all evening. Just keep a can of Flit on hand and spray around occasionally. Mos- quitoes dislike Flit outdoors just as much as they do indoors. They keep away from it. Flit is abso- lutely harmless to use around people, and it will not stain. Do not confuse Flit with any other product. Greater killing power insures satisfaction with Flit. One of the largest corporations in the world guarantees Flit to kill in- sects, or money back. Buy Flit and a Flit sprayer today. ' on Attacks Tires and Eats Them “Smooth Skin Irresistible” Hhasats. e R o says James Cruze, director for PATHE De MILLE Recommended for Prevent- ing Tires From Rotting Away While Cars Stand Idle ow quiclily a man or woman is won by the fresh loveliness of velvet-smooth skin. The closeup has taught motion picture directors that this beauty always wins instant response. They say the constant loveliness of her skin under the glare of the close-up is worth more to a star than any other beauty. Nine out of ten screen stars use Lux Toilet Soap. There are in Hollywood 433 important actresses, including all stars. 417 - 4 of these use this fragrant white soap. All the s fOLl!;Y'tI‘.R.w. of Fox o w great film studios have s lovelies voung stars, ., made it the official soap takes exquisite care of her skin ’ X +..“Lux Tollet Soap is just in their dressing rooms. like the luxurious soaps of Paris in the wonderful smoothness it gives my skin," she says. urney s | ction without a | 5 upon | t t Mr. Winkle had ouched the reins, than he \s head and darted fuil length aid Mr. Winkle sooth: good oid horse was proof against 0il is the encmy of rubber. It rots the best tires. Blowouts are its offsprings.” If you have ever changed a tire on a'boiling hot sum- mer day, you know what blowouts mean, Algo the price of a new tire, 8000 to 5000 miles too soon, is more than n.nnoylnz. The only sure, simple way to keep your garage floor free from oily drippings is to take b minutes (whenever necessary) to swab out these spots with an old broom and a solution of Red Seal Lye and water—one can of lye to a gallon of water. Use Red Seal Lye because it is 97% pure lye—by far the pur- est, quickest, most economical lye made. It melts away grease like snow from a hot stove, Stop at your grocer's and up & can of Red Seal Lye Save this article as a reminder, fellow “The yellow can with the The Old French Court . black band" Amid this splendor was born Fran fame for beauty. Gouraud’s Oriental Cream contributed to this renown thru its use by fa- mous Court Beauties. Gourauo's AILEEN PRINGLE has the warm vital quality to her loveliness that comes from intelligent care.. . “Lux Tailet gu:y'mmy skin nnl- -Mayer star. fek p rINl out of ten screen stars ay. wse it for smooth skin. * smooth, Goldwyn- LUX Toiles SOAP - 10t 3 Made in White - Flesh - Raehed Bend 10c. for Trial Bise Ford. T. Hopkins & Son, New York g

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