Evening Star Newspaper, August 24, 1928, Page 19

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WOMAN’'S PAGE. THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. €. TRIDAT, Reversible Materials for Coats BY MARY MARSHALL. Reversible woolen materials are used ;and the other an irregular stripe. And for ma of the new Autumn coats, | checks are. you know. decidedly smart and are especially suitable for sports|Often these-checks are in two tones in and general utility coats woman who knows enough about dress. making to think of making a coat a home these two-faced materials have a | Very great advantage. They are used without lining, you know, and may be DOUBLE-FACED WOOLEN MATE- RIAL. BRIGHT NAVY BLUT ON ONE SIDE AND BLUE AND WHITE CHECKED ON THE OTHER. WAS TUSED. UNLINED. FOR THIS SMART SPORTS COAT. trimmed by means of stitched patches and bands of the material used. lining side out. Reversible materials lighter sort lend themselves to the making of coat frocks for street wea the reverse side being used for belt. eufls, collars, etc. There are reversible wool jerseys this saason that deserve much ~popularity. The two sides are entirely different though the material is not heavy and s used to make some of the new sports frocks. faced jersevs one side shows a check WORLD FAMOUS STORIES 1 And for the of | In some of these new double- | rather hazy outline, and I have seen them in woolen materials as well as t | silks, One of the smartest new frocks I have anywhere seen was mace from a checked silk in_the new soft “bleu an- doise” tones. The silk was like a soft taffeta. and the frock was quite simply made. with ruchings of the pleated silk for trimming. Silks showing black and gray checks of & not too clearly defined sort are also in excellent style, and these checks and small plaids—the col- ors of which are, of course, woven in— present an interesting contrast to t'~ printed figured materials which have been so widely used ’ To maintain the slender hip line, which is as important now as ever many women are wearing the new type of combination undergarment known as & camiknicker any of these convenient bits of lin- gerie for yourself, you may like a copy of the pattern diagram. which is ready for you this week. It has been made as simnle as possible without from the smoothness of ou send me A stamped, self-addr velope, and I will send it to you at once. (Covrright. 1928) DAILY DIET RECIPE FILLETS ITALIENNE, Six fish fillets, one raw egg, one tablespoon cold water, three- fourths cup very fine bread crumbs. one-fourth cup olive oil, one-fourth cup shredded al- monds, two tablespoons flour, one-half cup hot water, one-half cup tomato catsup or soup, one tablespoon lemon juice and one- half teaspoon salt SERVES SIX PORTIONS. Fillets of sole. flounder. halibut or haddock could be used. Beat exg and add one tablespoon cold water. Dip fish in crumbs, then in egg. then in crumbs again. Heat oil in frving pan. Add almonds and fry until they start to color, then remove them to a soft paper to drain. Fry the breaded fish slowly in the same oil until well browned on both sides. Then remove to a hot platted and keep warm. Sprinkle the flour into the ofl left in the pan. Stir well. Add the hot water or a fish stock and the tomato catsup, soup or canned tomatoes and let mixture boil up. Season with salt and lemon juice and add almonds. Pour over the fish and serve. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes protein and contains lime, fron. phosphorus, vitamins A. B and C. Can be eaten by normal adults of aver- age or under weight. A CURIOUS RELIC. BY MARK TWAIN. (Mark Twain, whose real name was Semue! . 1835-1910. was _an American humorist of inter- wn_works “Innocents Arthur's Dest (Huckleberrr Ping, broad,” “Yankee in . re.” ete.) September. 1867. a flaming Oriental day, our party had just ridden through the squalid hive of human vermin that ot{ll bears the ancient Biblical name of Endor. I was bringing up the rear on my grave $4 steed. who was about beginning to compose himself for his usual noord F et I b tear, o T wes aying. Our pack mules and Arabs were far | ahead and other whites in the party were following close after them. As my horse nodded to rest I heard a sort of pamting behind me and turned and mw a tawny youth from the vil- lage vertaken me—a true remnant and :f tation of his ancestress. the itech of Endor —a galvanized scurvy. wrought into human shape and garnished with opthalmia and leprous sears—an airy creature with an invisible =hirt front that reached below the pit of his stomach and no other clothing tn speak of except a tobacco pouch »n ammunition pocket and a venerable gun, which was long enough to club any game that came within shooting distance. but far from efficient as an article of dress. T thought to myself, “Now this dis- eaze with the human heart in it is going to shoot me.” But I found that he was only a friendiy villain who wanted to beg. and after begging what he could get in this way was perfectly willing to trade off everything he had for more. I believe he would have parted with his last #hirt if he had had one He was smoking the “humbliest” pipe 1 ever saw—a dingy. funnel-shaped red clay thing, streaked and grimed with nil ‘and tears of tobacco and with all the different kinds of dirt there are and 30 per cent of them peculiar and indigenous to Endor and perdition. And rank? I never smelt anything like it. It withered a cactus that stood lifting its hands aloft by the side of the trail. It even woke up my horse. 1 sald I would take that pipe. enst me a franc, a Russian kopec. a hrass button and a slate pencil. My spendthrift lavishness 50 won upon the son of the desert that he passed over his pouch of most villainous tobacco 10 me ax a free gift. What a pipe it was. 10 be sure! It had a rude brass wire cover to it and a little coarse iron chain suspended from the bowl with an iron spiinter attached to loosen up the tobacco and o pick your teeth with The stem looked like half of a siender walking stick with the bark on T felt that this pipe had belonged to the original Witch of Endor as soon as I smelt it. Moreover. I asked the Arab in good English if this was not so and he answerc@ in good Arabic that it was. I woe up my horse and went my way, smoking And presently I {3 aid to myself. reflec- 1f there is anything that could & man debiberately assaull a g cripple 1 reckon maybe an un- expected whiff of this pipe would do it ong untll 1 found I was heginning 1o Jie, and project murder and stesl things out of one pocket and hide them in another. Then I put up my treasure. tnok off my spurs and put them under my horse’s tail and shortly eame tearing through our caravan like & hurricane Bome weeks later. finding myself in the lesd one romantic night. with my triend Dan by my side, 1 fiked the new gensation (1 had been in the rear as a regular thing, and longed o keep the piace forevermore. Every little stir in the dingy cavelcade behind me made me_nepiews Dan and 1 were riding side by side Fight after the Arab. About 11 o'clock it hsd become really chilly and the dozing boys Poused up and began to demand that the Arab hurry along faster 1 gave it up to them and my heart sank within me. because course, they would come up and scold the Arab lerder. 1 knew ] would take the rear again in my sorrow 1 naturaily took o my pipe, my only comfort. As I touched the ‘maich 1o 1t the whole company eame Jumbering up and crowding my horse’s rump and-fanks. A whiff of smoke drified back my shoulder and “The suffering Moses! Whe v By George who opened that grave ve, thet Arsha heen swallowing me'hing deed’ ANht sway thers wa2 & gap benind us. Whiff after whiff sailed airily back | and each one widened the breach Within 15 seconds the barking. gasping | | and sneezing and coughing of the boys | and their angry abuse of the Arab guide had dwindled to & murmur, Dan and I were alone again with the leader. Dan did not know what | the matter was. Occasionally he caught | | a faint film of smoke and fell to scold- ing at the Arab and wondering how long he had been decaying in that way. Our boys kept on dropping back farther and farther till at last they | were only in hearing, not in sight. Every time they started gingerly for- ward to reconnoiter—or shoot the Arab. | as they proposed to do—I let them get | within fair range of my relic (she would carry 70 yards with wonderful If you want to make | WHO REMEMBERS? RY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Offce. Rates Sense of Humor Highest. What Makes & Perfect Wife? DorothyDix L.ook for Charming Exterior, Intelligent Well Tust Mind, S /| ADMIRE Your ) S PIN Miss : s vmpathetic Nature and | | | | ! | 1 \ YOUNG man asks me what qualities the ideal wife should posses | | A\ pitractive personality. A good brain. A tender heart and a funny-bone AUGUST 24, | It T were a man. I should want & wife who was easy on the eyes. 1 would not { demand a living picture. for living pictures are generally nothing else but. | | Also they come high, and they are sure to fade as time goes by and leave their possessors feeling that they were stung in the matrimonial bargain. | > But. on the other hand T should not desire to spend the balance of my | | < g 2 | days gazing on a chromo that rasped my esthetic sensibilities raw. So I should | | pick out for a wife a girl who, w ithout perhaps being beautiful, gave the illusion | 1 of beauty, who knew how to buy clothes and wear them and adjust her hats and { ", | her complexion and who had the indestructible good looks that are just as good ¥ | at 40 as at 20. | And 1 should pay particular attention to her expression and her manners, and to whether she wore the smile that won't come off or the peevish, fretful look that is the sign manual of the born nagger. I should lay great stress on the girl's personality, because 1 should not only want an agreeable companion to live with, but a wife I would be proud of and who would make friends for me | by her graciousness and charm of manner [F 1 were a voung man picking out a wife, T would try to find out what Kind | of brains she possessed. if any. I would be far more interested in what was inside of her head than what was outside of it, for you can grow weary of When the very latest in neckwear | contemplating the most ambrosial locks, and. anyway. age turns us all either jewelry for both men and women was | bald or grizzled. But intelligence never palls upon us. and the clever mind only a photo of the admired one in a gold RFOWs cleverer and more fascinating as the years go by. setting about the size of a half dollar? NANCY PAGE Naney Learns Difference Between Temper and Pain. Boredom is the curse of matrimony. It is the scourge that drives men | away from home in search of entertainment. It Is what turns husbands into | | philanderers. It is not age or fat that makes men forsake their middle-aged | wives, but their driveling line of conversation about the children and the cook | | and the price of butchers’ meat So if T were a man, T would make very sure of getting a wife with real I brains. one who would read and study and Keep up with what was going on in this interesting old world of ours: one who had intelligence enough to understand | and enter into my plans when T talked with her about my purposes in life; one | with whom T would never have a dull moment because she always had something | bright and interesting and peppy to say and who would illumine every subject by considering it from & new point of view . BY FLORENCE 1A GANKE. Grandmother Lee belonged to the generation that cuddled and loved and rocked babies. Nancy went to the other extreme. She left the baby alone with Spartan stoicism. She was so IF‘ I were a young man picking out a wife, T would choose a" girl who had a tender heart. No hard-boiled young woman for me. I would want no eynic | wise-cracking on the hearthstone. but instead a woman who belicved in every- thing that was good and true and pure because that was the reflection of her { afraid of spoiling Peter Junior that she | own soul allowed him to cry and cry. She was too young a mother to have learned Beauty, brilliance, wit: they are the crackling of thorns under a pot. The | fire that endures on the hearthstone and at which a man warms himself for a lifetime is made of sweetness, gentleness, sympathy, pitifulness—the something that enables a woman to understand things with her heart even when she doesn't | understand them with her head. So if 1 were picking out & wife. I would watch out to see if the girl were selfish, whether she grabbed off the best for herself or not, whether she alwa: insisted on having her own way or was willing to defer to the wishes of other I should notice how she treated old people and littie children, whether she brushed out of her way people who bored her and could do nothing for her and kowtowed to the rich and important. I should observe how she treated stray dogs, and particularly I should observe her demeanor in her own home and whether or not she wore the best clothes in the family. And if her father and mother were afraid of her, I should have a hunch that as she treated them she would treat me when I also belonged to her. 1 knew a young man who broke off his engagement to a girl because when he took her to see Maud Adams' play. “A Kiss for Cinderelia,” she sat up as stolid as a wooden Indian throughout the performance. “Why." he said to me, “nothing touched her! There was nothing in her that responded to the exquisite, heart-breaking pathos of thal poor little waif mothering those little starving that there are temper cries, hungry ' bables, and I couldn't spend my life with a woman with no feeling in her. | cries and legitimate cries made when [ couldn't love'a woman who couldn't cry.” the baby is in actual pain or dis comfort 1 When the baby is wet, or when he is Iving on a ridge of bedding or clothes, or even when he aches from Iying in one position it is but a matter of humanity to lift him and make him | comfortable. Holding the baby with his body pwessed up near mother's shoulder and rubbing the baby's back may dislodge gas and ease the pressure It is possible to make a baby com- fortable without spoiling him. and the more comfortable he is the better he will be | After a while Nancy learned to dis- tinguish cries. Temper could ery itself out, but pain needs assuagement. When If 1 were a man, I should feel that way about it. and T wouldn't want a | wife who would always be wise and just and practical. I would want a wife | who would be foolish over me because she loved me too well to see my faults, who | would put her arms around me when the world buffeted me sorely and who would kiss my hurts and make them well. P I were a young man picking out a wife. I would select a girl with a well developed funny-bone. The main thing that is the matter with matrimony | 1s that women take it too tragically. They fill it with gobs of gloom instead of joviality. They brood over their husbands' faults until they turn them into high crimes and misdemeanors. They salt their husbands down in their tears, and then wonder why the poor fish do not enjoy being pickled in brine. So. if I were a young man picking out a wife, 1 should pass up all the wistful-eyed. melancholy, serfous-minded young women and select a nice. jolly girl with a laugh that was hung on a hair-trigger. I would know that she would make the kind of a wife who turns misadventures into jokes. who sees the funny side even of misfortunes and who would make a good story out of my ! blunders instead of reproaching me with them. . For a sense of humor in his wife is God's best gift to a man. and does more than any other one thing to make marriage a success, DOROTHY DIX. |pl‘ndul" among them a healing atmos- | phere of tranquillity. | There is no more blessed ministry | than that of the peacemaker. Our AY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. beatitude says peacemakers “shall be | dear 1928. SONNYSAYINGS RY FANNY Y. CORY. I don't see how we eber goin' fer hab world peace, like my daddy talkin' bout, when the ladies acts like 'iss! 1928.) (Covyright BY MIMIL Is Everything Ruined? “Everything is ruined,” wails Adeline. “I don't really need advice. I just need | sympathy. Because nothing in the world | can alter the fact that my romance is spoiled utterly, It was all Tom's fault. We were so happy together until this Summer when he went away and met a girl called Isabelle. I don't even know what she was like but I do know that he gave me up entirely for her For a whole month he never came near me—simply wrote to me to say that he'd have to break the engagement be- cause he didn't really love me. “And then suddenly he came back I know perfectly well she gave him the air. But he says he doesn’t care about that. He swears he's wildly in love with me, and with no one else. What's the use now? He's ended everything as ir- revocably as if he'd married Isabelle.” And poor little Adeline goes on through many dreary pages, bewailing the ruin of love's sweetest dream. Well, it is a bitter pill to swallow, my We all try to keep our romances free of ugly words and broken vows and other loves But not all of us can do it. Every once in a while we get a case where the most fortunate thing that ever hap- pened was a few moments' disloyalty— or a month of utter forgetfulness Let me show you why. I don't know your Tom but he seems to me to be the average nice boy most girls marry. | Let's suppose that you're one of the first girls he ever fell in love with in his life. Let's suppose that for the six months in which you were engaged he | saw no one else, thought of no one else. | That's all very beautiful and Tom may have felt as you did that it was sufficient. | But it's just possible that that blind love of his wasn't suffiiclent. It may be that Tom needed his fling—that he needed to have a real standard of com- parison before he could be sure of his love for you Perhaps Isabelle supplied just the comparison vou needed. Tom's little flirtation with her may. have seemed cruel and horrible to you-—but it may also have been the means of making your marriage a secure and very happy | affair | You see before he met Isabelle he was just a boy In love with his first sweet- heart | Now that he's met her and found her wanting in loyalty or sincerity, you're that much dearer to him, that much more precious. M5 love for you—a boyish. romantic | thing—may have settled down into a| deep, sincere devotion through no bet- | ter ‘medium than that of his fiirtation | and pimples. | matures | to cleanse precision) and then wafted a whiff \ among them that sent them gaspingand . | TO 2 strangling fo the rear again. I'kept \ | my gun well charged and ready. and /i g{yoe within the hour 1 decoyed the BARY () s right up to my horse’s tail and then with one maiarious biast emptiea| [P ROTECTION . the saddles, almost. I never heard an Arab abused 5o in my life. He really | she heard other bables crying inter- owed his preservation to me, because | minably she wished she could pass on for one hour I stood between him and | her acquired wisdom to other mothers. certain death. The boys would have ' Another comfort and safeguard for killed him if they could have got past { the baby was a 2-yard square of ey | white net or mosquito netting to throw By and by, when, the company were | OVer the pram. It kept flies and far in the rear, I put away my pipe— Mosquitoes out, and allowed air in I was getting fearfully dry and crisp | Nancy hemmed the edges with blue about the gills and rather blown with Yarn and weighted the ends with fat, good diligent work—and spurred my Pudgy varn tassels. animated trance up alongside the Arab and stopped him and asked for water He unslung his little gourd-shaped earthenware jug and I put it under my mustache ‘and took a long, glorious satisfying draft 1 was going to scour the mouth of the jug a littie before I passed it to | D;ni but I saw that I had brought the | whole train together once more by my wri 3 V] delay and that they were si) anxious | pantonl” (ajout something which 1 painfully feel, and just as paintully 1o drink, too—and would have been ! ot 4 e . g SmNin e know not how to explain. That some pre- [hing is poverty. I address the average tended that he was out of water. 50 ' man: who. I r'akrlud:nows mmrlm:x 1 hastened to pass the vessel to Dan. |ahout the same feeling. One thing | He took a mouthful and never said A | seems certain: Poverty, like most | ;::': g!.';mrll‘;fl:rfhnfl hL; horse and 1ay | things, is in part an abstract something Y e roa and is, theretore. to that extent a state felt sorry for Dan. It was 100 1ate | of mind. Being a state of mind, it gz:k.thnugr;’ and the next one Wfl5|t.h11xea us to consult psychology for an g ng. e, too, got down and|explanation. Now comes a ,would-be unted for a soft place. 1 thought I|psychologist with an explanatfon which heard him say, “That Arab's friend i pass on without comment ought to keep him in alcohol or else | Poverty is due to a quarrel between take him out and bury him somewhere.” | the consclous and the unconscious. In All the boys took a drink and climbed our conscious minds we would all be down. It is not well 1 go into further | wealthy, or at least would have a com- particulars. Let us draw the curtain | petence. 1In our upon this act, most of us want to be poor. And so we are poor—the unconscious, being more powerful than the consclous, of course Ihl~ its way. Now this unconscious mind 1s made experiences, 1. e largely so. As children we poor people | heard our parents talking about hard | times and its connection with money. Bo we got the notlon n a perfectly un- conscious way that money was & pain- ful substance since it with those hard times We poor people also heard as children that 1t was easier for a camel to go through the eve of & needle than it was for » rich man to get into Heaven. We compared a camel with the needle in our mother's work hasket and decided uneonsclously. of course, that poverty | was an ultimate blessing. 8o we wished 1o be poor. Wished to he poor? Yes unconsciously There are many other factors in the unconselous urge to be poor—for ex- ample, sympathy. ‘The poor do seem to get some svmpathy. If nothing clse Thix helps to enlarge the unconscious, which In turn helps to keep us from gaining wealth Assuming that you are poor apd as- sumine that you consclously wish to be rich. then get the unconsclous thoughts { Into_consclousness as soon as possible | Your consclous mind ean then get rid | of the unconsclous desive for poverty. 1926 ) Everyday Psychology RY DR, JFSSE W, SPROWLS, Why Be Poor? Lessons in English , fup of childhood BY W. L. GORBON. Words often misused “Where did procure Simplicity s preferred you get the book? Often Pronounce not. mak-rel Often isspelled nounced a-leet) Synonyms Ignoble, vile | infamous, dishonorable Word study “Use & word three time and it is you Let us increase our ocabula mastering one word each day. Today'’s word. Vindictive, dis- posed o revenge vindictive light came into his eyes . Brown Sugar Nut Buns. Bhape dough Into an oblong. roll half an inch in thickness. Bpread with me ed shortening. Sprinkle with a sugar wnd cinnamon mixture made with o fourth cupful of brown sugar and on teaspoontul of cinpamon and some ral S Roll like a jelly roll Seal the edges by pressing togeMier with the fin- gers Cut into slices one inch thick Into the hottom of each greased mufty pan put one tablespoonful of melted butter, medium brown sugae 1o one fourth inch In thickness, and about 4% nut meats. Into esch muffin pan put | one of the slices, eyt sides up and dows Let rise in a warm place uni'l doibls in bulk Bake In oderately not oven. Invert the muffin pan on cool ing rack Let hang a few seconds be fore removing Berve hol or cold Alephen A 1Lynch show” in Asheville ven veare later he |genius” of 180 theaters. Do not say the hook?” Where did you was associated mispronounced mak-er-el, three Mackerel svilables Elite (but pro- degraded A (Copyright N €, in 1910 was directng ! | ‘ l unconscious minds | with the unworthy Isabelle | No. I'm not saying that every voung | man must be unfaithful to his true love before he can know the meaning of sincere devotion, | But I'm saying quite definitely that | very often it's the case that a man's Airtation with some one clse makes him twice as devoted and loyal to his true | sweetheart [ called the sons of God.” The ministry | of peacemaking is so Godlike that those | who engage in it are recognized in a special sense as His sons. Peacemaking is delicate work. Tt requires a gentle and tender spirit. Indeed, he who would he a peacemaker should make sure that he has the spirit of Christ, the Prince of Peace. Seventh Beatitude. Text: “Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children of God."—Matt., v.9. We must have peace in our own hearts before we can be peacemakers. We must have peace with God and peace with our felow men. No man | can bring to others that which he does not possess. There are two phases to the peace- making that Is here pronounced blessed. Its first and most important phase is that of bringing about peace | between men and God. The cause of all the alienations, quarrels and fight- ings among men is that their relation to God is disturbed. So the first thing to be done to make men at peace with one another fs to get them reconciled | tn God and at peace with Him. We can do more in this way to heal ani- mosities and sweeten society than is | possible to be done in any other way But, of course, we are to go on be- yond this and do what we can In a| dircct way to reconcile the alienated and eompose men's quarrels. And be | sure there is great need for such peace- making, for everywhere there are bitter | misunderstandings and. hostile antago- | nisms. He is a much needed man who | can go about and make contending ! | people give up their contentions and ' New sandwiches—new salads in one minute JUST a minute's spreading of Butt-R-Naise in a sandwich instead of butter—just a spoon-dip onto your crispest salad—makes them taste new and refreshing. Bute-R- Naise is a spicy salad and sandwich cream. Stff like whipped cream, and made of lemon juice, spices, creamery hutter, oils, | and specially prepared yolks of fresh cggs. Full of the vitamines that help healch! A delicious spread on crackers for chil- dren. Freshin 30c glass jars wherever you market. Put Gelfand's French Dressing into your market hasket too. The Gelfand Mfg. Co., Baltimore. Distribuier Washington, D. C. GELFAND'S BUTT-R-NAISF | | i The Carpel Co. ; ] | | | No Hot Weather Cooking | SHREDDED | " % ounces ; full-size biscuits Saves time, work and health Thoroughly baked- Crisp and brown The nation’s summer food, TRISCUIT - The health cracker of whole wheat VISITORS WELCOME TO ALL FACTORIES FEATURES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Beauty in the Teens. | Many of the readers of this column | are girls In their teens. if T may judge from the letters I receive from them and so today I am giving this colunm to a diseussion of common beauty prob- lems of adolescence. First and foremost of these is a group of complexion troubles, including en- | larged pores, blackheads, shining noses Questions regarding these blemishes come to me in every mail The original cause of them is the stim- ulation of the oil and sweat glands (pores) that is often one of the char- acteristics of adolescence. As one these annoying (‘Ompll‘x]r\n‘ problems disappear. In the meantime | there are certain things one may do | to make the skin clearer and finer and other things to avoid that coarsen the skin. It Is hard for some girls to realize that the functioning of the digestive tract is reflected in one’s complexion The wrong choice of food, indigestion and constipation are often responsi- ble for coarse, oily skins and pimples. What one eats is built into the body. and if these building materials are not well chosen the structure as a whole will not be strong and beautiful. The young girl's diet should include plenty of fresh milk, fruit, raw salad and cooked succulent vegetables, as well as the right proporflon of whole grain cereals, bread, fat, sugar and protein foods such as meat. eggs and_cheese. Water should be drunk freely between meals. The external care of the skin is also important. Blackheads are pores clogged with oil and grime. When face powder and rouge are scrubbed into | the skin the make-up naturally lodges in the pores and does not come out | with a superficial washing. Thus lhe" pores become choked and often pimples develop in them. To prevent this clog- i ging of the tiny glands it is essentia the skin thoroughly each | night at bedtime. It will simplify mat- | ters i no make-up is used. If the blackheads no not come out after being washed in soap and water in the ordi- nary way, they may be steamed. Fold a small Turkish towel three or four times, then place it in the center of | a second towel. Fold the latter over the former and then dip it into very | hot water. Squeeze out the Turkish towel by twisting it in the other| towel. Now take it out and hold it | over your face until it begins to cool. | Repeat the hot application once or | twice. Massage the skin with a thick | lather of castile or other mild facial | soap. Rinse in warm water, press out the blackheads gently. then bathe the face in cold water for several minutes. ' 0 or Dry and pat on an. acne lotion Ted the re- Yed scars result from - mr?!:{nn( ebluckheldfl or pimples they. pimples n are ususlly due 10 TFOUEE That ‘bruises_the skin The PIEECG d out and im- should be pricked wi ently presse! A litfle healing salve may be &DPIEC, Another heauty problem tha voung girls is their weight. teems fo be quite a fad among tne members of the ’;’"':f..‘;nmw'fnsm e tain their physical spec! B Though Thire " are. standard _weight: i eight tables for all ages. follow that every girl of & given age and height should weigh the same amount. for there are differences in structure and in rate of development between girls of the same age. We may say that the “average girl” of & certain age and height should meas- ure and weigh a certain amount, but really no girl is “average.” is an individual, and each must be her- self in order to develop into beautiful womanhood. (Copyright. 1928.) Huckleberry Dumplings. Pick over and wash one quart ripe huckleberries, add two cups of water and one-half cup sugar. Heat slowly to boiling point, and boil for five min- utes. Sift together one and one-half cups flour, two teaspoons baking pow- der, one-fourth teaspoon salt and one tablespoon sugar. Rub in two table- spoons of butter or any shortening, then add two-thirds cup milk or enough to make a mixture that is just too soft to handle. Reheat the huckleberries to the boiling point and drop the dumplings from a teaspoon into the boiling fruit. Cover closely and boil slowly for 10 minutes without removing the cover. Serve hot with hard sauce or just with the stewed fruit *The most widely used and enjoyed coffee in the United States *]t is a matter of record in the history of the coffee trade that Seal Brand was the first coffee ever packed in sealed tins. SESANBORYS . CHASE & SANBORNS SEAL BRAND COFFEE Seal Brand Tea Is of t he Same High Quality WHITE ST TUN ...and be sure family gets en OFTEN your ough of these two vital elements...phosphor- ous and iodine. Of all the sea foods none is more healthful and delicious than WHITE STAR LG

Other pages from this issue: