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WOMAN'S PAGE. BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Whether or not people are inclined €5 acknowledge it, there is a gulf which | exists between parents and children, | A1 for no other reason than the wide difference in age. and there is hardly & mother ar father but seeks some way to span it A child is quick to resent the patron- IN THE GAME DESCRIBED PARENTS AND CHILDREN ALL BECOME CHILDREN TOGETHER BY JOIN- ING IN THE SAME SPORT. t2ing touch, which is the result of the t00 extreme effort. and which dis- counts his immature, but perhaps not | inferior, mentality. Children are also quick to dislike the didactic “preachy tone by which some parents think to lift them to their “level.” But nowhere | gendered. | matter merely is there a child who disdains a sincere attempt. at sympathetic contact From real sympathetic contact. it is certain that both young and old will be the gainers. for, when sympathy is established. each is found to have some- thing to give. A bond of the most | precious and vital sort is thus en- | One way of establishing this sym- pathetic contact is "to enter into a child's play hours. A splendid examplic | of this came (o my attention recent There was a picnic at which many | children and their parents were pres- ent. It was suggested that a base ball game be played. Parents vs. Children The youngsters thought this & grea idea. and they took extreme delight ir finding themselves the victors! Sturdy fathers, with records for long-distance running at college, were among the happy defested. Excitement ran high. | and the game of yielding the score (o the junfors without being discovered was Almost as much fun to the grown- ups as the hard-fought success was to the children Nor is all such playing of games & of pretense with the grown-ups. For every grown-up has something of the little boy or girl with- in that never quite outgrows child- | hood, and it is the bringing of this to the surface which makes it possible | for those of such varied vears to meet on the same plane It may take some experimenting to find in what field it is most easiiy pos- sible to establish this sympethetic con- tact, for not all children are given to sports, not all parents inclined to fol- low in that direction. Books. enjoyed in childhood. and read aloud may prove the channel, or rediscovery of some hobby which was dear to the early vear of the grown-up. In the crowded apartment life cities one sees children old beyond their vears, becruse always thrown with their elders. If the situation occurs when most of the companionship is neces sarily with adults, it is for them to make more of a point than ever of giving the little girl or boy a childhood as much as possible like other young- sters. They should find out the little boy or girl within themselves and call it forth with frequency to meet the ooy or girl who is young in years as well as spirit. | My Neighbor Says: 1t dishes are properly scraped and plled before the washing | | begins the task loses much of its | | unpleasantness. The ideal way to wash dishes is with two dish- pans, one full of hot soapy water, the other full of clear hot water. | | Sosp Jelly for washing flannels and fine woolen goods is easily made. Shred a piece of yellow soap into & saucepan of warm water and let it simmer by the side of the fire till dissolved. Add sufficlent of this to warm water to make a nice lather. If too strong the flannels will be hard. | | Always grease a frying basket i by dipping it in fat before putt'ng | | foods that are to be fried into it A small piece of salt fish skin washed, dried and cut in pleces may be used to clarify coffee | KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY JOSEPH Stroke and Tact. | Mental fitness is reflected in what we ! @o and how we do it. Matter and man- | Rer are the two factors in perform- ance. and ‘h:g.u best mod'eux to T:nnel: Lies. ing word, stroke. | w‘:fi% and your style, it ex- pressés your personality. It's your way of doing. It may be that what you ' do you do becau: body's doing it—it’s the fashion. But your way of | doing it is your private fashion, your stroke. Sports offer the standard illustration. In golf or tennis anybody can hit the | ball, but you are a duffer or an ex- pert according to your stroke. Watch an eight-oared shell racing in the water and see how speed and style all depend on the technigue of the stroke. | ‘The same idea applies to much else in which we prefer the word style. All | writers. painters and other artists have A style. Style is manner. You ma: build a house in the Colonial style. but every architect has his own style of following the colonial pattern. You may wear stylish clothes, but your way of wearing and choosing them is your style. and often the “styles” or passing fashions don’t suit your “style” of fig- ure. All this is the parallel of stroke— it's your way of doing things. In music. you call it touch. You can tell who's playing the piano by the | “touch™ or the bowing or stroke of the | violin. In a phonograph record you | dentify the selection, which is the matter. and the player. which is the style. Its all in the fingers and | muscles, but it reflects the mind behind | them. i There are standards in stroke and style in every kind of performance: there is g form and bad form. It's | true the piayer plays to win, but form eounts. In watching tennis players you admire their form or stroke as well a< their ability to win. Grace and skill enter into form and stroke, even though the game is played for points. Manner eounts: we are fudged by how we say it as well as by what we say. Msn ners make the man: good manners are ®ood social form It is when we transfer the point to the art of handling men that the stroke ©r touch becomes tact, which is but an- PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Surgical Relief for Veins, In very troublesome cases of varicose veine it s sometimes necessary and ad- [ surgery. To the patient the excision of a portion of two or three enlarged may seem a formidable It i no trifie to be 5 10 the modern surgeon with methoas £ intple operation and one ihat esrns the ecause In eases where surgical relief is resorted W there is no | olher relief to be had. Bometimes the tesuit of the operalion 16 HOL 50 per- ‘et a5 doctor and patient hoped for, | ave it all b gl if 1 were ufflicted varicose veins beyond hope of rem- | tnrough hygienic means. 1'd gladly | e a good surgeon carte blanch with | legs. #ad 1 belisve I'd be satisfied h anything better than & 50 per cent | Visable ettt to veins procedure ire. but modern it a tient s gratitude h |y, | of how to handle them, how to allay suspicion, how JASTROW. | | other way of saying touch. Its all in the manner. In the social arts stroke | is tact. You may excite and frritate or offend by your manner, even though your words are innoceni. You | may handle people crudely and rough- | hurting their feelings at eve point, or you may soothe them as (||€4‘ delicate touch of a trained nurse. Tact | is the most humanized type of stroke. | Tact proceeds largely on &n emo- | tional basis. It implies a sympathy with others’ feelings and a knowledge | o inspire confidence. | how to compromise and adjust. The social tactician is a good peacemaker. | Tact is said to be a preferred woman's | art. since it deals so largely with the | intimate personal and emotional na- ture. There are, in turn, many styles in tact, whether applied to persuasion, ! or organization, or campaigning, or! diplomacy. You may use flattery, but | whether you lay it on thick or use it delicately shows your stroke. Diplomacy is the more intellectual side of tact and passes over into planning and cunning and even intrigue. Like everything | else, tact may be used in & good cause or a bad one. To be tactful, to have a good stroke in social relations, is a part of mental | fitness. Whether your major business | is in handling materials and processes, in manufacture or any of the by-paths | of industry, or in handling ideas, in sharing in the organization and intel- lectual guidance of the many affairs of the world, you will not escape the handling of men, which to many is the major profession. Tact is a universal asset because the human element counts heavily, snd men are neither working machines nor idea factorles, but sensitive, emotional | creatures, subiect to slights and com- pliments, to taking offense and co-ope ating grudgingly or in protest if th are rubbed the wrong wav, or co-ope: ating gladly if they are tickled | I school or college there are no courses in “tact”; we trust to learning it in the school of life. It's part ull the common lesson that manner counts that your success depends as much on | how vou do things as on what vou do. | In all your steps watch your stroke use tact (Copyright. 1928 solution is required. which causes some burning and cramping pain for a min. ute or two after each injection. The patient may go home 10 minutes after the injection Just what the chemicals are s no concern to the layman-— leave all that to your doctor 1 referred ) this chemical obliteration of varicose veins here & few weeks ago and numer- ous readers inguired sbout the identity and address of the doctor or doctors who were reporting their results. I can- not give the name or address of a doc- tor who uses this method. Auny docto) who Is up-ro-date Is competent to give the chemical treatment and the com plete detalls of technie and 5o forth ave | published i the medical journals and | wvallable to any physician Capyright. 1926 To Cool & Room. An effective way 1o cool & room |t plant vines W cover the windows o 1, the last two or three years an- | other surgical method of less formidable | aspect has heen brought into quite gen se. and in view of the great preva lence of varicose veins and the fact tha surgery offers the only chanee of any permanent relief in troublesome o this newer metnod should interest many sufferers wnd th physiclans, for 1t i | s method which any good phrsician or & physician who i any good can use | [ It is called the | with complete sucoess chemical” trealment and consists of injections of suitable chemical medicines inte the vein at one or more points ‘hese injections are given as are or- dinery hypodermic injections They may be sdministered either in the doc- tor's office or at the patlent's home. The treatment does not disuble the patient nor interfere with regulsr occupation For smaller varicosities a solution is used which Is painless and self-steriliz- g and injections are given every sec- end day until sl the veins are obliter- sted. For larges varicosjies another “ the wire strips run up and down it even to cover the entire culside wall of the room, especially if it is & frame | house. ‘The vines should run wp a | traight framework made of coar wire netting, such s chicken wire. Lat and desired thenr more tban one width i fasten the strips together alon edges with wire or cords. ‘The should be attached in such w | wav 8% 10 leave & space of not less than 1 foot hetween it and the house. This i the secret of the cooling effect of the | vin 1t provides a wide, cool air space outside the window and the | house well and resulls In much more inside coolness than can be secured by window shdes, Awninge, or any other means. Vines s arranged will lower the temperature of a sunny room fully 10 degrees on & hot day. Ax to what ¥ind of vine to use, consull s forist Plant the vines thick. Most vines grow rapidly. I too late this Sum- mer, plant early next Spring. | i : \ | up eating and paused T STYLE POST is the marker on the road to being smart Crystal Links. blithely continues on its smart way. this time in the form of colored links, joined together in a long chain. Clear, crystal white. soft blue, green, glowing red—all of these colors find their way They make an extremely happy accent of color against the deep, rich velvets and satins of Autumn dresses. Or they are equally striking when worn with late Summer prints in a color to harmonize with the pattern. (Copyriaht. 19281 JB ROSA BY MIML Crystal Why Does the World Go Round ? Sheila hasn't been able to under- stand for days how the old world has had the effrontery to continue its placid couise when she is a heart- broken, disillusioned wreck It ail came so suddenly with Jimmy, and Jimmy's engagement to Janet. lieve in it yet Some dav she will get even witn Jimmy. make him suffer as she has suffered. but 2t the present writing her chief grievance is with her friends and the world Her friends continue to go to parties, her break subsequen. She can't be- continue to eat large meals and sleen | eight hours a night. They actually discuss little trivial things when they're with her as if she weren't the victim of a great tragedy And the world—the blamed old world goes right on moving. It isn't fair. Sheila_and “all broken-hearted dam- sels ought to be tickled to death that the world and all the people in it are going right on their busy ways, without | wasting any time over her pitiful littic affair. How awful for her if friends and re!- ives stopped going to business, gave in their busy lives to hover over her, concentrating all their attention and hers on her great trouble The fact thet Sheila is in a circle of busy. happy people is her salvation. if she only knew it. Their somewhat cas- ual indifference to her pain will be her greatest help. For she is not at s permiited 1o wall aloud her sorrows. She is not permit- ted to dwell with morbid satisfaction on the awful details of their last quar- rel No, she must pick herself up. get on her feet and start her life wuere she left off & few weeks ago What would bcome of any of us if the whole world hung suspended to sympathize with us over our troubles? We'd never get a chance 10 recover. We'd be reminded of our tragedy every minute of the day. We'd dwell with our great sorrow, feed on it. sleep on 1t until it became an obsession which blotted out ell our chances of happi- | ness in life, The best kind of sympathy in the world, Sheila. is tim sympathy that lends & helping hand to one who has fallen into deep despair—a helping hand up, mind you. The careless manner in which your friends treat your sorrow is all for your own good. They know that through little trivial things you'll come out of this period of heartbreak into the sun- light of youth and gayety again. If you found nothing but morbid sympathy around you, and eternal in- terest in your sufferings, you'd have no incentive to recovery. Now you must recover if you want to find vour place in the world you love. You must make it snappy, too, if you're going to catch up with the grand old world that's been going round brisk- ly all the time you've ston) living. (Copyriaht. 1928 1 Mimi will be glad to answer any inauiries | into such link chains. | The Sidewalks of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. * “Another o' mine, Your twinkling eyes and face divine. ‘Though life is short and time is fleeting, | I love you' Is my birthday greeting." year younger, mother And examine the art work careful- ly. ‘There is mother sitting by the fir side, waiting for father to come home. | | There is a depth of conception in the picture. Now take dad's birthday greeting. There’s & picture of father looking out toward the setting sun | look at the color ot | the sun. Can you i | A PICIURE OF DAD GA2ING AT THE ETTING SUN.____ imagine father who has been grinding all day in the marts of busi- ness, coming home on his birthday and finding a card from the children bought at Addie’s Station- ery Stors? The | kind of card you | will be proud” to sell. People wul | say, “If you want to send a real birth- | day or Christmas greeting. go to Addle's for them.” Every day in_this town | somebody has a birthday. Who is sell- | ing these cards, you or your competi- | tors” Our line of Christmas cards i | superb. Let me show you a sample Here's just the one that is onur biggest selier. Notice the way the snow 15 i | the Christmas tree, i l 1 ! | % LNE OF Did you ever see | more realistic snow in all your life? And | read the sentiment “Most blessed day of all the year, With joy and song and Christmas cheer | May in your heart the Yuletide chime, Today, forever—all the time.” | “‘Longfellow never did any better | work than that. In fact, our greatest | trouble is in keeping our competitors | from stealing our stuff. Here's one to iather ““Dear dad. ‘til night curt who works from morn | To Not all visitors to Washington are | look at this card we get out. Notice t to souvenir novelties. Others engage [ ne these commercial men many interesting Sometimes their yarns are fabulous or drummer won customers through dreary at best, bought goods in ex- | “made” the town occasionally in quest still remains a “drummer” was in town Next to the guy o | drums,” said he. “ | should take the once, as a side line | the “old days. The A means of increa “I had difficulty several seasons he would stock up with me had to find an argument to sell this | could sell him. ‘But I've got a new line now, Mr of snappy card writers. These boys and bright, | Just look at the stuff youre carrying This one announcing baby's ar- | vou take this one here “To Dad’s Birth- | “I am a bouncing baby boy, | {break any regular mother’s heart Come over soon and see me, pray.” " | over the country for the finest poets, to |and he remained my customer until I | tourists. Some are traveling salesmen, | “mother” rhymes with “lover.” That who sell everything from women's wear |art. That's real verse writing. Take this sample rooms in hotels for the display | of their products. There are among characters. Most folks who travel and see the world are worth listening to. though none the less amusing. There was @ time when the traveling man | bis skill as a story teller, and small- |town merchants. whose lives were change for & few light moments con- tributed by a breezy individual who of business A man who prides himself that he vesterday. All the hotel clerks know him who sells saxo- ([T FEWS ERE phones and trap [WERE TWo SCOTSMEN: | think the greeting- cardsalesman brass medal. I used | to sell 'em myself, Some of us used to carry side lines in firm usually did not know it, and it was ing an income that was all too small in_selling the pro- | prietor of a tiny stationery store. For birthday, Christmas and New Year cards and then a competitor cut in on “Now, a greeting card is merely a greeting_card to most people, and I fellow on. On one of my trips I dropped | in to see how he was and what I ““Don't want none was his manner of dismissing the subject | Addie” I replied. ‘These cards are : | different. We've got a whole new staff keep our home and hearthstone ! girls bat ‘em off bscause they're lit- | May you continue through the years | erary geniuses, They know their o be our cad and get three cheers.” now on the shelves. There isn't & line | rival is a knockout. Mothers are wild of literature in the whole works. Now about them: day.” That's an insult to any father.| My mother's pet, my father's joy. | This on eto ‘Dearest Mother' would 1 just arrived on Saturday. “‘Whoever heard of “further” rhvm- In this way I convinced old man ing with “mother”? My firm looked all | Addie that I had something unusual produce only the best for our trade. Now ' went into the hardware line.” | | . o 5 ~ ~ MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE || | | BY MOLLY MERRICK. HOLLYWOOD, Calif., August 29.— | purveyor of Winter fashion sank down | kit vie- | At & window table and gasped for air. | | There ts » general tendency in movie- | &t, 2, RdOR tRs 470 Besnel for A% | land to capitalize on the curlosity of | 4 masculine cynie in a soft shirt, “but the great American public. And one of | she's only half a jump ahead of apo- | the best ways is to sell your home to | Plexy - Ladies must attract attention in gel- some big butter-and-egg man and take | 48 O #UTEEL 8 e OF Renius to an apartment or just a plain stroke. As Autumn approaches, one after s4- | other of the stars who have lived along | I am reminded of the story of Ger-| the routes of the sightseeing busses are | (rude Ederle's arrival in Hollywood. A disposing of the great piles of masonr {sludm make-up man boarded the train that formerly have been part of the bus- | Some few stations earlier and prepared iness of “going Hollywood.” This Win- | her for the news picture ordeal. | .ter the apartment will be the thing| He dropped off one end of the train | among movie | &s the swimmer, he. rotund countenance | Pola Negri and Prince Mdivani were | reduced to full inch in diameter through | among the first to popularize the apart- | hi skill, dismounted from the other ment. Pola built her own. The Tal- [ Nobody was the wiser. and they were | | madge sisters frowned upon the idea |the best pictures of “Trudy" ever | { of the big home some time since. The | taken. Hollywood can fake a face any | hotel apartment has been their choice. | day. | And in their wake followed the blond | | Laura La Plante, who lives in quite the metropo'itan fashion out here La Ne i rented her Beverly Hills house and lived at the Ambassador Ho- tel before the urge to erect a large epartment building came upon her Alice Joyce returned to Moyieland to play the mother's parts she wisely af- fects these days. Two vears ago Alice | | Joyce built a beach house. which she | | has had time to occupy only three days. | { Yet one hears that a movie career gives ! Emil Jannings is living in the Hollv- | leisure and a taste of home life. | wood boulevard home of the older Tal- | madge sister—a huge edifice of some Along the boulevard in midday are | | or 30 rooms. with broad gardens and noticed the yachting caps. which nre\ a screen of palm trees the latest whim among the curly-haired And in the wake of these pioneers boys and curly-brained girls who imi- have followed quickly Mary Brian. |tate them | Evelyn Brent. Buddy Rogers, Doris| Scores of Latin types affecting the | | Dawson. Louise Brooks and Dorothy | V lentino make-up. That is not sur- | Mackaill prising. since Ullfi'nln. Rudy's former | | Greta Garbo has never gone in for manager, has announced that a film | | a home or for entertaining. She lives ! based on the life story of the star will | quietly at a Santa Monica hotel and |be started as soon as a true Valentino | confines her friends te the few pro- | type is found. | fessionals of her cholce | One Beverly hotel shelters quite a groupe of moviettes—Mary Duncan, | ducers to follow up a type discovered Sallie O'Neill, Marcelline Day, King by chance. When Edwin Carewe picked | Vidor, Fleanor Boardman and Lowell | Leroy Mason as a coming screen star, Sherman. | Mason was eating a ham sandwich at | | & boulevard lunch counter. Carewe It is customary in Hollywood for pro- | The bachelors have a club in Holly~ FEATURES.” Millions of Users ' Do you know why? A trial package will answer the question. 10c at your grocers "SALADA" “A sensible woman has got more | = T A ”me sense than a man, but no man has got as little sense as a fool woman.” even think of it! Don’t pay 30 cents for a half- pint of any liqu Insect- killer. Black Flag—the deadllest of all—ceosts only 23 cents for the same quantity. Black Flag wipes out every Insect pest that Invades your home. (VMioney back If 1t doesn’t prove so.) Twe forme, liquid and powder. Some prefer Riack Flag Liquid to kill fiying pests —files, mosquitoes, ete.~Black Flag Powder to kill crawling pests ~roaches, bed-bugs, fleas, ants, etc. Powder, 15 cents up. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. Everyday Law Cases I3 One Guilty of Fraud If Deception Could Easily Have Been Discovered? BY THE COUNSELLOR. Representing that he owned _his property free of mortgages, John Burr effected an exchange of property with Mr. Simpson, who gave Burr a deed to his farm in exchange. Soon thereafter Mr. Simpson dis- covered that Burr's property was en- cumbered by a mortgage for a large sum. He sought to regain title to his farm, but learned that Burr had sold it 10'a third party, who was innocent of the fraudulent transaction Burr was arrested and charged with fraud. His attorneys, in his defense contended that he could not be charged with fraud because the victim could have easily discovered the misrepre- sentation by making an examination of the land records. The court, overruling this defense stated “Inasmuch as laws are passed for the protection of the weak and credu- lous as well as the intelligent and prudent, the modern tendency is to consider, not whether the pretense was calculated to deceive a person of ordi- nary intglligence, but rather, whether, | in view of the victim's mental ability. it was devised to mislead and did. in fact. deceive the individual at whom it was directed.” 01928, A 7. G LiNOLEUM all of our stock is tn the AUGUST directed 1o this paper. provided a stampes addressed envelope is Inclosed THE DAILY HOROSCOPE " wood. And there is the refuge of the Hollywood Athletic Club for those un- married luminaries who find their morning mail clogged with pale pink envelopes. | o Douglas Fairbanks, jr., lives at Athletic Club. In faci, & peep ° its walls might thrill the heart- girl fans of creation the un, | i the made Mason a lead player opposite Del | Rio. But Mason made himself Carewe's | son-in-law when he cloped with blond Rita Carewe a few days ago. Sandwiches are no longer named for | stars. That vogue passed in Hollywood some years ago. One small eating place maintained the custom long after others | | exceedingly | will be Inclined to be drewm | tents | hreakfast | paper | water Thursday, August 30. Astrologers read LOmOITOW #s an un- favorable day, for a mulefic aspect s strongly dominant “There is a hint of serious dil attending new enterprises This 15 & rule under which deception and ndirection are supposed o be enconraged by the stars. It is well to be on the lookout for double dealing although, as a general thing, & suspicious attitude should be avoided Water cures again will be much ex- ploited and the health will be a subject of too inuch discussion, the seers declare While prevails, fMculties this planetary government both men and women may be sensitive to impressions They may imagine insults or slights where none has been intended. Astrologers stress the importance of maintaining a positive attitude of mind nd avoiding destructive or discouraging | thoughts. Mars will be in an elevated position that inspires European war lords to exert their power, astrologers predict Banks will continue subject to the best planetary direction, which will aid enterprise, |f the stars are rightly Interpreted Women are o rise to Important posi- tons in the financlal world, the seers predict, and they will become great conomlste, the planets seem to indicate Persons whose bBirth date it s have the forecast of w happy, proxperous ertain subjects of (his sign of 4y become prominent i the Government service, it s foretold. Children born on thet dey |:In:mlplv These wnd girls often are exceed- antic. Many have psychic and dramatiste belong o Virgo boy ingly 1o gifis, thix sign ) (Cowyiieht Special Dish of Spinach. Open & can of spinach, pour the con- o s colander, and let drain hall an hour Broil six jces of bacon and place brown in a warm place add one-fourth cupful of cold one-fourth cupful of pure vine- one teaspoontul of mustard, one poontul of salt sugar if liked, and a pinch of paprika When thoroughly blended and bub- bling, sdd the well dralned spinach, stirring constantly, and cook for about minutes, or until the spinach i well heated, Remove (o & hot platter with the gravy and garnish the top with strips of bacon, or sliced or grated eggs may be put around the sides, If preferred, fresh apinach may be used tor on y gar o % ‘There are more than 700,000 hooka in the National Library, City of Mexieo. To the bucon | one teaspoontul of | George (7 Brien. | ghandoned it. Strange mixtures were | assembled and honored with the names | of leading movie lights. am cheese and walnuts honored | Clair Windsor, but sandwich Pola Negri | had « dangerous dash of cayenne pe per. Restaurant men discovered they | couldi’t invent sufficient sandwiches to o around. Movie stars who were neg- | lected on the menus might feel offended or, worse still, their fan admirers regis- ter violent objections. And these parti- | SANs can wax more wrothy than the principals concerned, every time. Roland Drew, George K. Artaur, € | bert Roland, Paul Vincenti, Chester Bennett, Andrew Berange Montague | Love and a host of others like the added | privacy of the doorkeeper of u bach- | elorclub, Joseph Hergesheimer will Ronald Coleman story This actor's ‘12=»I picture came from the pen of Joseph Conrad. There were some Holly- ! wood alterations peshaps- but Conrad is no more. “Joe” Hergeshelmer. as he is affec- | tionately called in Hollywood, knows his movies. He may not know his story when it is in cellulold, but he will know how to spend the check A strange thing is the changing of a tale from written to visualistic art. O Henry has never been Incorporated into movies with any flavor of his charm Now that “talkies” have come there is a great scramble for the whimsical tales of this American writer write a Pola Negri says the reason of her unalloyed bliss with Prince Mdivani is because he s non-professional Charlie Chaplin thought too much about himself. Rudy Valentino had the professional's femperament, and Pola had a corner on that herself. Rod La Rocque had all the competitive draw- backs of an admirer in the same line of work ‘The present husband just princes for living. so all is serene. i Iw;vnh the thermometer well up toward | & bolling point, Hollywood boulevard y | bravely displays Winter fashions, And | Spesking of long hair, & great cry cinema Iadles saunter in to luncheon In | ¥ont Up about Mary Pickford's locks the weltering dignity of printed velyet | When she returned to Hollywood. But | frocks, double fox scarfs and Winter | the bobbed hair storles proved to be | chapeaux only half true Mury had merely succumbed to the thinning” which all French colffeurs Insist upon. France demands a sculp- | tural head and frowns upon anything ight hint of x wave, which it i | E Over today at Glendale Station Ruth | | Elder arrived to_open her Hollywood | movie “cureer, which will be & role {opporite Richurd Dix. She is chic |but the pretty. und nossessed of n degree of non- ;lnb«l« ‘ondule " They thinned out | { chulance, But more than one out of | Mary's superfluous locks and reduced [every five who arrive here huve that. | the size of the heavy coil at the back i | of her hen s s r | aust one jump Déhing Paris, mur. 'O JF head. 10 s sthl long hair mured w Hollywood enthusiast as one e AN | Asericen AFYER the hig dinner st 00N, you won't wang pre than a sandwich or a salad. Make it refresh- ing with But-R-N v lends spicy flavor the toast sandwich (use it in plac { buster). And it has a creamy stiff. ness in holding chopped fresh fruits together. It s lemon juice, yolks of fresh eggs speci pared, pure creamery but- ter, vegetable spices. . . . Butt-R-Naise in the pantry makes you always prepared. Fresh, in 30¢ gla s At your dealer’'s. Keep Relish Sandwich Spread on hand, 100, The Gelfand Mig. Co., Baltimor treat for the Sunday supper The Carpel Co. Washington, D. €. | Distributer GELFAND’S BUTT-I}-NAISE SALE L/o meet with modern requivements, the W. & J. Sloane Linoleum Company has created Linoleum patterns for every room in the home. There are quali- ties and designs for every require- ment, and Inlaid Linoleums start, in the August Sale, 5150 per iquare yavd G W. & J. SLOAN 709-711-713 TWELFTH ST., N. W., WASHINGTON, D. C. *“The House with the Green Shutters TN STORE OPEN FROM 9 A M. TO 500 P. M. DAILY, CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY Charge Accounts Convemsently Arvanged Sloane Endorsed Merchandise Carvies An Assur, of Satisfaction Experienced Advertisers Prefer The A A,