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WOMA N’S PAGE. Footwear for Bathing Ensembles BY MARY One may no longer think of bathing suits and accessories simply as things to wear in bathing or on the beach. They are that, of course, but they are also a very definite and important divi- ::;Dt; of the fashionable woman's ward- Footwear for your bathing ensembles must include two distinct types—sand=~ clogs for beach wear and high-heeled Tubber sandals for actual bathing. The HIGH - HEELED RUBBER BEACH SANDALS WITH YELLOW AND GREEN- TRIMMINGS: BEACH SANDALS OF NATURAL-COLOR- ED CANVAS WITH RED WOODEN SOLES; PAINTED ‘WOODEN SANDCLOGS WITH__LEATHER STRAPS AND FELT FLOWERS. sand-clogs are brightly painted to match or contrast with the . bathing | costume and the rubber sandals are also bright in hue. At some of the South- | ern resorts this Winter few women have | worn- beach costumes away from the MARSHALL. pools, but at other resorts women in beach pajamas and sand-clogs might be seen anywhere at almost any time of day. At Palm Beach a society woman whose name links two of the best-known for- tunes in the country caused some com- ment, of a good-natured sort, when she and a number of her friends motor- ed from the beach, where they had had their morning swim, wearing gayly col- ored silk pajamas and sand-clogs, ar- rived 8t a restaurant on one of the main streets, and there lunched in their pic- turesque attire. » There is something very tempting about these little gayly colored wooden sand-clogs even to the woman who has no thought of going to the shore for many weeks. Once you get the knack of walking in them you will find them most convenient to wear with neglige pajamas at home and you may even find a pair convenient for wear on an early morning ramble in your garden when the dew still is on the grass. Every woman needs two or three sleeveless blouses in her Spring ward- robe, to wear with two-plece suits, or sweater and_separate skirt ensembles. This week I have ready a diagram pat- tern for one of the new sleeveless blouses which is extremely easy to make. If you would like a copy with directions for making and_sketch of the original, T will be very glad to send it to you on receipt of your stamped, self-addressed envelope. (Copyright, 1929.) DAILY DIET RECIPE SALMON PIQUANTE. Salmon, 1 can. Onion, 1. Butter, 2 tablespoons. Flour, 2 tablespoons. Tomato catsup. Cold water, 2 cups. Salt, 1 teaspoon. Chili powder, %4 teaspoon. Toast, 6 slices. Serves Six People. Slice onion thin and simmer in the butter. Add flour, chili pow- der and salt. Brown slightly. Add water and catsup gradually, blending until smooth. Simmer 10 minutes. Add salmon which has been freed from bones. Heat thoroughly. Serve on toast. Diet Note. Recipe furnishes phosphorus, iodine, iron, lime, vitamins A and B. Fish is a protein food. Can be eaten by normal adults of average or under weight and by those wishing to reduce if amount of bread and butter are restricted at meal at which this recipe is taken. purlieus of the beaches or swimming WORLD FAMOUS STORIES A FAMILY HORSE BY FREDEICK S. COZZENS (Frederick Swartwout Cozzens, 1818-1869, :ul'l ::‘l’!-:m;;w)lnthumo?“. HDWDdhlll! read, ust as funny today as he must have been 10 our ancestors.) = ‘The horse had been very cleverly groomed. and looked pleasant under the saddle. The man led him back and forth before the door. The man said he was the brother of the former owner of the animal. “There, squire, 's as good a hoss as ever stood on iron.” I replied that he did szem to be a -looking animal. I asked him if ‘was a good feeder. I was told that he was. “Of course,” said he, “if your hoss is off his feed he ain’t good for nothin’. But what’s the use,” he added, “of me tellin’ you the pints of a good hoss? You're a hoss man, squire: you know—-" “It seems to me,” said I, “there is :t;metmn( the matter with that left e “No, sir,” sald he, and rapidly crook- ing his forefinger at the suspected an, sald, “see thar—don't wink a “But he should wink,” I replied. “Not onless his eye are weak,” he sald. To satisfy myself, I asked the man to let me take the bridle. He did so, and so soon as I took hold of it the horse started off in a remarkable retro- grade movement, dragging me with him into my best bed of hybrid roses. Finding we were trampling down all the best plants, and that the more I {mlled the more he backed, I finally et him have his own way, and jammed him stern-foremost into our - largest climbing rose, that had been all Sum- mer prickling itself in order to look as much like a vegetable porcupine as possible. ‘This_unexpected bit of satire in the rear of the horse changed his retro- grade movement to a sidelong bound, by which he flirted off half the pots on the balusters, upsetting my gladioli and tuberoses in the pod, and leaving great splashes of mold, geraniums and red pottery in the gravel walk., By this time his owner had managed to give him two pretty severe cuts with the whip, which made him unmanageable, 50 1 let him go. We had & pleasant time catching him agein, when he got among the lima bean poles. But his owner led him back with a wvery self-satisfied expression. “Playful, ain’t he, squire?” I replied that I thought he was, and asked him if it was usual for his horse to play such pranks. He said it was not. “You see, squire, he feels his oats, and hain't been out of the stable for a month. Use him, and he's as kind as a kitten.” With that he put his foot in the ! stirrup and mounted. The animal | really looked very well as he moved around the grass-lot, and, as Mrs. Spar- | rowgrass seemed to fancy him, I took a written guarantee that he was sound, , and bought him. What 1 gave for him | is a secret; I have not even told Mrs. Sparrowgra: There is one thing about early riding in the country: you find out a great many things which perhaps vou would | not have found out under ordinary cir- | cumstances, The first thing T found was that my horse had the heaves. I had been so wrapped up in the beauties of the morn- ing that I had not observed what per- haps everybody in that vicinity had ob- served, namely, that the new horse had been waking up all the sleepers on both sides of the road with an asthmatic ~whistle of half-a-mile power. My attention was called to the fact by the village teamster, old Dockweed, who came banging after me in his empty cart, shouting out my name as he came. Sparrygrass.” said he, as he came up. “that your hoss?” I replied that the horse was my prop- erty. “Got the heaves, ain’t bad.” And the new village before breakfast. 1 was so much ashamed that T took a roundabout road to the stable and in- stead of coming home like a fresh and gallant cavalier, on a hard gallop, I walked my purchase to the stable and dismounted with a chastened spirit. I had determined not to buy a car- riage until I had thoroughly tested my horse in harness. For this purpose I hired a Rockaway carriage. Then I put Mrs, Sparrowgrass and the young ones in the double seats and took the ribbons for a little drive. We had passed Chicken Island and the famous house with the stone gable and the one stone chimney in which Gen. Washington had slept. as he made it a point to sleep n every old stone house in the country. and had gone pretty far on the road when Mrs. Sparrowerass said sudden “Dear, what is the matter with yous horse?” T had been talking to the children, with my back to the road ahead. When 2 Got 'em d over the ner. He was going downhill with his nose close to the ground, running the wagon first on this side and then on the other. I thought of the remark made by the man, and turning again to Mrs. Sparrowgrass, said, “Playful, isn't he?” The next moment I heard something breaking away in front and then the Rockaway gave a lurch and stood still. Upon examination I found that the new horse had tumbled down, broken one shaft, gotten the other through the checkrein so as to bring his head up with a round turn, and besides had manzaged to put one of the traces in a single hitch around his off hind leg. So soon as I had taken all the young ones'and Mrs. Sparrowgrass out of the Rockaway, I set to work to liberate the horse, who was choking very fast with the checkrein. It is unpleasant to get your fishing line in a tangle when you are in a hurry for bites, but I never saw a fishing live in such a tangle as that harness. However, I set to work with a penknife and cut him out in such a way as to make getting home by our conveyance .impossible. When he got up, he was the slcepiest looking horse I ever saw. Mrs. Sparrowgrass stayed with the children while I sought the nearest farmhouse. I took the horse with me to get him out of the way of the chil- dren and went in search of assistance. ‘The first thing the new horse did when he got about a guarter of a mile from the scene of the accident was to tumble down a bank. Fortunately, the bank was not more than four feet high, but as I went with him my trousers were rent in a grieveus place. While I was get- g the new horse on his feet again I saw a colored person approaching, who came to my assistance., The first thing he did was to pull out a large jackknife end the next thing was to open the new horse’s mouth and run the blade two or three times inside of the new horse’s ms. Then the new horse commencec bieeding. I learned that he would have died otherwise: I learned that the new horse was afflicted with the blind staggers. Then I went back to the Rockaway, but met Mrs. Sparrowgrass and the children coming to meet me. She had left a man in charge of the Rockaway. ‘When we got to the Rockaway, we found the man missing, also the whip and one cushion. We got another person to take charge of the Rockaway and had a pleasant walk, home by moonlight. Does any person want a horse at a low price? A good, stylish-look'ng mal, close-ribbed, good loin and good stifle, sound legs, with only the heaves and blind staggers and a slight defect in one of his eyes? If at any time he slips his bridle and gets away, you can approach him by getting on his ide. I will also engage to give a written guarantee that he is sound and kind, signed by the brother of his for- mer owner. Living Your Own Life. A modern and a momentous phrase, this: Living your own life. Can you do {1t? Perhaps in a moment of despair, or, it may be, of high resolve, you used those words in protest of yearning: “I i want to live by own life.” What did you mean? In that desire we seem to touch the very heart of living and feel the pulse beats of the self way down. It isn't | easy to tell what we mean by it. and | we wouldn't care to discuss it with any | sympathy. It touches upon values so precious as to be sacred. ‘The expression is most commonly one of protest. When coerced by circum- | stances, when oppressed by conventions, | when weighed by obligations, when out of adjustment with family or career, ! when torn between ‘dutv and desire, we seek justification in that cry of the stricken soul: “I want to lead my own life.” 1It's & noble cry, though no less a distressed one, and voices the convic- tion of the happiness through self-di- | rection, making psychological freedom ||hP supreme value. To attain a meaning. however, it must somehow be embodied in a pro- gram: it must be more than a protest, jmore. than a sentimental vearning, more than a vague desire. It has been said: | “Fortunate are thev who want things, {for when they get them they are !'happy”; but it is truer that fortunate | are fhey who know what thev want, for if free to follow that pursuit they are on the road to happiness. What most we feel are the restrictions and thwartings, the futilities and empti- ness; like wearing a tight shoe—the mere relief from its pressure is' an in- I turned about, I found the new horse behaving in a most unaccountable man- tensive joy. Yet how few of us can lead our own THE EVENING OUR CHILDREN LY ANGELO PATRL A New Camp. Summer camp is a part of the chil- dren’s education. It is mnot, it ought not to be, a cheap way of disposing of | troublesome_charges for the Summer vacation. The children profit by a sea- son away from home. And parents get a better prospective of their children by parting with them for this period. Of course city children need the country. The woodsy camps;, the sea and the forests and the sky are new experiences for them and they have to have them if they are to be well round- ed children. Country children need camps for the other reason. They need to associate with a group of stranger children so as to learn to meet many kinds of people and to get along well with them. Getting along well with them means that they give the strangers the best side of themselves and get that quality from the stranger in return. That little exchange is what makes the world go round in smiling peace. I am heartily for Summer camps. But there are camps and camps. I haven't forgotten that new camp idea that I mentioned last year, It is fine to go to_the bills, to the sea, to the open country Wherever one can manage to meet it. But the older boys and girls need to stretch their horizon a little. Many a Summer camp is another form of school. There are the lessons a fellow failed in last term to be made are recitation bells, swim- | setting-up dril's—school all over again. A fellow gets very weary of that. When the eternal hills arc calling, when the waters Jap the beach with their come, come, come, when the | birds call in the deep forest, when dreaming clouds cast ficeting shadows | over the still mountain’s slope, how can a fellow go cheerfully to last term'’s neglected Latin? It is not in nature. And a base ball contest—or a moving p!cl\“’e show—in a camp? Not my idea at_all. Suppose you were 15 and your lungs were soundyand your heart like a tide- beat, your legs sturdy and your shoes good, and the weather fine. And sup- pose you found yourself in the New England hills with enticing landmarks all about you? Which would you rather do? Follow the bells or the brown road? Which would you rather do? Root for the ball team or visit Boston Harbor? Take a look at the North Church Tower or do your afternoon coaching lesson? Would you rather make a pi'grimage to storied places, to beautiful spots, to historical shrines, traveling on your good feet with occasional boat rides, train trips and motors, seeing things ond feeling out a new world—or stay in the camp repeating old experiences? There ought to be degrees for camp- ers. Beginners must be broken into hiking, scouting, sports of the woods, and the like. But the older lads who have covered that ground need to get out on the road and broaden their hori- | zons, Let's go to camp with this new | idea. (Copyright, 1929.) JABBY “This fella says no one seems to un- derstand him—he should be glad of it.” (Copyright, 1929.) O;ef'- thefi Seas.r ‘i —— - 0 The gentle Spring will soon be here, and brisk announcements now appear, from damsels scarcely sane, that when | the Winter says goodby they'll board their trusty planes and fly to England | or to Spain. Again in public prints we'll read the yarns that make our bosoms bleed, that make our spirits sore, con- cerning maids who fly away to land in Holland or Cathay, and then come back no more. A thousand ships will search the seas for missing damozels like these and find no clue or trace; their tragic | fate will not be known until the final trump is blown to end the human race. I often wonder why it is that girls are thus aliowed to whiz on trips inviting decom; is there no father in control to chide them with a 10-foot pole, or lock them in their room? Is there no mother who will cry, “I shall not let my daughter fly across the seven seas; my girls will stay at h~me, T wot, and keep the cookstove good and hot, and shell the early peas.” Is there no sweet and | saintly aunt who will announce, “My ! nieces shan’t as aviators shine; they shall not try to soar abroad if they'd | inherit the small wad that I've put down in brine.” When some fair maid | sets forth her plan of flying off to far | Japan, regardless of expense, 1 marvel | that she scems the boss: her parents are a total loss, her friends display no sense. They wish her Godspeed when she goes, but they should hide her fly- ing clothes and strive to make it clear that making pies is better far than sail- KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY JOSEPH JASTROW. one with whom we are not in close | ing in a flying car to t'other hem- isphere. ‘WALT MASON. lives, largely because we are caught or have allowed ourselves to be enmeshed in a tangle of circumstances. No sooner free from one -entanglement than we slip into another. At the worst, when there scems no way out, tragedy im- pends: and the value of life itself is questioned. One need not be much of a Hamlet to contemplate shuffing off this mortal coil. Serious as is this reflection, however —and there is none more so—the wish is in many instances more of a gesture than a resolution. For Hamlet it was sicklied o’er by the vale cast of thought. For most of us it is only the drab re- flection of emotional maladjustment. It is as often the expression of a lack in |1ife as of an oppression. Somehow. for one or another of the great values of living, we have lost out; we have drawn a blank. It is wise, but it isn’t very comforting, to urge con- ltent with the small prizes; for we have set our hearts on the big ones. There is much to be said on both sides for accepting the second best, or for re- jecting it. You can't live your own life, because living it depends so deeply on the others in your life; you cannot be sufficient to yourself. Let fortune smile or the fairy wave her wand and place your way of living completely in vour hands and the chances are that you wouldn't know what to do with the gift. If you are yourse!f and harbor no seriously disturbine conflicts, you are living vour own life and your trials and tribulations are an intimate part of it. Life is a problem for these who take it seriously and the essence of a life problem is that there is never a STAR. WASHINGTON, belt buckle to break its lines, The Sidewalks A guest with mediocre skill in so- called reading of cards or palms can stir up interest, if not enthusiasm, in any group. The performer points out to us the idiosyncracies with which we are familiar, or, if not, we are flattered to belleve we possess. To be told that we possess a strong character, ideals, talents and are loved by a beautiful woman is something that no man re- sents. We are “titkled” when the cards inform us that we are not appreciated and that fame and fortune are just around the corner. We will meet a dark stranger, per- haps, who will have good news for us. That same day & dark - complexioned friend informs us that we are looking exceptionally well. Lo, the cards win. Within the last few years some in- genious souls have devised question charts which, when honestly answered by the fortune seeker, are sup- posed to provide & fairly accurate ap- praisal of said seeker's character. Some of the questions are rather absurd. The other night a family group told each other’s fortunes by means of the chart system. One of the questions was, “Do you pay more attention to other peo- ple’s business than your own?” Obvi‘- ously. most decent folks would say, “No.” Another question was, “Are you amused when other people make fools of them- You are rated according to your answers. By turning to page whatsis you will find a number under which your character is revealed. ‘We, therefore, offer our own chart, so that by a little questioning and an- swering the reader may learn what he or she may already know about himself or herself. Remember, you must an- swer the questions honestly. If out of the following five questions you answer three in the negative you will find your- self to be one of high ideals. Moreover, you are extremely fond of squirtless grapefruit. Your family is fond of you and Tuesday is your lucky day. You are fond of dogs and keep a pet canary, which sings “Over There every afternoon at 3 o’clock. The questions follow. Answer them honestly and fearlessly. Itis well to check them “Yes” or “No.” Do you like bananas? If so, what dif- WE WILL MEET A DARK STRANGER- YOu KEEP A PET CAMARY WHO SINGS. “OVER THERE " ference does it make? Are you particularly perturbed at the price of prunes? Do you walk in your sleep, and if so, where do you go? Are you troubled at times by the hallucination that you are Napoleon Bonaparte? * kK x The next group of questions is for the ladies. In this case, if three of the questions are answered in the af- firmative you are of an exceedingly loving disposition. Your husband an- noys you by wearing red ties and drop- ping ashes on the new Orlental rug. dirt per minute than any other cleaner. And you can get a Hoover for as little as $59.50. complete solution. You live as you solve. If you can be yourself, you are living your own life, (Copyzight, 1929 | You had many chances of marryingall the rest. D. C. WEDNESDAY, MARCH ' 27, 1929. PARIS.—Flares are placed so low and occur so abruptly on some of Lucien Lelong's Spring dresses that they accentuate the slender silhouette instead of breaking it. A blue dress with the Lelong bell skirt has a crystal an d_silver RITA. of Washington BY THORNTON FISHER. a better man and often tell him so. You are either a soprano or contralto singer and play a fair game of bridge. You are fond of good clothes, fine auto- mobiles and do your own housework. Check the answers. What letter in the alphabet appeals most to your esthetic taste? Explain in two words why. Do you like to listen to your next door neighbor's radio at 2 o'clock in the morning? What difference does it make? Does non-skid soap rouse you to mirth? * ok K X The third chart is a trifle more dif- ficult. Consider the questions very carefully before answering. If all of the five answers are in the affirmative you are sitting on top of the world. You should not try to recite in the presence of strangers or sing in a crowded street car. A person of this type should carefully avold visiting the Cannibal Islands and devote his time to stamp collecting. If the questions are answered in the negative, consult a physician at once. On what day of the year do you prefer a total eclipse? Is it true-that you are still beating your wife (or husband)? Are you bothered by inhibitions more on Fridays than Mondays? What is your favorite name begin- ning with the letter B? If you were running for a street car and fell down and went boom, would you get up and thank the conductor or run around and throw stones at the motorman? By answering these questions serious- ly you will feel very foolish for the next 24 hours. Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. March 27, 1801—The sporting season opened today, along with the circus, and | “there are scenes of sawdust and arnica | in the land,” as one of the local news- paper writers expresses it. In the matter of professional sports, base ball has taken the lead, and the | players are busy preparing for a lively | and long season ahead of*them. The bicyclists have come out in new and gay uniforms and, as The Evening Star puts it, “sheir thin but rapidly moving legs can be seen dashing over asphalt pavements every afternoon.” “From the present.outlook,” adds The Star, “the fashion in bicycling uniforms will be of the gaudiest and the boys are going to cut the swells on wheels.” The boat clubs, which provide the other most popular amateur sport in this city besides bicycling, are prepar- ing soon to begin their activities. They are getting their boats in condition and expect to spread over the river in this vicinity, as usual, in pleasure jaunts and sporting races. A new amusement in this city is roller-skating. This is the peculiar province of the younger element. The streets are crowded with boys and girls every fine day on rollers. There are still other signs of Spring. At noon today the District Commission- ers opened bids for a gate-chamber and sluiceway for a new carp pond to be constructed at the foot of Seventeenth s.reet; also for the removal of the old canal wall on the west side of the earp pond. which lies above the floor of the pond, and the rip-rapping of the river | front on the south bank of the pond, | the same to be replaced by stone from the old canal wall. The canal wall is to be consTucted of conerete, lined with brick, on a foun- dation of “hydraulic cement concrete.” ‘The ponds when completed will cover an area nt&q‘v’_ acres and will add ma- terially to the work of the Fish Com- mission in this city. Congress has pro- vided the money for the work, which will be under the superintendency of the city engineers. Water is being let into the lowest level of the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal today at Georgetown and tomorrow boats are expected to arrive there from up-river loaded with coal, lumber and farm produce. NANCY PAGE Checse Souffle Is a Spring- time Dish. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Lois was planning a Springtime din- ner for Roger. She wanted it to be good, from start to finish; not too heavy and varied in texture and flavor from course to course. She had learned that a meal which had one course after an- other with a decided flavor in each course was poorly planned. She found, too, that a soft meal where nothing re- quired any chewing was most monoto- nous, Two creamed dishes did not be- long in the same meal, nor did two pasiry dishes. A patty shell and a pie are not good companions in a well chosen dinner. ‘This is her menu: Potato and Leek Soup. Cheese Souffle. French Rolls. Orange and Green Pepper Salad. Rhubarb Tarts. Coffee. Her souffie was easily made. She chose the recipe which calls for a small amount of granulated tapioca. ~This kept the souffle from falling and gave it a certain body. This is her recipe: ‘Three tablespoons granulated tapioca, one cup milk, one cup grated cheese, three eggs, one teaspoon salt, one-eighth teaspoon dry ‘mustard, one teaspoon ‘Worcestershire sauce, a few grains pepper. Put milk and tapioca in upper part double boiler. Cook until taploca is transparent. Add grated cheese, sea- sonings. Cool and add egg yolks, mix well, fold in stiffly beaten whites, bake in casserole in oven of moderate heat, 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Bake slowly for 50 minutes. Serve at once. WHY WE DO WHAT WE DO BY MEHREN K. THOMSON. Hate and revenge re usually re- garded as immoral. That is due to the fact that times have changed. Time was when these traits were regarded as most valuable and were richly re- warded by society instead of being pun- ished, as now. In the primitive, tribal condition of savage life, anger, hate and revenge were regarded as highly moral, because they benefited the group. These emo- tions were directed against the enemies of the tribe and helped it to survive. Such traits made the warriors of the tribe better fighters, causing enemies to beware of them. But when the tribe developed into a very large nation, anger hate and re- venge became directed against members of the same nation. This was decidedly injurious, instead of beneficial, a be- fore. They worked against the group. Consequently, they were stamped as im- moral and came under the general so- cial ban, the list of taboos. Moreover, these traits have lost their usefulness for purpeses of protection to the group:™ Policemen and courts were established to accomplish the functions previously relegated to anger, hate and revenge in the individual. But even now it is considered a moral obligation to hate an enemy in war. ‘This shows clearly the origin and use of the traits. Perhaps some one will point out how inconsistent modern soclety is. We do everything in our power to weed out, kill and destroy hate and revenge in the individual by the combined force of all our social institutions of the home, the church, the government, and But on a sudden, we enter Where else than in The Hoover can you find, instead ot simple surface-cleaning suction, three cleaning principles combined—suction for the removal of surface dust, sweep- ing to gather up the thread and lint and beating to dislodge and flutter to the surface the wedged-in grit? Before you buy ‘any cleaner, telephone for a home dem- onstration of The Hoover. Learn why it removes more e HOOVER 1t BEATS ... o3 (1Sweeps asit Cleans LANSBURGH &BRo 7th, 8th and E Sts.—Franklin 7400 ,1 a war and seek to cultivate the thing we have been working so hard to de- stroy. But these inherited traits do not die out easily. It will take many centuries before any progress is made in eliminat- ing such fundamental traits as hate and revenge. The price of progress is a long period of strain and modification of atavistic human traits. (Copyright, 1629.) Maple Apple Sauce. Prepare two quarts of apples by par- ing, coring and cutting them into eighths. Mix the applies with one and one-half cupfuls of maple sirup, and one lemon sliced and cut into quarters. Bake in a covered earthenware dish in a medium oven for several hours until the apples are tender and of a rich dark red color. Use as a meat accompani- HAWKINS Street” 1529 14th St. NW. Dec. 3320 ow to remove, Make-Up Every trace of rouge and powder—even heavy stage make-up—is easily removed from the pores by Black and White Cleansing Cream. Such effective cleansing makes this light, pure cream the choice of theatrical stars and of dis- criminating women eve: where who value and desire to retain complexion beauty. Try it tonight! BLACK=s\WHITE Cleansing Cream lit is the color of the hair or the skin FEATURES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS A request has come from one of my | readers for an article on different types of coloring. She wants to know whether tints that class a person as a blonde or brunette? There are many degrees of blande- ness and brunetteness, but for conven- ience they may be divided into the fol- lowing groups: Blondes. First. True blondes, with golden hair, pink and white skin and blue, gray or brown eyes. Second. Pale blondes, with golden hair, pale white or ivory skins and biue, gray or brown eyes. The difference be- tween this and the first type is in the complexion. Third. The titian blonde, with red dish-gold hair, white or ivory skin 2nd eyes of blue, gray or brown. Fourth. The medium blonde, with light or medium brown hair, medium complexion and eyes of blue, gray or brown. This is the commonest type of blonde, often called ashen or drab brown. Fifth. The olive blonde, with fair, medium or light brown hair, dark skin inclined to sallowness and blue, gray or brown eyes. There is sometimes a reddish or sandy tinge in the hair. Brunettes. First. Fair-skinned type, with dark or medium brown hair and dark blue, gray or brown eyes. Second. Medium-skinned type, with dark, medium brown or black hair and eyes of dark blue, brown or gray. Third. Florid brunette, with fair skin and very rosy cheeks, medium brown or | {black hair and blue, brown or gray eyes. Fourth. Auburn brunette, with chest- nut or auburn hair, medium or ivory skin and eyes of brown, blue or gray. Fifth. Olive brunette, with dark brown or black hair, brown or black eyes and olive skin with some color. Sixth. Black-haired type, with clear olive skin, good color, black hair and dark eye: Of course, there are many fine de-| grees of coloring between these types. | I have not mentioned green or hazel eyes, but consider them as included between the brown and the gray. It is not always easy to classify some types. For example, an individual with medium skin, medium brown hair and blue eyes might be placed in the second group of brunettes or in the fourth group of blondes. according to the clas- sification just given. Perhaps it would | | be more accurate to have three groups | instead of just the two, the third being intermediate and including all types | with a combination of medium or dark skin with light brown or medium brown hair. MENU FOR A DA BREAKFAST. Preserved Pears. Bran with Cream. Baked Eggs. Date Muffins, Coftee. LUNCHECN. Tettuce. sian Dressing. Coffes. Jellv. Whipped Cream. Black Chocolate Cake. Tea. DINNER. Clear Soup. Broiled Pork Chops. Lyonnaise Potatoes. Creamed Cauliflower. Raw Carrot Salad. French Dressing. Cocoanut Custard Coffee. BAKED EGGS. Butter _individual ramekin dishes. Break each egg info cup and drop into baking dish. Sprinkle with salt and pepoer and place dish in pan of hot water and bake in moderate oven 5 minutes for soft and 10 for hard cooked. Chopped red or green pepper sprinkled over top of baked egg is delicious. BLACK CHOCOLATE CAKE. Cream 1 cup butter, add 1'> cups sugar and cream again, add beaten volks 4 eggs, 4 ounces chocolate dissolved in 5 table- spoons boiling water, 12 cup milk, 114 cuvns flour mixed and sifted with 2 level teaspoons baking powder, 2 teaspoons vanilla and finally fold in stiffly beaten whites. Bake in moderate oven and frost when cool. COCOANUT CUSTARD PIE. Beat 2 eggs slightly, add 3 tablespoons sugar, lg teaspoon salt and 112 cups milk. Line plate with paste, and build up fluted rim. Strain in mixture and sprinkle shredded cocoanut and few gratings nutmeg. Bake in quick oven at first to set rim, de- crease heat afterward, as egg and LEEDS. Pet: You would look well, I think, in the new bright blues, also in browns, tan, medium and dark greens, pastel pinks, old rose, gray, beige, pale yellow, soft medium _blues, biue-violet, purple. cream and black. Permanent waves do not last longer than a few months. Sometimes hot oil treatments will help restore them. Of course, the new hair that grows in is straight. The waves stay in some types of hair longer than in others. Have your hair water-waved or finger-waved. You may use a curl- ing fluld to keep the wave in when using cold curlers. The only way to get rid of the blackheads is to wash your skin well every night with soap and water. Be very careful to rinse off 2l the soap and dry carefally. Next pat in a lotion made of equal parts of glycerin, rose water and witch-hazel. ext morring wash your face in cold water, dry and apply the lotion again. An Unhappy Girl: The best advice T can give you is to see a doctor and ask him to plan a reducing program for you. Excessive overweight is sometimes due to some internal disturbance that requires medical attention. Sport shoes in Oxford styles and light colors would help make your feet seem larger. A Constont Watcher: Do not try to lose weight too quickly, my dear. Two pounds a week is as fast as it is advis- able to lose. You should consult a doc- tor about your reducing program. Do not take reducing drugs unless he so advises. I do not plan reducing pro- grams for growing girls because I feel that what reducing they do should be supervised by a physician. You need a well balanced diet in order to develop “Looks as if it just came from the store” Mrs. S. W. Hoffman of Chicago knows how to keep her furniture clean and gleaming. She uses &Cedn—on floors and woodwork “I have used O-Cedar Mops and Polish for geveral years. The mop s the only one T've found that will enable me to reach all the dust on floors. It goes under low radi- ators and pieces of furriture—and into close corners because of its tri shape. A little O-Cedar Polish on a damp cloth keeps furniture looking as if it had just arrived from the store. Wonderful for Tindow sill, too—guards against weather 8) " New improved O-Cedar Polish | Mops have removable pad which can be easily washed and renewed with O-Cedar Polish. Mops, 75¢, $1, $1.25, $1.50. Polish, 4-o0z. bottle, 30c; 12 oz., 60c; quart, $1.25. Get them today at hardware, depart- ment, grocery, drug and other stores. O-Cedar Corp'n, Chicago, IlL THE HECHT CO. ' “F Street at Seveath” | Features a Complete Line of milk in combination need to be cooked at low temperature. O’Cedar Mops ~and vPo!is}{cs | Quick relief for COLDS since 1889 Her sad confession “Dear Diary,” she wrote, “my cold is no better. I am so miserable. Haven't been down to work fora week. Maybe my job is gone. Have done just about everything for this cold. But I'm worse. Can’t even go to Alice’s party. And I bought the blue dress specially for it. Isn’t life just too devastating!” What a pity that everyo ne does not know what a ’powerful weapon against colds is obtainable in al drugstores! In large cil France or in Brazil, GROVE'S BROMO are easy to take, pleasantly laxative, in preventing and correcting colds . ty and small town, in e standard prescription is UININE. The tiny tablets s e gudnlirfl emphasize leg\glES, in asking for GROVE'S RO! MO QUININE. Price 30c. GROVE’! BROMO QUININE LAXATIVE TABLETS