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WOMAN’S PAGE, Stuffings for Holiday Turkeys BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. * The stuffing for turkey, chicken or|dried or canned mushrooms cut into any poultry is a delicious, savory, sup- | small pleces. The stems and peeling fiemnury portion of these birds. It|can be used. By using the stems and thrifty as well as epicurean. It| peelings, together with a few mush- makes it possible to serve larger por-|rooms for the stuffing, it allows the tions without actually encroaching on | mu: themselves to be used for the meat itself, and it is considered by | supper the evening previous. Keep the skins covered and in a cool place | until needed for the stuffing, or mix " them immediately with the breadcrumbs. | One-half teaspoon burnt onion juice jor one scant teaspoon cho onion. | One-quarter teaspoon lemon T and celery salt to taste. ! tablespoon melted butter, or chopped | fat from fowl. Moisten slightly with a little clear | soup stock or water. One béatem egg | can be added. Follow these propor- tions and make as much stuffing as can | be pressed lightly into the turkey. Put | some in neck and sew up openings. | Tie up bird and roast or boil as pre- | “Ghestnut tumn Chestnut Stuffing.—Use equal portions of boiled and mashed chestnut meats Juice. Salt, One | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1929. “I've often wondered what kept the moon in place and I've just discovered that it's the beams.” and breadcrumbs. Moisten with melted buttér and water. Season with salt and pepper. Cranberry Stuffing.—This recipe is recommended when there is a scarcity of the berries. Cook the cranberries, using’ the recipe recommended by cran- berry growers, and which I have found preferable to all others. Fine Sauce’ Recipe.—Half as much sugar gs cranberries and half as much water as_sugar. Put in a sauce over the fire and boil for five minutes. Remove and allow to cool, or serve hot, ‘as_preferred. Stuffing Recipe.—Add one-quarter as much cranberry sauce to the mixture as there are cups of breadcrumbs, To each two cups of this mixture add two tablespoons onion, cut fine; two tea- spoons chopped parsley, one tablespoon chopped celery, salt, pepper and one- quarter teaspoon powdered sweet herbs. (Copyright, 1929.) My Neighbor Says: ‘Tp thoroughly clean iron muffin pans, before using them set them on the stove with a plece of mutton fat in each com- g:'kmnnt. Let them stay on the of the stove three or four hours. Then let the fat Zet cold and heat it again. Wash with * hot water and soap. Discolored tan shoes may be converted into smart footwear if given a coat or two of a good shoe blacking. Take the paper wrappers from new soap before putting it away. It will dry out better. If you wis] to use only half a cake at a time cut it while it is green. A clean, washable rag rug is excellent to place under the iron- ing board. Large pleces, such as 'nlol;rleclouu. will not get on the v, —cas a7 ~26 THE HOMEMAKER MAY WELL TAKE PRIDE IN SERVING A WELL ROASTED BIRD, FILLED WITH ANY OF THESE STUFFINGS. some persons to be more delicious than the meat. Today some unusual recipes for stuffings for the Thanksgiving bird are offered. Mushrcom Stuffing—Two and one- half cups finely broken bread or two cups breadcrumbs, three tablespoons BEAUTY CHATS Types of Diet. I'm sorry so many hate to bother about counting calories, for if they would put their diet on an arith- metical basis they would have no fur- ther trouble reducing. Besides, it can- not upset any one to go on eating foods in a normal fashion, only in fixed smaller quantities. However, if you don't want to bother lories, try a diet that is mostly practically all liquid. The solid part should be thin, dry, unbut- tered toast in small amounts. Not po- tatoes! ~As you know, milk contains all the necessary elements of food; i7;1!1 ‘can live on it alone if you must. It is prac- tically the only diet allowed for many ailments, which affect the liver and di- gestive tract, such as colitis and forms of dysentery, which certainly ruin the complexion, As milk has a constipating effect, I'd suggest that breakfast consist of the Juice of a large orange, followed after 10 minutes or so by p, Or even two cups, of hot coffee. This may be NANCY PAGE Comfort Bags Comfort Old Folks at Christmas BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. . BY EDNA KENT FORBES milk if you want, but not coffee with cream. If bréakfast is early, mid- morning you can have a glass of hot milk. " For lunch, a bowl of chicken fece of toast. Mid- again, or else weak t . Dinner, a soft boiled a plece of toast, & glass of hot milk, - Hed: time, if hungry, & glass of hot milk. Now if I count your calories for you, the most this diet amounts to is 1,300 calories—it should be 1,200 really, for reduction. But if you take your coffee Without sugar, your toast thin, and have tea without - sugar in the afternoon rather than milk, and even tea at bed- time, you'll bring yourself down to the D! calorie ration. We count a glass 160, you see. Skimmed 80, but is not pleasant. two pounds a week on & divine complexion. our loose stamp was and to be sure of a best to send a self- a , stamped envelope. While I am glad to hear you have been so bene- fited by reading the “Chats,” I do feel you should go to & doctor and have a thorough diagnosis of your case. Your skin, and perhaps your health, will be impaired ¥ou do not soon get at the cause for t! afternoon, hot mi tea. is easy enough to Very hard for you to keep your health, and that is the reason you have carbuncles, boils, watery eruptions, itch- ing and all the other wretched symp- toms. Go to & good doctor and get at the cause of this trouble. Facial» Massage, Faclal massage is stimulating to the skin, it feeds, it olls from cold cream, which s always good for it (except in one or two cases to be mentioned later) ;| it 'stirs the circulation of the blood, it is generally rejuvenating. You can massage without cream; some 1pefl;ne use fine talcum ywder, since it, as well as cream, makes the skin temporarily smooth enough for the fingers to slip over it. But I pre- fer the cream always, since it is a lubricant. For if the skin is too ofly, Lols was having a busy Winter, but # rather quiet one. She did not rush down into the maelstrom of shopping. Being at home, she had time to think of people who were not/ so forfunate as she. That started her gift of comfort , She telephoned an old folks’ home in the city. matron _told her there were 20 old men and 25 old ‘women in the home. The next day Lois wrote notes to her town sorority members. The note said in effect something like this: “If I make 45 small bags of cretonne, may I count on you to fill one? I have learned that the old folks are seldom remembered at Christmas time. I want to put & few little things like a comb, a tube of cold cream, some nice smelling powder, | nt & small mirror, a cake of mild soap, some inexpensive correspondence cards and a gay pencil in each bag for the women. These are little personal things which they want and seldom have. “I thought that the bags would be made with a drawstring so that they could hang it on their bed t and keep it beside them during year. I plan to make the bags 8 inches by 12. Of course, I'd love to have any or all of you come over for tea some after- | the cream can be washed out after the and a cloth soaped with castile, then rinsed, dried and treated with ice. Few women know a thing about facial massage movements. I think it is just as well, for if you go in for that sort of thing, you should take a regular course under some one holding a cer- tificate as a qualified masseur. Other- wise you can pull your face around in several harmful ways. Far better to remember this—all motions from the lower part of the face are upward and outward toward the ear; this to lift sagging muscles; all motions on the forehead are from the center out. All motions around the eyes begin at the nose, go over the,eyelids, around the crowsfeet and thed under the eyes to the nose again. The chin is massaged by ktm'oklnl under it, down into the ec It is far better, I think, to tap or slap the face all over. You can buy rubber patters, you can make substi- ger of pulling the skin and making weak muscles weaker. Add to this hot and cold water and your massage is sufficiently stimulating. M. K.—The most satisfactory way of filling out hollows anvwhere is to build up in health, as it always comes back to that. even though you may gain a little through masssging and feeding the skin with nourishing oils. Hollows in the neck and chest fill out guickly when the weight is built up, and this may mean that some condition is keep- ing down your weight and it must be traced and cured. massage with hot water or even water | p| Miss G. W.—Try lemon juice or the juice of a cucumber to remove the tan from your arms and face. Your skin will W off the tan anyway if you do nothing at all this season of the year. M. P. R—A simple exercise to cor- rect the tendencv to stoop or to be- come round shouldered is done as fol- lows: Stand facing a-corner of the room, and far enough from the corner so you may have room enough to stretch noon. We could make the bags and | out each arm as you yourself chatter as we worked. And do tell me |and swav toward the corner holdine what you think ought to go into the |vour hands seetrelv to the side walls bags for the men. Roger suggests the | You will prebably be about 2 feet or most impossible things. I don’t thuik | more from the corner. denendent nnnn men have much imagination, do you? | the length of our arms. Ordinsvv (Signed) “LOIS." ln(’fllil ;flg‘nl] dtfi;l:hl)& t::c‘umll" The response was pleasing. Within | ePOUg] s g m 8 week the sorority sisters met at the | M L. L—The best way Miller home and finished making and filling the bags. Lois - glowed pleasure. Lois served sandwiches and tea. Write to her, care of this pa closing & stamped. self-addressed envelope, asking for Nancy's leafiet on sandwiches. 19200 oxide. Many women use the for coarse hairs when they cannot have the electric needle used, and they very well to keep their (Copyright)) 1920.) Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. ‘We all know that bables learn by imitating their elders. We consider it amusing and intelligent when the child imitates the things we want him to learn, but when he resorts to slapping as a means of exp g his anger most parents find it anything but funny. But just as inevitably as night follows day the child who is slapped for mis- ::h‘:vmz is going to begin slapping ick. As “A Reader of Your Column"” says plaintively: “What can I do when baby slaps and kicks for no reason at all? Some say ignore it, but I think if we do not correct children when they are little they grow worse and worse.” ‘You are absolutely right. We do have to correct children, for they.cannot grow healthfully in the right direction unless we do. That is what parents are for. We have to show them when they slap and kick that such conduct is unpleasant and that a person es the child who does it. And the very first step in teaching the child that and in correcting his wrong impression is to refrain from doing it ourselves. We feel ever so justified in slnrpmgh:lemla because from our viewpoint he mis- behaved, but the child can't understand that viewpoint. He only knows that When we slap him he has been hurt for doing what may be a most natural thing for him to do. Instead, we should correct his action. This opens up a big subject, which we shall go into some day soon in dealing with dis- cipline. Today we are interested in undoing the slapping habit. First. Take the right step yourself and don't be guilty of hitting the child as a means of correcting his mis- behavior, Second. If he insists on playing this game, play it with him, but let him see for himself why it is an unpleasant one. Thus he learns by experience. But keep it a game and leave emotions out of it. ‘When the child slaps you, offer calmly to play a slapping game. When he slaps, say, “Now it is turn,” and give him a small slap in the same way. If he doesn't offer to return it, then suggest that the game is over. Other- wise continue giving him slap for slap, showing no rancor and no emotion, but letting there be a slight tingle to it so that he voluntarily ends the game. Don't offer to play it again unless he loes. This has been tried out and found effective, for the child sees that it isn’t pleasant to be slapped and he refrains from entering into a slapping game. I should isolate the child who kicks, putting him ‘in another room in sight of the others of the household, but away from them and ignore . The chiid who handled wisely and not brutally responds very easily to loss of the companionship and the regard of his mother and begs to be forgiven, If he has been subjected to harsh treat- ment, such simple measures do not work, which should be one very strong reason for making the natural love of children for kind parents a means of enforcing necessary authority over them. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. .4 Srown between his thumb and finger. “I ought to give Pa the bill for my wait until he gets beat ige. He's ashamed to admit it makes him mad, an’ he'll be glad to have some excuse to fuss.” (Copyright, 1929.) One o the hardest things about bein’ a Democrat is rememberin’ where you ut your flag after the last time you gld occasion to use it. t’s worse'n gittin’ all set to vote intelligently an’ then have & votin’ ma- chine bluff you out of it? DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Can a Jealous Couple Make a Success of Matri- mony >—Doubting Thomas. D!AR MISS DIX—I am engaged to & nice girl and we are planning to be married very soon. Both of us have been working for quite a while. My financee wishes very much for me to join her church, but I am afraid that my fagily will disapprove and that it would cause hard feelings if I did so. I think | thit we should not with either of our families, but go by ourselves, but my financee wishes me to live at her 's. My flancee wishes to continue to work after we are married, but I seriously object to her doing so. We wish above all to be truly happy and shall sincerely appreciate ln& suggestions that lyou make about how to make our marriage a success. Both of ;“C“EB quite Answer: My first suggestion, J. C. B, is to eliminate jealousy. That wrecks more marriages than any other one thing. For door, peace and happiness fiy out of the window. They say there is no cure for jealousy, but I think that common sense is a never-failing remedy for it. If, when you feel an attack coming on and per- celve that you are getting green-eyed, you will take a large and copious dose of xoodlgld hard horse sense, you will find that it will restore you to sanity and serenity, Just consider how senseless jealousy is. How absurd. You must think that you are "“"y‘“i,,‘ true woman and one whom you can trust, or else you would not have picked her out for a wife.. You must think that she loves you and pre- fers you fo other men, or else she would not marry you because you are no mil- lionaire and have no glittering social position to offer her, and there is no reason in the world why she should marry you except for yourself alone, ‘Then why imagine every time you see her talking to another m: ‘woman whom you know to be honorable is about to b'etny you, or tflc%: g‘uh ceased to love you and is likely to elope With any stranger who comes along? 8o, if you want to be happy after you are ma make ngeyour minds to trust each other, and to not to always on the lookout, each ex) 1s nothing really so insulting as jealousy. believes you capable of doing the thing of which rried, you and your wife must believe the best of each other, the other to play some trick. It shows that the jealous one he or she accuses you. As to whether you should join your sweetheart's church or not, that is o matter of your own religious convictions and you should be swayed by your conscience in the matter and not by what your {:mlly will think about it. Inasmuch as you are a poor young couple startin income, I think you are wrong in objecting to your wite keeping on with her Job after you are married, as she wishes to do. ~ Let her work until the babies come, which will automatically settle the question. A girl who has been used to earning her own salary and being financially independent is very apt to be dissatisfied and disgruntied when she finds herself with nothing to do exce to try to stretch her husband's pay envelope farther than it will go and to wan around the stores and look at the things she hasn't the money to buy. You wouldn’t want to give up your job just because ol you? You wouldn't want to give up thg’ work you like .fl ttn;:ll;nl:s'd 'flot“nmd yourself for doing, and the money it brought in, just because you are taking a ;iée. m éou? 'Pr¥‘ m:o n? it ‘!hro;n tgour l;eethnn‘a point of view and don't be - enoug] eel that there is an: L Frneo s e y reflection on you in your wife out on a very limited But you are right in putting your foot down good and hard, and ki , on your fiancee’s proposition that you o to 1ive with her mother " munt do it under any consideration. Don’t live with your people or her people, or let any of h:l;zmol;v:,y with yollx. su;t a home of yhmgtovm even if it is only in a dry- 3 yourselves where you can it out toge! thou! any in-laws to referee the domestic nynll. > 7 b acigie Statistics show that mothers-in-law cause more divorce than drink, vamps, or any other one thing in the world. If your girl doesn’t love you 'we.fi enough to leave her mother for you she doesn't love you well enough to be your wife. A girl with the mamma complex is a mighty poor risk in matrim o e DEAR DOROTHY DIX—I am in love with a boy who is lame in one foot and limps when he walks. He is intelligent, well educated, good-looking, kind ‘ntdh good and has a good position, but &ople make fun of my going around with him. Does it make such a bi eren ‘Will I be sorry if I marry him? . TS L WMPT Answer—I think you must be more afflicted in the head than hi ‘I’?:t v’fm“:‘l‘::t’l‘ :\hqu::uona or to b:hm?::{luu?g by the unfeeling fldlc:l:‘ ollnp'ehoe- le heart and sympa ythin physical afiction. Ty b o Believe me, it s & thousand times better to be crippled in your foot than is in your brains or your energies or your disposition. 5 ut don‘yturn-rry this kwiyt unless you are very sure that his misfortune makes you love him more and feel tenderer toward kim instead of making you ashamed of him. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyrisht, 1929.) HISTORIC WHOOPEE-MAKERS Diplomatic Drinking Bout Hastened Death of August II, King of Poland. BY J. P. GLASS. “AUGUST AND GRUMKOW PLUNGED INTO A TERRIFI( |- ZThey told great stories of August the ng, Elector of Saxony and twice King of Poland, . He was one of the biggest eaters and ers in historv, and when he em- ‘ked on a whoopee he would do such little tricks as breaking a horse- between his hands or crushing a over wine cups. He was the best diplomat who could drink his rival un- de‘l;!.he Yi'm& ugust and Grumkow plunged into a terrific guzzling contest as they sought to extract information from each other. Many- a carouse had they staged on &t;her efi:cu_}_h”onl. !mk. this su em all. drank, it is sald, an entire night. August was growing old. He was not ished him. He died within three weeks. the man he had been. The spree fi As for Grumkow, he lived six years. But he was never himself again: (Copyright. 1929.) o Lima Bean Rolls. Sift three cupfuls of cooked beans, preferably fresh or dried lima beans, ~ The scandalmongers had it that he ‘was the father of 354 illegitimate chil- dren. His dissoluteness broke down the wuuuon of a horse and he died at 63. Poland, as ever, was the foot ball of European politics 12 the time of August the Strong. Called to the throne as a compromise between the jealous powers, his aim was to make his succession hereditary. His plan was an alliance with Priedrich ‘Willilam of Prussia, which would enab.: him to appease the when suspicion enters the | er | £ SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. I goin’ ter be th’ first feller what sees our turkey! Baby's watchin' from the winder, an’ when her sees me put my thumbs in my ears an’ waggle my hands, her’ll run down an’ be the ‘ittle door operer. (Copyright, 1929.) Home in Good Taste B) SARA HILAND. to the present time the breakfast nook has contributed little or nothing in the way of unique effects. The regu- lation window in the center of the wall has been the sole break in the room, the benches and table or chairs alone beciga depended upon for decorative ef- e In the illustration, however, is shown & breakfast nook which would be any home maker’s pride. The window and the shelves on each side of it are re- cessed sufficlently to keep the window curtains from interfering -with the shelves which have been built across the window and which are continu- ations of the shelvés in the smaller re- cesses. ‘The woodwork in this room is painted in lime green and the walls just a trifie lighter. The inside of the recessed shelves are tinted in a dull shade of Chinese ‘red and the shelves (including the portions across the windows) are black. - The curtains are of red and white crossbar gingham, the furniture is fin- ished in plain (without trimming) and the covering for the benches (seat and b'::k) is of gingham to match the urta: Surprise Eggs. Boil some e, for exactly three and one-half utes, then shell them very carefully unde'L water without breaking them, as ey will be very soft. Let stand :in the bolling water until ready to use. Have ready circles, about three inches in diameter, of fried bread or toast, from which a hole has been cut in the center of each one. Place an egg upright in the center of each piece of toast’ or fried bread. Beat up stiff and dry the whites of two or three eggs, depending upon the num- ber to be serve nd season with salt. Completely cover the whole eggs with the egg white, putting it on Youghl: but carefully. Take a narrow strip o! Spanish pimento and place around each egg about one inch from the top. Place in the oven just long en%h for the meringue to brown. Serve with any preferred sauce, Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. other nations witi scraps of Poland’s outskirt territory while he kept the most of it for himself. v ‘To cement the wlliance he wished to marry Wilhelmira 19-year-old daugh- ter of PFreldrich willam, then almost 40 years his junior. Had this union taken place, he would have been the brother-in-law of Frederick the Great, and the history of, the world might have been greatly changec. ‘Three of the greatest of August's whoopees developed in connection with these negotiations ‘The first was rtaged with Friedrich Willlam and his son, Frederick, visiting him at his Saxon capital, Dresden. August entertained magnificently, un- loosing rivers of champagne and tokay. Here Prederick bad his first taste of depravity. ‘The second was when the Prussians were entertained with military ma- ueuvers at Camp Radewitz in 1730, August made this svent the occasion for stupendous extravagances in eating and . His masterplece was a tre- minsom cake, 50 feet wide and 2 feet lck, ‘The third whoopee was the final one of Al t's life. Bound from Dresden for Warsaw, he stopped at Cressen in January, 1733, to meet Baron Grumkow, ;d’.t‘plomnic emissary of Friedrich Wil-| im. Diblomacy in_that day was = e layed | through a colander and mix with a scant cupful of crumbs from whole wheat or graham bread. Add three well beaten eggs, three tablespoonfuls of melted butter, a tablespoonful of to- mato catsup, and a “tegspoonful of mixed dried herbs or poultry seasoning. Sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste, and after thorough mixing shape into rolls about three inches long and not quite an inch thick. Roll these in fine crumbs, dip in beaten egg, roll again in crumbs and saute in bacon fat until brown, or the mixture may be stuffed into sausage casings. “Pug ain’t polite like T am. When that new girl scratched h'm, ha kicksd her inste of pullin’ her hair.” When you entertain this true Oriental dish presents a happy variation. A real treat, and not expensive. Serve with Orien- tal Show-You Sauce and Chow Mein Noodles (also in cans, ready to serve). Oriental Show-You Co., Columbis, Tad. Send for Free Recipe Book (Copyright. 1929.) FEATURES. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Hair Getting Thin. iss Leeds: 186 years old, have blond hair, and fair, freckled skin. What powder should I use? My hair is dry and sort of thin, w" can I prevent it getting dry, and an I make it thicker? . Is it all right to curl my halr about_three times a week? 4. What colors become me? J.AT. Answer—1. A light shade of sun-tan, flesh or the new apple blossom shade of powder would be attractive for your complexion. Can She Be Popular? Dear }Kllubehmh 1. lcandlmbtr" ; legged gir] popular? nt cannot. I don’t swim, neither do I dance (although I'd love to), so I'm always left out of the parties. 2. Are there any exercises that could straighten the limbs? Please help me. I am healthy but in & bad shape! My greatest worry is that I cannot go swim- ming. I have been taught swimming at school, where, of course, nobody is interested in your figure, but at a beach it is different. J. P. Amw:'rfl—l \;lehy, nlhcouue. & bow- legged can ular. I have an idea 'm it isn't the bow X at all which are causing you to believe that are so unpopular. More likely it is your self-consciousness ipoo | concerning them. At the present time tendency to be dry. In the final rins- ing water after the shampoo put about a tablespoonful of olive oil. Though this will not mix with the water, it will spread evenly over your hair and pre- vent that dry, harsh look which so often Aarpeln after washing dry hair. 4. 1 shades of blue, but particu- medium shades. Green is also fally good color, as it matches your eyes. You may wear bronze, soft tans and beige. LOIS LEEDS. Gray Hair at 16. Sixteen—I would advise you to see a physician. There 1is perhaps some physical reason for your hair turning gray, and if so you should find out at once. Anemia is a very frequent cause, and if that is true in your case a physi- cian will tell I‘m how to tone up the blood and build up your (enlesnl health, LO! larly the an_especi Powder Base for Dry Skin. Dear Miss Leeds: 1Is it better for a woman of 40 to apply a good cold cream every night after washing her face or to use witch-hazel, and in the morning apply glycerin, rose-water and milk of onds as a powder base?. My skin is inclined to be dry. MRS. M. M. Answer—After cleansing the face at night with tepld water and a mild, pure soap, dry thoroughly, and then massage & tissue cream into the skin. Leave this on overnight. Witch-hazel is a good astringent, but when applied in the evening and left on overnight it is apt to cause your skin to become d wrinkled. an . Glycerin, and milk of almonds make a der base for & dry skin. o Lo HOLLYWOOD, Calif,, November 26 (N.AN.A) —War pictures just begun will save the day for a good many extra talent people and some others as well. ‘When I visited the lots of one of the largest studios in the business and found men who yesterday were members of the financial B army rifles at shoulder, I began asking questions. The often happens mm:ldel:{u with the visit of Santa Claus is operating full blast in movie- land. Warner Bros. are closed for the time being, Fox has laid off more than 500 persons on schedules varying two :}-luu to six, and Universal has done e same. Stranger still, one studio has gone over its contracts with a magnifying glass and discovered that it could make reductions in salary, and some aétors who have beerf among its preferred talent find themselves faced with the prnbt ml.m of ‘working at half pay or. not al ‘You can do your Christmas shopping early in this village if you have the wherewithal. Production schedule picks {up at some of the Culver City ts next week. But this week it is very quiet on the gelatin front. Gossip credits Ina Claire and John Gilbert with séeking publicity in their forthcoming. separation. It may be true. No movieite is above such a ruse. But intimates of Jack Gilbert say the actor has been in the depths. ‘The critics have attacked his talkie venture with particular venom. The financial tide went against him. The know-alls of movieland credit him with 3 is is gossip, not be worth the breath it is spoken ) But Ina Claire starts & new picture immediately. Jack Gilbert does the same as soon as they can find a story fit for him, And Gilbert confided to a friend just before this contemplated separa- tion: “It is a pity I am bothered with 'irmn:y affairs on top of all ouble.” this other Clara Bow is still in the hospital, and reports incline to the belief that she Chaney has not been well enough to start the silent picture which Fred Niblo has ready for him. If he doesn't tly to start within the fortnight, Niblo will shoot a talkie he is preparing and the Chaney picture will go over to Spring. Anthony Bushell is a new type lead- ing man: who has some of the appeai Conrad Nagel popularized. ' This remark not make a hit. Players do not like to be compared to other players, but the fact remains—a certain clean- liness and strength. He was once a member of the London company of “Is Zat So.” Hence it was quite appropriate that he and Zelma dry | your other good points. par29) you are very fortunaté in that longer dresses and uneven lines are in vogue and “darker-colored hoslery and shoes. All these will make the less notice- able. Unless your bo legs are so had that they are a real deformity (and T doubt that) I should most cer- tainly advise you to dance and swim and learn to do them s0 well that neither you nor any one else will even think about the shape of your legs. ‘Who sees your legs when you're in the water? With the present style of eve- ning dresses, I'm sure no one will see your legs on the dance floor, either. 2. No, there are mo exercises which will actually straighten bewed legs and, it your iction is serious enough to cause you much worry, you might see your own physician. On the other hand, you should forget your legs and develop And cultivate a pleasing personality, which is impos- sible :!Jo\l allow yourself to be so self- centered. LOIS LEZTZ, (Copyright, 1929.) MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE MERRICK. ‘Toomey was also there. He understudied Jimmie Gleason in the role in London. Willard Mack was there, telling this priceless story: A boastful bore :dt‘:h:ysl:h Glu}’ every one on o prowess. He got on the subject of his car. “It's the way I drive it,” he said. “It’s not so much the make of a car as the way it's handled. Now, when I'm at the wheel of that machine you couldn’t touch me with a bullet.” “What a frightful pity,” said a Brit- ish major sitting nearby. Ina Claire intends to retain her bronzed face. It has been too much trouble slowly acquiring the ripe, mol- ten loveliness of perfect tan, says the lady who is keeping Jack Gilbert in & continual emotional flurry, to drop it lightly merely because fashion decrees white skin. ‘There are a few others in the colony who stand with Ina Claire on this, Evelyn Brent is not bleaching out the almost Indian brown months on the beach has made permanent. On the other hand, ladies may be seen marching into beauty parlors with the Summer face and emerging a few hours later with & Wintry physiognomy ‘The white-face type wears no color whatsoever on the cheekbones, but the scarlet of the mouth more than makes up for this. It takes all kinds of ladies to make a movie colony interesting. Some Te- incarnations of luxurious beau of history; some are a law unto with their brown faces and :pnufl outdoor type, even in the drawing room, where their ner ks are really tennis dru»lsest “‘g:’cmd from cloth (;: gold or velvet. Ann_Harding the outstanding beauty of the moment lnodod(he most practical person in Holly- wood. For two months now she ‘and her husband, Harry Bannister, have been’ working in overalls on the site of their new home. Baby Bannister, 'carried there in his bassinet, umun baths thing of a freak in the village and among the cinema stars of (! old school. (Copyright, 1929, by North American News- paper Alliance.) ATWOOD GRAPEFRUIT TREE-RIPENED O'Neal. his wife, would be at the Glea-: £01 dinner the other night. o Imagme s A Fluffy-Dry Face Powder made with a base of pure OLIvE O o soften your shin and kee, it smooth and bealthy! A velvety, caressing face powder containing one of the most protective ingredients known to science « + . Have any of your friends told you what won- derful thil Powder will do for your skin? 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