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WOMA N’S PAGE. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. The armpits have active pores and they must be given more attention than the dally bath in order to keep them dainty and sweet. After the morning bath it is a good {dea to dampen the armpits with tollet water. This not only has an astringent effect on the pores, but it imparts a fi;ilme pleasing scent to the body. r the warm cleansing bath at night 2 7 it is a good plan to bathe the armpits with a strong solution of salt water or & lotion made of witch hazel and a little common baking soda. At the toilet counters are various products which will prevent underarm perspiration. If used according to di- rections these are very good and they not only give milady the assurance of being dainty, but they also save her from the exasperating experience of ruining a frock by this annoying under- arm perspiration, which is so apt to be increased by excitement or nervousness. A toilet water which is splendid for the armpits, since it has a sweet scent as well as astringent properties, is made as follows: Four drams essence of am- distilled water. powder. proves too strong. smooth and clean. water washing is very necessary ai the use of an ordinary toilet water ap- plied afterward is very helpful. (Copyright. 1930.) My Neighbor Says: ‘When the wood on the back of a_picture frame becomes worn so that it will not hold the screws, fill in around the screws with sawdust mixed with glue. When hardened, it will hold the screws firmly in place. To clean a light felt hat, make a* paste of powdered magnesia and water and brush it well into the felt. When thoroughly dried, remove with a stiff, clean brush. ‘Thread often becomes twisted when sewing or embroidering. ‘To avold this. roll the needle to- ward you occasionally as you sew. To remove shaded spots or dark and light patches that sometimes appear on plain rugs, place the spotted ‘part of the rug over a pan of boiling water. The steam arising through the rug will straighten the nap, thus re- bergris, one-half ounce oil of lavender, moving the shaded spots. MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE BY MOLLIE HOLLYWOOD, Calif., January 6 (N.AN.A).—The colony woke yesterday | morning to find the skies weeping for the first time in 10 months. We stepped OVEr w.. *hreshold of Winter with a bound, and phones began ringing, break- ing the usual Sunday appointments. Plus fours were reluctantly laid aside for trousers of a more dignified cut and color, and swimming parties were meta- morphosed into afternoon tea gather- ings before log fires. But Saturday beaches were thick with bathers who still sported the mahogany tan of June. The sun of; these past months has been biting hot, and tans deepened during the December holiday outing. But ladies who bought furs before the market began its acrobatics smile gayly at seeing an opportunity to take them out of the camphor closets. And those who haven't had an opportunity to leave the village this year thank. their stars that the long, long Summer is over for a time at least. Aimee Film Possible. Aimee Semple McPherson declares her intention of invading the industry at her doors by making the story of her life in celluloid. The lady has managed to grab more than her share of world- wide interest and some front-page pub- licity the stars feel should rightfully belong to them. is the second or third time Almee has signified an intention to per- petuate her talents via the gelatin me- dium. Thus far her plans have never crystallized. Aimee is a genius when it comes to scenting profits—and her law- | yer bills from the last cases may be | met through this channel. Sam Taylor, director of Mary Pick- ford and Douglas Fairbanks in their Shakespearean venture, and perhaps the first man in history who has really collaborated with the Bard of Avon (however posthumously), returns from an around-the-world tour with the an- nouncement that he has brought home no celluloid finds. It is the favorite pastime of those who venture Europeward to bring home talent. Some haven't been worth the boat fare. When Norma Shearer and Irving Thalberg vacationed abroad they brought back a find—a plump young Gretchen, who lost her spirits com- pletely by the time the village masseuse finished with her. And when the coif- feurs and modistes had their way she ‘was reduced to terms of a complete nonentity. Talkies put the final touch to_her glory. Dimples Lido, brought here by Carl | b Laemmle, was put on a diet intended to straighten out the curves which made her popular in her home town across| :‘hecn:;-s, bt‘x’t .th: é""e laul on her tor- rs and af ve plates of noodles ml""om tlllll:ck G'trl:“n soups. portations are 100 great a hazard at the present time. = And this village, which has gone Ylour Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED It takes time and infinite patience to teach a child a new way of doing any- thing. Teaching a child to drink by cup discourages mothers_because they expect instant success. Baby may ac- cept a cup willingly, or he may turn up his nose at it and cling to his beloved bottle, endeared by habit and pleasur- able experience. This is no excuse for mother to sit down and say despair- ’c’\ll‘p]% “I can’t get my baby to take a Mrs. J. B. is becoming discouraged too early in the game when she says: “My baby will soon be a year old. She weighs 21 pounds and is healthy. She ‘will not drink milk from a cup, though she takes orange juice and water will- ingly. As soon as she discovers the cup contains milk she refuses it. I give her two bottles now, one after lunch and the other after her dinner at night. I feel she needs these when she won't drink milk by the cup. Please send me your feeding leaflet and also the leaflet on how to teach a child to drink by cup.” I should be only too happy to send you the leaflet desired but you failed to sign either name or address, which, you must admit, is an insurmountable han- dicap. If you were alone in this I'd be happy. but readers ask for leaflets and sign their letters with a couple of ini- tials. Then I'm e, they say later, “I ‘wrote for her I ts but she didn’t answer me.” A s iped, self-addressed envelope (full address, not “city or Jocal”) will bring you any of the leaflets offered frequently through this column. ‘Will you send me one, Mrs. J. B.? Meanwhile keep on as you are doing now. Put cup near baby at the table and play tea party with her. Let her pour the milk from a doll's tiny tea- pot into a doll's cup. Let her pour one for you, too, and both drink it solemn- ly. Make a game of drinking from a cup, not a horrid duty because you say, “Now drink your nice milk.” If baby doesn’t take readily to the game push the cup slightly out of reach. Say nothing about it. If baby tries to drink and spills some milk, don't say “Naughty baby, getting herself all wet,” because being & naughty baby when she drinks out of & cue turns baby against the way she is drinking and keeps her attached to the old bottle that doesn’t get her all wet. Put on an oilcloth bib. Put a of ollcloth under the highchair shut year eyes to awkwardness and led milk. It's easily mopged up. ‘While she is getting such a small amount b{ cup, use milk with and over her , over her vegetables, in cus- , junkets, and other milk puddings see how easily one can use a pint or more a day. Sultans of SBumatra are considering MERRICK. through all sorts of weird fad enthusi- asms, including sauerkraut juice, grape- fruit diets, orange juice gorges, and what not, has a new one. Stars are drinking pomegranate juice for beauty's sake. This puckery bever- age is really quite nice, and it tones the stomach and discourages the terrible desire to lay into solid food which re- sults in the laying on of solid fat. Producer—Whaddja mean—she has no_sex appeal? Director—That girl’s a flat tire where sex appeal's concerned. Didja ever see her in a knockout red evening gown, I ask yuh? No! An’ what's more, you never will. She just don't know the meanin’ of sex appeal. (Copyright, 1930. by North American News- paper Alliance.) MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Dreaded Tasks. I find that a most helpful yet ordi- nary way of getting children to have their hair combed or shampoosd is to tell them a fairy slory. Red Riding Hood or Three Bears, no atter how old the story, will held the attentin until the dreaded task is completed. This plan usually works well in picking splinters or giving first aid to cuts and urns. At any rate, it takes only a moment to get right into the heart of the story; and you'd be surprised at its effective-,| ness. (Copyright, 1930.) Old Needlework BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. A NARROW BORDER IS APPRO! ‘Those who have had fine aditions of books presented to them at Christmas will want to preserve the beauty of the bindings, yet they will not wish to have the volumes appear other than hand- some. How, fhen can this double object of preservation and beauty be accomy plished? There are several ways, order of fine bindings. The covers can be works of art, conservative and ap- propriate. A duil finish dark satin can be cut and fitted to the binding, and be removable in an instant. ‘The title can be embroldered plain clear stitchery, the letters being copled from those on the back of the volume. Be- neath the title, and spaced as on the back of the book, there should be the name of the author. No other stitchery need be employed, the front and back covers being left unornamen‘ed. It is quite in accord with taste, however, to put _some stitchery embel- lans for taking over plantations when 75-year leases, held by Europeans, expire in 1931, lishment on the front. A narrow border in conventional design can ve worked, and within this the name and author of one ounce toilet alcohol, one-half dram oil of bergamot, six ounces witch hazel, Excessive perspiration under the arms may be counteracted to a great extent by using the following lotion as directed: It is made by mixing one-half ounce of aluminum chloride with six ounces of Apply it to the armpits and allow it to dry on the skin. Then dust with talcum powder or boracic Apply the lotion on_ alternate days for one week, then less frequently afterward. You may dilute this lotion | with rosewater or witch hazel if it Needless to say, it is scarcely possible to have underarm daintiness unless the armpits are kept A dally mv-lnd‘; Needlework covers follow the ancient HE EVENING Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. January 6, 1861.—This was a day of great anxiety among the sincere friends of a peaceful and prosperous continu- ance of the Union. "All such persons in public life here were manfully at work throughout the day and this evening, endeavoring to bring the extreme men of h the North and the South to a realization that their present attitude may result in the destruction of this Union of States. “We cannot say yet how far they were successful,” says the Capitol re- porter of The Evening Star, “though we know that their holy work was earnestly and patriotically ' performed and at least deserved success.” ‘The border slave-holding States, where there is strong sentiment in favor of the Union, may not be able to prevent the secession of 15 States, it is feared, | unless the extremists on both sides can be made to take a calmer view of the critical situation. “By the 4th of March if they (the extremists) eontinue to tender the sword only as the instrument of settle- ment,” says The Star, “at least eight States will have declared themselves out of the Union, while seven other States by that time will have, all of them, vir- tually-notified the North that any at- tempt at coercion inevitably forces them to make eommon cause with the seceding States.” The great problem now confronting the Northern States seems to have re- solved ftself into these questions: First, will they consent to a_peaceful dissolution of the, Union—15 States leaving it? Second, will they adopt the plan (whatever that may be) offered by the border slave-holding States and try to reconstruct the whole Union upon:it? Third, will they, rejecting both these alternatives, try that of coercion?—or, in other words, will 16 States make war on 15 States and attempt to hold them in_the Union by force? Those who are hopeful of a peaceful preservation of the Union are pinning their hopes mainly on alternative. ] ol LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. The Weakly News. ‘Weather—Not so bad. SISSIETY PAGE. Mr. Benny Potts spent the week end at his home as usual. Among others doing the same was Mr. Puds Simkins, Mr. Leroy Shooster, Mr. Artie Alixane der and Mr. Glasses Magee. POME BY SKINNY MARTIN. Easy for Berds. A crater is the top of volcano, It skwerts out lava and fire, The foolish climb up and peek into it. But the wise stay away and admire. CONVERSATIONS BETWEEN FAMOUS CARACTERS. Shorty Judge—G, I had a fearse dreem last nite, I dreemed I was eating chocklit ice cream out of a barril and the barril kepp on filling up with more ice cream but I didn't care because my stummick got emptier and emptier the more chocklit ice cream I ate. Sam Cross—Well holey smokes what was the fearse part of that? Shorty Judge—Waking up. THEATRICAL NOTES. Sattiday afternoon Glasses Magee and Reddy Merfy started to wawk pass a movie place and they saw a sine say- ing Children with Parents Admitted Free, and they started to try to wawk in with innocent expression alongside of 2 ladies, and the man taking tickits asked the 2 ladies if they was their children, Glasses and Reddy not waiting to hear their anser. LOST AND FOUND. Neither. - AVVERTIZEMENTS. 0. Mushrooms and Ful. Stew three-fourths pound of coarsely broken mushrooms in two tablespoon- fuls of butter and enough top milk to | Just cover for about 10 minutes. Shake two tablespoonfuls of flour over, stir- ring, and let simmer for two or three| minutes longer until thickened. Add salt to taste. There should be enough wwuce for the addition of four hard- ooked sliced eggs, which should be added carefully at the last minute. ‘When very hot pour the mixture over a few small pieces of toast on a hot dish | and garnish with lattice strips of rich pastry while hot. You could usé toast points instead of pastry if desired. The mushrooms need not be peeled. and the thinly sliced stems can also be used. on New Volumes PRIATE FOR THE BOOK COVER. the book can be worked in some chaste and suitable capital letters. ‘The stitchery cah be entirely in outline stitch. This is best for the let- tering. The stitches must be fine and set very close together. A fine chain stitch is well suited for the border. If one elects to do the design 1n close em- broidery, satin stitch is recommended. Silk should be the embroidery medium. ‘The textile need not be so rich if decorative protéction is all that is es- sential. e material can be a fine quality of round thread linen. Natural color is excellent although there is a wide assortment of tones adapted to this cover bindery. There are other textiles that are equally well suited. Be sure the fabric is not rough. Linen is the embroidery medium to employ on all textiles but the satin, although silk may be used if preferred. ‘The same stitches should be employzd as on satin. Covers of this sort can be STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, dress for a debutante. It tones from rose. The fabric is supple. PROF. RICHET HYPNOTIZED HIS ‘Telepathy that can be utilized at will has Jong been the goal of scien- tific investigation. But it must be ad- mitted that most of telepathic evidence relates to spontaneous experiences. With the aid of hypnotism there has been attained what might be called utilizable telepathy. ~A case of this sort has been supplied by Prof. Richet, the celebrated French physiologist. ‘The English physicist, Prof. W. P. Bar- rett, defines it as being on “the bor- derland between telepathy and clair- voyance.” Returning home after a day of hard work in his laboratory, Prof. Richet hypnotized his subject, a girl named Leonie, and gave her a_diagram con- cealed in an envelope. While she was trying to make out the nature of this diagram, he said to her suddenly: “:!'!th has happened to M. Lang- ols?" It is important to explain here that Leonie only slightly knew M. Langlois, although he was M. Richet's assistant. She seldom went to the laboratory. Indeed, she had not been there for six months. And in all her life she had seen him only two or three times. She replied instantly to Prof. Richet's question: “He has burned himself.” “Good,” said the professor, where has he burged himself?” “On the hand.” Now there is nothing of significance in either of these answers. Since M. Langlois was a laboratory worker, it was possible for Leonie, if she was fak- ing. to hazard a guess that he had been burned, and on the hand, with a fair chance of being correct. Her next statement, that he had been burned on the left hand, also was deducible, for if he was right-handed it would be his left hand that was most exposed to any chemical he might be using. But the girl's subsequent answers are not so easy of interpretation. Telling how M. Langlols was burned, she said: “It is not fire; it is—I don't know its name. Why does he nof take care when he pours it out?” “Of what color,” asked Prof. Richet, “and BY WILLIAM Might Market It as “No Croak.” Some time ago you published formula and directions for use of & gargle for singers and speakers. I used it and found it remarkably effective. Unfortunately I cannot now find the foymula, and I need to have another supply made up. (C. T. T) Answer—Singers or speakers troubled with huskiness of the voice may use this gargle once or twice within f hour before beginning the torture. It is also valuable in »ny chronic throat troubles, or it may be used every two hours in mild acute sore throat if one has no medical care. Of course, it can be made up only by the skilled pharma- cist. Dissolve 2 drams of potassium chlorate in 4 ounces of bolling water, cool and reserve. Dissolve 1 dram of powdered alum in 2-ounces and 5 drams of stronger rose water, add one-half ounce of glycerin, one-half ounce of stmple sirup and 3 drams of fluld ex- tract of red gum (eucalyptus rostrata). Then mix this with the reserved por- tion. The product should be ruby red, transparent, agreeable in taste and odor. Directions: Add a tablespoonful to an equal quantity of water for use-as a gargle. We may repeat the formula thus: Potassium chlorate, 2 drams; bolling water, 4 ounces; alum, 1 dram; stron, 2 ounces and 5 dram; llxcer\n. sirup, of eagh one-half ounce; fluid extract eucalyptus rostrata (red gum), 3 drams. For le dilute with water, half and m« ox;n v‘orn book covers and lend Uty o R Cerrisnt, 1930 half. Sometimes it is difficult for the W to get fluid extract of If it is not available, 2 drams 4 PARIS.—There is a dash of Velasquez about Louiseboulanger’s shaded lame pale gold through primrose yellow into RITA. Psychic Adventures of Noted Men and Women Luther Burbank’s Telepathic Messages to His Sister. BY J. P. GLASS. SUBJECT, A GIRL NAMED LEONIE, AND GAVE HER A DIAGRAM CONCEALED IN AN ENVELOPE. “is the stuff that he pours out?” “It is not red, it is brow: he has hurt himself very much; the skin puffed up directly.” Prof. Richet comments on these an- swers that they were “admirably exact.” At 4 o'clock in the afternoon, M. Langlois was pouring bromine into a bottle and spilled some of it on his left hand, which held a funnel. He at once thrust his hand into water, but the bromide produced a series of blisters which could not be better de- scribed than by the words, “the skin puffed up.” Prof. Richet regarded his experimen- tal conversation with Leonie as ex- tremely satisfactory. He was certain that she had not been out of his house and that she had not seen or talked with any one connected with the lab- oratory. He himself had not mentioned the incident of the burn to any one. “Moreover,” he says, “this was the first time for nearly a year that M. Langlois had handled bromine, and when Leonie saw him, six months be- fore, he was engaged in experiments of quite another kind.” In the matter of utilizable telepathy, JAN TARY 6, 1930, Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. ‘Words often misused: Do not say “I invested in a lead pencil” Say “I bought” or “purchased a lead pencil.’ Use “invest” only when pertaining to a transaction of considerable importance Often mispronounced: Candelabra (plural of candelabrum). second a as in “day” (not as in “ask”), last a as in “ask,” accent after sec- ond a. Often misspelled: Later (one t), at a subsequent time; latter (two t's), the second of two things. Synonyms: Just, fair, righteous, im-, partial, honest, equitable. Word study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Utility. A useful thing. “Aviation is already a great utility.” Twisted Sticks. Shape some bread dough into rolls | about the size of pencils. Twist two together and place in greased bread stick pans. Let rise until light, brush with melted butter and bake in a hot Pronounce | | be worked well FEATURES. BEAUTY CHATS Skin Cleaners. There are dozens of ways of cleans- ing the skin—that is, the complexion of the face. Besides soap and water, about which we will talk later, there are the following methods to be recommended: Vanishing tream of good quality bought in large sized jars, to be rubbed into the skin and immediately washed off with a large, spongy cloth wrung from fairly hot water, Cleansing cream of & quality so light it is almost a jelly, to into the skin and washed off with a spongy face cloth, wet with hot water and a mild soap. This requires a hot rinsing with clear water, as well. A ‘light oil, such as olive or almond oil, to be rubbed into the skin and removed with a cloth soaked in hot water. There are also a large number of skin cleansers, some containing ether or other harmless and slightly drying ingredients which are valuable if your skin has been too oily. ‘You must use your own judgment as to which of these methods suits you best. If your skin is very dry, or if BY EDNA KENT FORBES the oil or cream method is best. 1f four skin is olly. the vanishing cream as one advantage, that it does get into the pores and when washed out it will remove a certain amount of deep-lying dirt, leaving no oil under the skin. Whichever method you use, you will notice that I advise washing the skin free afterward. or_girl puts far too much stuff on the delicate skin of her face, with the re- sult that there’s hardly a_perfect com- | plexion, It is not our fault that we must resort to more than soap and water for cleansing, for most of us live under conditions where the skin be- comes more than usually dirty. But the trouble is that our cleansing meth- ods_have clogged the skin and given a chance for infection to start in the pores. The ideal soap and water cleansing means a superfatted mild soap. such as castile, worked to a lather over the skin and rinsed out. Even this is too drying at times. The modern woman Ancient St. Sophia in Constantinople, the mosque built as a Christian churgh in the time of Justinian, is generally | considered the gem of domed architec- oven. | the her is wnusually cold, either ture the world over. Shop the ASCO ay and ‘Solve Your 1930 Food Problems Daily hundreds of thrift-wise shoppers prove the wisdom of ASC Values at ASCO Savings! Let us solve your 1930 Food Problems, for In the Stores Where Quality Counts Your Money Goes Furthest! Reg. 15¢ ASCO Reg. 19¢ ASCO Reg. 13c Finest Crushed Very Choice Farmdale or Golden Bantam Sugar Sugar Country Gentleman CORN CORN CORN 2 e 25¢|2 o 29¢|2 = 23¢| 3 = 28¢ 18c 14c The Stores Where Quality Counts Are “Butter and Egg” Headquarters! pdstthefiibatbihsutAuisiihiitai S LS e Taste It! The Finest Butter in America Richland Butter .........."™ 45¢c|Selected Eggs...........%* 49¢c The Pick of the Nest! D Try a Cup—You'll Want Another! ! 0 Choice Sweet, Tender Carton of Twelve Orange Pekoe India_Ceylon Old _Country Style one of the most unusual cases is attest- ed by the late Luther Burbank, the famous molder of plant life. Burbank claimed to be able to send and receive telepathic communications. “I inherited this ability from my mother,” he said. And he declared that a sister had received the same in- heritance, Luther Burbank's mother lived to a very ripe age—96. In her last years her health was poor, so that a situa- tion very often arose when her son feared the end was at hand. On such occasions he naturally would wish to send for his sister, who lived at a distance. But did he write, tele- phone or telegraph to her? Mr. Burbank claimed that he did not. “I sent her messages telepathically,” he declared. He adds: “And each time she arrived in Santa Rosa, my home, on the next train.” ‘These statements seem beyond belief. Still, it is impossible not to believe Luther Burbank. (Copyright, 1930.) PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. D. extract of kino may be substituted for it. Kino_ is official in the pharma- copoeia. I found this formula in Shoe- maker’s Materia Medica and Therapeu- tics, published in 1906. Shoemaker credits it to Joseph England, who was a pharmacist in Philadelphia hospital. Many singers, speakers and teachers of singing and speaking have reported that it is very satisfactory. (Copyright, 1930.) AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “T never knowed it to fail. A woman that's forever talkin’ scandal about her ¢ neighbors always has a meek little hus- | band like Jim.” (Copyright, 1930.) or °| o Lean Plate Special Values! Pancake 43c—33c—10c Saved! Orienta and Maxwell Victor Coffee. .. 29 Karo Syrup........."10c Renault’s Wine Jellies ™' 19¢ Stock Up for the New Year—and Save! 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