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Gradually foreheads have come back into fashion and the woman who has & smooth, fair brow 18 as much admired nowadays as she was in early Vie- torian days. To be sure, one still sees well dressed women with hair arranged in bangs of some sort or with side- g:rud hair looping down on the fore- ad, but the prevailing type of mil- linery makes such an arrangement 41'1%; fashion, but rather more of the fore- is seen was the case a year ago_and many of new hats are made to show quite a patch of fore- head on one side—but drawn down on the brow at the other side. And if you would wear ycur new hats in a way that Paris approves you must not let one single hair show at the front. In order to make sure of this the simplest arrangement is to brush the hair well back from the forehead. Ears are, as one hairdresser puts it, “optional.” If you' have very nicely shaped ears and a face that is neither too broad nor too thin, you will find the coiffure shown uppermost in the sketch well worth trying, and with a hat that 3fs closely down at the side of the head you will find it convenient not to have earlocks to contend with. Eut there really never was a time when a woman might arrange her hair in such a wide variety of styles and still not look quaint or eccentric. Every woman really needs a number of purses and handbags, because it is really important to have the bag har- monize quite definitely with the rest of the ensemble. If you would like a bag to match a frock you are making or would like a bag and scarf set, you will find it not at all difficult to make a bag yourself. This week’s help for the home dressmaker shows how this may be done—with the aid of a strip Foreheads Are Now in Fashion BY MARY MARSHALL. HELD WITH DIAMOND PINS. would like the circular, please send me a stamped, self-addressed envelope and of patent fastening, some ribbon or silk and a little canvas for interlining, If I will send it to you at once. (Copyright, 1920.) WHY WE DO WHAT WE DO BY MEHRAN K. THOMSON. ‘The so-called bad boy constitutes a real tragedy because he is not a bad boy at all. His incorrigibility arises from an exaggerated development of the childish impulses of independence. It is this impulse gone to seed that gets the boy into trouble. In itself the trait is most laudable. Unfortu- nately it sometimes takes a most ugly attitude toward parents and teachers and society in general. ‘This peculiarity is taken to be & sure sign of badness and the boy is started on a career of crime by ignorant and unsympathetic parents and police officers. A great many of the bad boy's pranks are nothing but the extreme manifestation of the spirit of daring and courage and independence that crops out in middle childhood and early adolescence. The boy breaks windows, tears down his neighbor's gate, steals fruit, and does a lot of other things, not because he is bad and wants to destroy property, but because he wants to impress his gang with his skill and courage. The boy who can chew the biggest quid of tobacco and spit the blackest and farthest is hailed as hero in his gang. Boys of this age admire strength and deeds of daring above all else. They will have nothing to do with weaklings who do not share their feelings. The Boy Scout and other boys’ clubs meet the need of such boys to some extent. But they fail to interest the real bad boys. An e ced officer of juvenile delinquents, in a private interview, stated that the parents were responsible for the boys’ delinquency In over 90 per cent of the cases. It is a pity that the superior quali- ties in boys are not more often directed in the proper channels of business and social service. The most daring and resourceful criminals are developed from such bad boys, who might have] become captains of industry if properly handled. ‘The boy’s impulse of daring, which so often gets him into trouble, is like electricity or fire, which are forces of great good as well as harm. Every- thing depends on how they are directed and controlled. Modern criminologists are almost unanimous in their belief that there is no criminal class, that there is no such thing as a born erim- inal. All criminals are made through unfortunate circumstances and r en- vironment, bad associations and unwise handling. Perhaps society will some day dis- cover a way to save the intelligent bad boys and thus enrich the life of society by restoring to it many gifted and daring spirits. Straight Talks to Women About Money Ronnel Ronnell and Pritty Polly with Lovey Darling, Barly Duke and Valencia . The Green Parrit and Pritty Polly, nuthing doing. Im haunt sed, and ma sed, Well I have & better ideer anyway, they have a tawking picture at the New Palade, its called Loves Ransom. pop t in the News of the Day and everything was tawking, and AND | they was showing battleships firing guns and you could heer them plane as anything, and the battleships went off and it sed, New London, Conn., Napo- leon, a Parrit with a Vocabulary of 130 Vallence. ‘This way_out, pop sed. ted, he Ab, a good old fashioned title, sed. And we went there and went and they was showing words. Come on lets go, pop sed. And he got up and ma pulled his coat tale to b make him sit down, and peeple in back sed, Down in: frunt, down please, and the parrit came on the picture and started to say all sorts of things in a fearse voice, Pop shutting his eyes and putting his fingers in his ears, and the rest of the show there wasent anything more about parrits and pop gradually looked more satisfled but not intirely, Your Baby and Mine MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED, We all admit that there is a great difference in babies. One baby will, from the day of his birth, adjust him- self easily to his surroundings, be stolid and placid, sleep long hours day and night, cry infrequently and react slow- ly to emotional impressions. Another baby, perhaps in the same household, will sleep hardly ever, develop large pains for small causes and shake and tremble over the slightest noises. At once ~we dzslgnrz him a “nervous child” and probably give him a repu- ml‘l( which he will keep the rest of e. Our very treatment of him will com- | plicate his nervousness, He will devel- op one or many nervous habits and because we have become accustomed to expect nervousness in him, we label them so, and do not dream of trying to teach him' better control. The mother, in fact the whole household, may be inclined to be frightfully upset over these nervous habits. If he vomits when he doesn’t want to eat, we immediately tell him that he can’t stand that kind of food, and next time we’ll find our 1t stand out. ‘Which Type Are You? A profound student of human nature in health and disease, whose name I won't mention, nor the terms that he uses, regards most of his fellow human specimens as belonging to one or other of two types. Let us call them X and Y. Each represents a number of varie- ties, but despite the variety they belong to a common type. Among the X people are such as “the ay chatter-box.” These talk loudly, reely, cheerfully; they play and they drink and they smoke; they are lively, good natured, not very sensitive; they are comfortable, animated. This X man may be “a quiet humor- ist,” who on occasion lights up and tells a good story; he makes friends easily; he lives and lets live. And again, he may be a “silent good-tempered man,” yet a good fellow, sympathetic, and at peace with mankind; or he may be a “happy enjoyer of life,” satisfled with his station: simple, not very deep, not much of a thinker, liking the good things of the flesh and sipping pleasures as _he goes. He may be the “energetic, practical man,” liking to be busy with many little jobs, dabbling in all sorts of things, especially something new; even tem- pered, compromising, quite sure of him- self always. One and all, these people belong to the X type, which is perhaps PARIS.—There are fewer taffeta robes de style, it is true. ines rose pink and black taffeta in a girl's dance frock. A pink ends in a huge bow with long ends, There is horsehair under the IAMI'! to KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY JOSEPH JASTROW. heavy u] ergy. School pressed hard.wgometmnc to give, so Jessie's guardian angel, old Mother Nature, closed the gates of |are to apply them to the best her mind and sald, “Go play, my child. | advantage. As I said above, the skin Play and will | must cleansed. U insing grow. ‘Tomorrow we st L* Give him & rest. Many a time you can bridge a bad time like this by cutting down the school hours, Arrange with the teacher to cut down lesson time by it 15 neither too dry nor too ofly, apply make-up directly cleansing cream, Apply the rouge a little at a time, lwt&lncyw!lmfmmsumluu you do s0. Do not let any rouge come . |on your cheek as far down as the lobes of the ears; keep it on the upper part ‘The teacher may teach a|of your cheeks, but do not let it spread new case in arithmetic. Some get it|to the temples. The rouge should be quickly and some do not, and the applied in an inverted, triangular form, teacher says, “Now you children who |the curved base of the triangle coming were right do this set of examples. I'll junder the eye and the apex pointing work with the other children,” and downward and inward toward the chin. these high-strung children, these ner-|All edges should be blended to avoid vous ones, bend to the task. Perhaps|harsh lines. Experiment with the ey need to do in order to fix the gl‘.’u:in( of the apex of the triangle. Note idea is a couple of examples, but they W your face seems narrower when the work on until the end of the period.|apex is brought near your nose and R ‘They are tired when the bell rings, but | wider when it is carried back toward through the | the angle of your jaw. day experfencing just the same rou-| Now dust on your face powder, using tine. &he high-strung child suffers | it sparingly and smoothing it downward while the more stodgy one saves him- self by proceeding slowly, doing a third alm the amount of work in same e, ‘Then if your child is getting nervous, either the X or the Y, although our/if his work seems to be falling off al- tendencies certainly veer more one way | though the child is trying hard to keep than the other. We still are X men or | up, see the teacher and plan to have Y men, but as X men we have some of | the pressure of work lifted for a time | the redeeming (or handicapping) traits|and see what pens. of Y men, and vice versa. ‘When Jessie was relieved of school All this may be a tough bit of psy-| pressure for a month she was as eager chology, but it is a useful one. It is| for school as in the beginning and lost important to recognize that we differ, | no time in making up her work. It is| yet differ not hapi rdly but accord- | not always necessary to take such chil- ing to make-up. We sit in various|dren out of school. Just try adjusting pews, in two churches that in many | the pro’nrn a little, cut down the respects oppose each other. Without| hours of ork and increase the play telling the whole tale, let it be said|time. Health comes first. will that these types are evolved from a| keep a while. band of MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. large study of cases of mental disorder. (Copyright, 192 'I‘}’mb shnlul?s not l(rlga:en lnybotliy ‘The [RTORe iR e T abnormal only the normal exag- gerated. It magnifies and distorts ten- | DOCtOr Says Diet dencies which we all share. The hu- man differences remain. And, last, with this difference in mental make-up is apt to go a difference in bodily make-up, in constitution. Caesar mis- trusted Cassius because he had “a lean and hungry look.” Cassfus was & ¥ man, but so were many of the world's great in many lines. (Copyright, 1929.) New York's proposed elevated high- |of humanity is concerned, it does open way canal to Pifty-ninth street will cost 000,00 Colors Our Eyes An extremely interesting question has been brought up in the announcement recently made by a doctor in Chicago that the color of the human eye is in- fluenced by the diet. This doctor says that his experience in treating eyes has shown that the color can be changed by a change in food. Whether this is correct or not, so far as the general run the way for considerable speculation and for further study and researc! 1 8 clean 80 that the facial = . 1 3 TR i color on vas and blend it toward finger, I mouth is large, keep the color- wit the natural edges of the lips, but: if it is small let the color come a trifis over the edges. The last step is to remove excess. powder from the eyebrows and lashes. { | with a small eyebrow brush. (Copyright, 1929.) Spring Sandwiches, Slice some white bread in ¥;-inch; slices and butter well. Carefully wash and drain well some young watercress and divide it into sprigs. Spread thick- ly on the buttered bread, sprinkle with salt and fold. Butter thin slices of. white bread and cover with thin of crisp white mm Test n?: radishes to be 1:““! 'y are peppery or stringy. Place in the tor to crisp. Very tender young cabbage can be used in the same way, mixed with boiled dress- ing and with or without the butter. Slice some stale bread very thin and dip it in Prench salad dressing which has been put in a deep dish. At the same time marinate some cold aspara- gus stalks in the dressing after cutting the stalks into small pieces. Slice some. bread a little thicker, carefully place: the marinated bread and asparagus on. these slices, then fold. There just isn’t any other flavor like it! Fine bam . . . cooked en casserole. Choice spices ++. blended as no one else knows how. That’s all there is to Underwood Deviled Ham. But it makes the best sandwich you ever ste. UNDERWOOD Deviled Ha the more common and the nearest to | normal. Y | ‘When you come to the Y type all is | changed. If the X type is uncompli- | BYMARY ELIEABETH ALIXN expectations that he can’t being realiz- ed. If the child controls himself, noth- exhibits My Husband Looked After That. “Oh my,” sighed the widow piteously, “here I've got to insure my house for fire and I don’t know how to go about it. Now that he’s gone I'm simply lost. | I can't just renew the policy because we've moved, and our house isn't the same risk, insurance agent tells me.” No earthly reason exists why any ‘woman should not be able to secure fire insurance intelligently and efficiently. First of all, it is never wise to insure above the cash value of your property. | ing, if your house is-to be unfurnished or unoccupied for any length of time, inquire directly regarding the matter. It should- be remembered agents have no rights to make verbal agreements with you. Binders, issued before a pol- icy can be put in force, are valueless without the company’s name on it. Abe Martin Says: ing much happens, bat if he any one of his nervous habits he can manipulate the whole household. He bites his nails, he refuses to eat, he may hold his breath and by any one of these means he becomes master of any situation which arises. Then we have the nervous ther who could make & whole household of children nervous by her treatment of them. She is at one moment cross and irritable, ready to scold or to spank. At the next she is over-affectionate, emotional over the children, extrava- gantly generous, unwisely easy on them. They never know which mood to ex- cated, expressive, the opposite. The Y type is inclined to be reserved, shy, sensitive, ill at ease. Again, when realized as a portrait the type shows varying features. It may take the form of “the polite, sensitive | man”; he has taste and goes in for the refinements of life; he likes a few per- sons and dislikes many: in the right circle he is charming. sympathetic, in tge wrong one silent, formal, withdraw- 8. Or this man is likely to go to ex- tremes, may become a sort of ideallst, | untroubled, good- | natured, superficial, the ¥ type is just | All policies read that one is insured up | to an amount “not exceeding the ac- tual cash value.” That is why when a building and other property depreciate | one'’s insurance should be lowered ac-| cordingly. On the other hand where | property values increase, the reverse should be done. not at peace with this world and living much in one of his own making; per- hug inclining to a bit of a radical or erent.” Fanatics in what they go in for or in what they deny themselves are of this order. Of the Y type may be a “cold, masterful nature,” a good (pact. One day they are punished, the | next day they are laughed at and kiss- |ed for the same behavior. Such incon- 3 ncies have the same result as those {51 the child. He becomes unmanageable, | he uses his nervous habits as weapons {and his emotions likewise. Always keep an inventory of what is insured in a safe place. It is also nec- essary to have proof of loss. Receipts are about the best proofs one can show. One’s inventory should include house- glold goods as well as personal belong- gs. It is best to take your house room by room, and list and describe all articles. In the event of fire, knowing the loca- enough and clear enough when the out- 4 s . tion of each article is generally of as- T O O s foore norvous | lines are clear, very few run_true to will bring you any article sistance. et he car ontrel himaself. and | form all the way through. There are . Having done tHist, ‘seail your policy our own unconscious assumption of pla- [ More mixed than pure types, and. most on this page and make sure the property described is insured. - Make sure the build! it- self is properly described, and. its legal location is given correctly. Your in- surance willconly cover the location in the policy. Securities, -money, deeds, currency, biils and the like are not insurable. Insurance is issued on the basis that your. building' is in sound condition, and that é’t is noutr dlm‘;le\_i or u'r‘:cked previous e. You ‘are ex- to agiu pected reasonable care to|heard that the Jones law would double 1 i tainable. If you have more than 30 tive shape; easy to clean. preyent, fire your wvg;rty. the price o’ liguor, 3 Articies wjonaishie y S 3 uA’%l s do fi:xver y(lm:“h us: Imwander i .?\lt!;or Soogdg;’s type- "‘l;aadu'u 3«:"3 pgmy slck,tlgnh h; you can get as many articles as you have cou- unmw any le: of | writer annoys the family the other | ain’t quarantined—he's so Scotc! Y time exceeding 60 days; seme policies | half o lhatyNorthm\pwn double? never give anybody anything.” pons for. If you do not care for any of these limit it to 10. To avold misunderstand- (Copyright. 1929.) (Copyrigh! articles, write to Friedman Manufacturing Co., “One o’ the dominant characteristics 0’ the people o’ this tountry is to go after anything that's hard to git,” wuz Tell Binkley's only comment when, he For more than 16 years American housewives have preferred White Star Tuna to all others. Its tender, firm flesh and delicious flavor . . hot dishes. Rich in iodine" and phosphorous, those goiter-resisting elements. dling. No excitement, simple foods and pleasures, plenty of rest and fresh air, and the wisest of management. Kno ing that he reacts more strongly to o dinary excitement and ordinary emo: tional situations, we try to avoid all causes for such reactions. We sternly quell any disposition to be upset by his actions, and strike the word nervous cidity and control will do their work. If the parent can't be counted upon to manage the nervous child this way, he is far better off among strangers who will be wise and kind and unemo- :onsl. three conditions that he must ave. JABBY | " The nervous child needs careful han- | deal of an egotist; somewhat, narrow, self-centered. He may become a ty- rant or feel superior, touchy in a few spots, with easily hurt feelings and slow to forgive. Or the portrait may show a “dried and emotionally handi- capped” person, silent, or depressed, or peculiar, or unsympathetic, or formal. ‘The trouble with any division of hu- manity into types is clean ALL the floor— they fit the corners THE new, improved triangular 0-Cedar Mop gets under radiators, around legs of fur- niture and into other hard-to- get-at places. O-Cedar Polish cleans, renews and preserves finish of fine furniture. Get this time and labor saving combination today — at gro- cery, hardware, department, THE HECHT-CO. “F Strest st Seventh” Features.a Complete Line of that. while true of us don’t belong very markedly to; Colored Enamelware Red, Yellow or Green 30 COUPONS What do you need? Percolator, double boiler, dishpan, self-basting roaster? 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