Evening Star Newspaper, March 19, 1930, Page 27

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WOMA N’S PAGE. Flower Basket Motif in Crochet BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. In response to the large number of Tequests that came to me for counted directions for the flower basket motif in filet crochet, they are printed today. dons include those for sep- arate squares and for fllet crochet in- sertion. In the latter, worked as it is across the pattern, the baskets will THE CROCHET CAN BE MADE INTO A SQUARE AS INDICATED OR Y REPEATING THE MOTIF IN-| SERTION OF ANY LENGTH CAN | BE FASHIONED. all be arranged side by side, not one above the other. This disposition is best for use on table linen as the bot- toms of the baskets should come to- ward the edge of the cloth. Leave a square of linen at each cor- mer of a centerpiece bridge or lunch- eon cloth and let an insertion band of the baskets into the cloth. Baste the insertion over the linen and sew or-ma- chine stitch each edge to the textile. Cut the textile away beneath the lace allowing enough of the fabric for an extremely narrow hem to be taken on the wrong side. Or the goods may be cut closer and be overcast with close stitchery so that no raw edges appear. A fine blanket stitch may ‘be used in- stead of the overcasting. To make a square—If a single motif is used, start the square with a row of blocks instead of spaces. Begin and finish each succeeding row with a block and put the final row of the square in blocks as at the start. If the worker prefers this finish for insertion, it is BEAUTY CHATS X Flabby Muscles. There are several things you can do o flabby muscles to tone them up. You can strap them up by dages or a face ma:l of always use ice. Strips of thin bandages wound around the head and under the chin can be ged that the flabby muscles under the chin are strapped up and the sagging muscles around the mouth and cheeks pushed back in place. I'd sug- gest that you buy ordinary rolls of gauze bandage, wind one of these from could wear this an hour or so during the day while you read or work, or you could wear it all night. Massage is such a long subject that is ‘excellent for toning up ihe muscles. Rub slowly over the face using ice; there is nothing like it for hardening a sensitive skin, for tighten! large pores, for stimulating ctrcuh%n. for d&m‘ up skin blemishes, for improving the color of a sallow skin. Keep rubbing with ice until the skin tingles, then pat dry gently and use powder. If cold cream has been used before there is not | the slightest danger of the ice drying the skin, Otherwise it might chap slightly, M. T. M—Creams made from fine ofls will not encourage a growth of hair. and when the skin is inclined to be dry as yours is, it must have either & cream or an ofl rubbed into it to keep- it supple. A very young person MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Orange Juice. Wheat Cereal With Cream. Eges. Date Muffins. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Ham Souffle. Baking Powder Biscuits. Pineapple sulAdT. Ice Box Cookies. ea. DINNER. Boiled Spareribs. Creamed Cabbage. Bolled Parsnips and Carrots. Bolled Potatoes. Plain Lettuce. French Dressing. Butterscotch Ple. CofTee. SHIRRED EGGS. Cover the bottom of individual dishes with fresh bread crumbs, drop into each dish one fresh egg. Cover the top with crumbs, stand the dishes in a pan of hot ‘water and cook in the oven until set. Scatter a dusting of salt and pepper over each and send at once to the table. HAM SOUFFLE. One tablespoon melted butter, add one leyel ubl:t&non flour, cream together and two cups scalded milk, a little at a time; season with salt and pepper. Re- move (!;’nm !{‘re and stir in ::n cups chopped ham, yolks two eggs well beaten; then fold in whites two eggs beaten stiff, ‘Turn into buttered dish and bake 35 minutes in slow oven. BUTTERSCOTCH PIE. ‘Take the yolk of one egg, one cup brown sugar, one tablespoon butter, one pint sweet milk, two tablespoons flour. Mix and cook until thoroughly done, pour into & rich crust that has been cooked .mh:\d‘h‘mver m!‘h beaten €88 sl brown in oven. st a simple matter to use blocks instead of when starting the work, at the beginning and end of each row and again at the end of the strip of in- sertion. Directions for filet crochet, flower basket motif: 1st and 2d row—29 sp, 3 ch, turn. 3 1 bl, ® sp, 3 ch, turn, bl, 1 sp, 1 bl, 18 sp., ., 2 sp, 1 bl, 1 8p., ch,, turn. 6th—6 sp., 1 bl, 4 sp, 1 bl, bl, 15 sp, 3 ch, turn. 7th—16 sp, 1 bl, 1 sp., 2 bl, 9 sp., ch., turn, 8th—10 sp., 1 bl, 3 sp., 1 bl, 2 sp., h., turn. 1 b, 18, BE 7 Continue to repeat rows in reverse se- quence of rows as indicated. End on 29th row. This will make & square of filet crochet. Continue crocheting for strip of insertion. (Copyright, 1930, 1f customers were satisfied with everything the times provide, there'd be a frightful slump in trade, the dealers all would be dismayed. If we were sat- isfled to drive the cars we bought in '95, regardless of their ancient lines, their interglacial age designs, the great- est industry we know would have ex- ploded mnf‘ ago. Perhaps a biacksmith here and there would build a motor car with care, and dope it up with grease and pitch, and sell it to the idle rich. But we don't like to drive a wain that's out of date and scarred and plain, so every now and then we buy & bus that gratifies the eye. And so great fac arise, empl countless well paid gu; spend the ample wage they make for gaudy rags and sirloin steak; their money goes for this or that, to buy & book, & Sunday hat, a cord of wood, & chunk of ice, a phonograph, a set of dice. And every merchant gets his share of what the worker has to spare, so trade increases far and wide because men are not satisfled. If we were satisfied to wear our clothes until they get threadbare, the same old rags year after year, the broadcloth or the cassimere, & lot of mills would shut their doors, and taflors would desert their stores, and men engaged in shearing sheep would throw away their shears and weep, and 40,000 other guys who manufacture varied dyes would seek the poor house in the dale, or steal a ham-and go to jail. But we're not willing to be seen in raiment that is dull and mean: we would not have the neighbors think that we are broke or on the blink. And so we buy, whene'er we can, fine raiment for the outer man, and shepherds on a thousand hills exult as we defray the bills,. WALT MASON. (Copyright, 1930.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES like yourself should not have a dry skin ‘as it shows poor functioning of the sweat and oil ds. You can overcome this, ly, stimulating the action of skin | daily warm baths ended with cold showers, ordlflyeoldlunullloumlhuhhy reaction from them. At 20 years, helgnt 5 feet 21, inches, you should weigh about 120 pounds. *L. E—No reason why you should anticipate having abnormally hips because the rest of your family ac- quired them. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “These folks beggin' for worthy causes don't bother me long. I start beggin’ them to help our society buy a new rug for the parsonage.” (Copyright, 1930.) ' Check dandruff ! You, too, can say goodbye to hair worries if you'll learn this simple method of caring for the hair. It is known to hundreds of stage and screen stal used b thousands of women and girls, who haven't time for laborious methods. Sprinkle a little Danderine on gour brush tonight. Then as you rush your hair you’ll feel the soothing, toning effects. For over 30 years ecialists have recommended Danderine: to dissolve the crust of dandruff; stop f:lun% hair; tone the scalp, encourage the hair to grow long, sllki and abundant, The first application gives your hair new life and lustre; makes it softer; easier to manage;- helds it like you arrange it. Evidence beyond doubt proves the benefits of its regular use. une Beautifier Dande The One Minute Hair At All Drug tore - Thirty tories | self like I wants to do.” THE EVENING SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY, Well, puppy has cooked his moose "iss | Yme—Baby arent going to stand fer i3 (Copyright, 1930.) LITTLE SISTER BY RUBY HOLLAND. “This is dest a clean dress, so I tan't slide down the cellar door or 'joy my- (Copyright, 1930.) SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Jazz Love, “If music be the food of love, play on!” Thus spoke the love-sick duke in Shakespeare's “Twelfth Night.” The kind of music which the yearning duke desired as food for his famished heart must have been that which issues from the Jute and viola. If Shakespeare had known about our kind Jf music and our kind of love, he might have put his duke on a different diet. ‘There is some connection between music and love, for the tremulous tones of some tender instrument have & way of plefl:: up the flutterings of the heart a broadcasting them to the far-off ether. The murmur of the heart and moaning of the dove, the sweet anguish of the soul and the plaintive l:enz of the nightingale—these tones 1 the fainting heart of love. ‘The nearest we come to that sort of leve music is from the lips of some radio crooner or whispering tenor. There isn't enough heart food in such music to nourish a love-sick ito. In- deed, the mosquito would prefer to sup- ply its own music. Most of our modern music is of jazs variety. The chosen the saxophone, whicth is raucous and melancholy at the same time. Maybe this is because our modern love is set i1in the same key. ‘The old-style delicacy that we read about in soft-boiled books Has been thrust aside to make room for: what they call cave man stuff. The pro- longed eoumhlf which made the ave- enue of love a long, winding and dimly lighted affair has passed out. ‘We ourselves are partly to blame for this state of affairs. If we were to put in an order for, moonlight and soft music, we'd get it—that is, in time. But we imagine that we like the modern rumpus, and so we have a kind of love which is tuned to jazs, Love means harmony, and that's why it has such an affinity for music. But the musicians and lovers of today are trying to distort tones of the scale and the emotions of the heart. They think they'll produce some newer harmony later on. And here’s hoping that they won't make us wait too long. (Copyright, 1930.) Fried Cabbage. Melt some butter and lard in an iron Add some shredded white cab- and cover with water. Add salt and pepper. Cook slowly for about an hour or until tender. Ki a little water on the cabbage until ahmost done, then let the water cook off, so that there is just the fat left. Fry the cab- the t is STAR. WASHINGTON, No sheik has ever ye! | up signboards that say, “ | particular case seems to indicate, as doctors say. bage in this for a few minutes, Add vinegar to taste and serve. TRY this “SPECIAL TEXTURE” AL e et NEW vorx T\ D. O \DorothyDix| = When You Go Courting, Never Go Humbly—But If You Were Born Meek, You Can Ask Forgiveness for Your Past. How o Win a Wife A YOUNG man who frankly admits that he has been successful in his love affairs wants to know how to win a woman. Well, son, there are no set rules for courting. reason that a lot of men fail to get the wives they want is because they didn't have the right hunch at the right time. They were humble when they should have been masterful. They popped the question in the middle of & meal when their mouths were full of mashed potatoes and rare roast beef instead of sentiment, and so their Lady Loves said “No" instead of murmuring “Yes." » high road to a woman's heart and put 'ake this turn to the right,” or “Avold that detour and you cannot fail to arrive at your goal” Every girl is different from every other girl and must be l%r:wched in a different manner, so every man has to adapt his technique to occasion and use the treatment that the * ok ok ¥ PMBABLY the best and most effective, general, all-the-way-round method of wooing is the cave-man style. In her secret soul every woman wants some brutal lover who will be so mad for her that he will knock her down with a club and drag her by the hair of her head to his lair if that is the only way of getting her. Every woman wants some man who will dominate her and who will marry her in spite of herself and who will make her believe that he will commit murder upon any other man who comes near her. So, when you go courting, son, never go humbly. Never abase yourself be- fore a woman if you want her, because no woman can ever resist the tempta- tion to kick the man who is kneeling at her feet or to refrain from trampling on one who makes of himself & doormat before her. It is the bold men, the strong men, the arrogant men that women fall for. If you beseech a woman to name the wedding day she will keep putting it | off, but'if you announce to her that she will marry you on next Thursday, she may say that she won't be ordered about, and she won't do it, but come Thurs- day she will be waiting for you at the altar with her wedding veil on. Curiously enough, next to battering down tfle door to a woman's heart and entering in and taking possession, the best method of approach is by way of con- fession. If few women can resist the cave man, no more can they resist the penitent. There is something about a black sheep that just naturally appeals| to them. Perhaps it is the maternal in them that makes them want to shelter and | tect a poor, weak, helpless creature who can't stand alone in the world. Per-| the man’s allure for them is the field he offers for woman's eternal mania for reforming things. Perhaps there is always something romantic, especlally to & very good woman, in a past filled with sins that she cannot even guess at. At any rate, for whatever reasons, the undesirable and the ineligible have a fatal attraction for women. There is no surer way of winning & woman's interest and her affection than by telling her a hard-luck story, and even though | A man confesses to half the crimes in the calendar, if he makes a woman believe that she alone can reform him, it is all over except sending out the wedding cards. R IF women like to be won in & whirlwind courtship, they likewise succumb to a patient siege. Therefore a man is foolish who gets discouraged when a girl refuses him the first five or six times he asks her to be his, If he wants her. all that he has to do is to camp on her doorstep and be always Johnny-on-the-spot. Thus will he establish himself as a habit with her. Without knowing it, she will become dependent upon his society, upon his ing and making life pleasant and agreeable for her. Also, g it, he will drive other suitors away, and then, when he judiciously absents himself, she will realize how empty life would be without him and gladly cast herself into his arms. Millions of men wear out women's sales resistance by their persistence and marry girls who swore that they would never marry them and live happily ever | Of course, all girls like to be flattered and told how beautiful and wonderful they are, and they lend a wimni‘:nr to the man who is a glib love-maker. Also, they fall for the romantic stuff, but if you feel that nature didn't fit you to quote poetry and build verbal castles in A&um, 80 in heavy for the 50-50 partnership marriage stuff. That goes strong with the modern girl, for it leads her to believe that you will help her wash the dishes and roll the baby carriage and come across with a regular allowance. Remember that whether a girl says “yes” or “no” when you pop the question depends to a large extent upon how and where you do it. Never propose to a woman in her hour of triumph, when she is looking her best or when she has on & new dress or has just had a raise in salary. Then she is sufficient unto herself and wants to be bothered with no man. Wait until she is tired and her hair is out of curl and things have gone wrong at the office and all she wants is some man’s shoulder to cry on and some man to lean on. And never propose in a crowd or in the midst of a meal or when you are crossing the street. It is 8 woman’s great moment, and it makes her so mad to have it muffed that she can't resist saying “no,” no matter how much she wants you. [ But, son, if a girl loves you and wants you, any old style of courting will go. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1030.) are regular enough and your forehead smooth enough to permit you to wear a decidedly off-the-face type of hat. For late Winter and Spring wear there are hats shading the forehead that are Fashions of Today. BY MARIE SHALMAR. It is & matter of the inspiration of the moment, and the pel quite as smart as those of the more trying sort. Choosing a Hat. By way of preparing for the business of choosing a hat, be sure that your hair is becomingly arranged. Some women feel that they should make no effort to look their best when buying a hat, since they want a hat that will look becoming at all times. But the trouble is that if you attempt to buy a hat when your hair is untidy and your face shows fatigue no hat will look be- coming, and you will feel so discour- aged that you will buy no hat at all, or in desperation choose a hat at ran- dom just to have the unpleasant busi- ne‘n‘efo"r i out this im) fore _ starting on por- tant business you should have a defl- nite idea of the color scheme of your Spring wardrobe. Usually the first hat you will want at this time is one that may be worn with Winter clothes on cooler days or with the lighter-weight ensemble that you will choose or have chosen for early Spring. Many women, therefore, select a black hat for this first hat of the season—realizing that it will go well with anything. It is well to have at least a general idea about the -hn;l that is prove becoming. Mz this time doubtless know whether your FOR OILY SKIN + .« select_Plough’s ““Ine cense of Flowers” Face Powder in the oval box. This heavy texture pow- der aprhel evenly and clings for hours without caking, streaking or ap- pearing artificial. Like the o{ erl wo ‘:nwt,du is appealingly perfumed. FOR DRY SKIN . . . select Plough’s “Favorite Bouquet”” Face Powder in the square box. Under the magic touch of this light-texture pow- der, the most transparent skin becomes more radi- antand appealing. It clings caressingly, and benefits as well as beauti- Ries the skin. FOR NORMAL SKIN , . . select Plough's “Exquisite’’ Face Powder intheround box. Neither too light nor too heavy in texture, but perfectly bal- anced for the normalskin, "I enhances na!uradl ;om- plexion beauty and keeps the skin mhzmoorh and youthfully fair. Each.of the three sizes of Plough’s Face Powder is obtarmable in five moderm timts. Sensibly priced af ¢, 50¢ and 75c. ., 2 from a Girl letter from which I quote: must release, because it is a ‘woman. W ASHINGTON Em{.m! P— (her friends call her “Bobbie”) writes me a very intimate “My trouble is that I'm ‘just a good pal’ to men. They like me but they don’t fall in love with me, and yet, llkpm[lrl: 1 want romance . . Bobbie dear, it is the feminine quality _ in yourself which you have hidden under a hail-fellow-well-met attitude, that you WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1930. NANCY PAGE Children Have Too Many Activities In a Day. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Aunt Nancy thought that her lttle niece was looking peaked. It was true that there had been weeks and weeks of sunless days, but then cod liver ofl had taken the absent sun's place. Sh= had had milk and green vegetables and plenty of sleep. And yet she seemed le and languid. She caught a cold easily and did not throw it off readily. Nancy talked to the doctor. “I'll tell you what I think it is, Mrs. Page. That child, like most children of today, has too strenuous a program. She goes to nursery school, takes part in the little plays and other social activities, Then I suppose she goes to dancing school?” Nancy sald “yes.” “I thought so, most children do. It's & good thing for them, mind you. It trains muscles into co- ordination, teaches poise and all that. But it's only, too frequently, the last straw. The child is overtaxed physically and mentally. She is nervous because she is tired, thin because she is nervous and nervous because she is thin. It is a sort of viclous circle. “In my opinion, there ought to be fewer demands made upon a child. Piano lessons, rhythmic dancing, speak- ing pleces are all right in their place, but they play too large a part in the modern child’s life. “Get Joan to rest more. Buy her onc of those new bedside tables which can be used as low table, lap boards or bed tray. They come in all colors of water- p.l;tl')of enamel, are light weight and dur- able. “Make resting good fun, not & pun- ishment, and I think you will see the pink back in the little girl's cheeks. You must watch out, for her mother left her a mighty poor inheritance of health and stamina, you know. P V‘Ir\ll to Nllhcf Pllll.! lflrfl! of lh:;vl.?:;:v inclosing a stamped, se! ressed asking for Nancy Page's leafiet on ehild care, Stuffing for Pork. Take three pints of diced raw po- tatoes and one good-sized onion chopped fine. Season with salt and pepper and add some chopped liver, if liked. Cook slowly in a large skillet with a liberal amount of butter and lard until nearly done. Have the butter and iard hot when the potatoes are added. Take three quarts of diced dry bread, add four eggs and enough milk to moisten the bread thoroughly, add salt and mix well. Pour this over the potatoes and stir until well mixed. Stir occasionally until the milk and eggs are well cooked. Put in with a pork roast when the roast is half cooked. FEATURES. Facial Packs. Many women suffer a great deal in early springtime from sensitive, dry, scaly and rough skin which is aggra- vated to a certain extent by the dry atmosphere of the home as weil as the special care and attention which has been given during the Winter months the skin appears dull, rough and cloudy as the mild weather ap- proaches and the warm Spring sunshine reveals its defects. Rejuvenating facial cks are not new by any means, but they have grown in popularity in the past few years in a modern version made by manufacturers of creams and cosmetics. These facial treatments, which were used by the early Greek and Egyptian ladies of wealth but which were unobtainable by the rank and file of women, are enjoy- ing a revival, and they are now within reach of every woman. When the complexion seems to be cloudy and rough and lacks a velvety texture, the facial pack 1s useful for toning up the skin. The tightening and drawing of the skin that you feel brings the blood up to the surface by shut- ting off the air for a few minutes. The local action removes the dead and dy- ing scales or cells from the outer skin, thus exposing the fresh, healthier layer beneath and revitalizing the tissues of the skin. It gives color to the skin and tion. The gentle massage tones up the facial muscles and the astringent prop- erties temporarily remove tiny wrinkles and bleach the skin slightly. Rejyve- nating facial packs are restful and re- freshing and remove that tired expres- sion so detrimental to beauty. They cleanse and soothe the skin. Before beginning the facial treatment, bind a towel about your head to protect. your hair. Next apply a cleansing cream or oll to remove the surface dust and make-up. Apply the cleansing cream. generously with the tips of the fingers and massage with gentle upward move- ments. Then remove the excess cream or a clean plece of old cheesecloth. Ap- ply & cleansing lotion to remove all fatty substances from the surface of the skin and then wring out a Turkish towel in hot water and hold it over the face and neck. Repeat the hot applica- tion twice. Blot the skin dry and apply your tissue cream, skin food or special massage cream: massage the face and neck for several minutes, using the light, upward pattering and stroking movements. the chin, cheek, neck, forehead and around the eyes. To massage around the eyes use the | | Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS, The Feeling Type. Do you regard yourself more ener- | getic than the majority of your friends and acquaintances? | Do you generally feel that you should | suggest some way to enliven the y? | Do you have a strong impulse pay the check when din! with another? Do you tip liberally bellboys, cab e times cateh yourselt fm Do you some! cal - | tating the speech habits of those you admire? Do you like exciting storles of fron- tier life? Are you easlly frritated, but slow in showing it? ‘Would you vote to do away with cap- ital punishment? Do you find yourself tending to line iup with minorities? Do you easily forget your troubles? Do you get along well with the boss? Do you sometimes have moods that last for hdurs or even days? Do you find it uu{ to put yourself in the other person's place? DAo’you ever contribute to the S. P. c. I you can answer these 15 points with ‘yes,” you belong to.the “feeling” (Copyright, 1030.) Beatrice Fammrax always lovely. gerie of its beauty, ” natural law that men should seek out the womanly Clothes can help'you to gain a more feminine psychology about yourself, Bobbie. For instance, and this advice is for POWDERL MEMPHILS FAN PRANCLITO . subtle spell. You believe in yourself— and confidence is contagious. Of course you must keep the wonder- ful colors, the soft lustre, of your lingerie This is not as difficult as some women ) - think. You need have no fear that fre- quent washing will rob your dainty lin- velous product—which so many know— especially ‘made to keep delicate colors an trlimate _filz‘% s for there is a mar- the cold winds out of doors. Even with | active stimulation of the blood circula- | with & tissue square, absorbent cotton |and MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. . first two fingers of both hands, place and press gently aroind the outer cor« ners and upward, following the eontour of the eye. Massage the creases at the temple and the frown lines between the eyes. Remove the excess cream and ap- ply your rejunevating facial pack. There are many such packs on the market and other good faclal packs may: be made by mixing corn meal, catme almond meal to a_smooth rosewater, buttermilk or witchh hazel. The facial pack that I am -describing here is the egg pack, which may:-be- used for restoring a faded, rough, dr{ scaly complexion. To make the: pack, beat the whites of two m-w»-.m with -a little rosewater, two table< nfuls of warm almond:oil or alive 1. Add a pinch of powdered alum and boric acid and beat ther until it becomes a soft workable, creamy. paste. Apply the pack evenly and allow- it to remain on the skin for an ‘hour or more. If the treatment is 3 Yy night. Make.a mask of thin muslin and fasten it behind the head with First cut holes for the eyes, nose and mouth. In the morning remove the pack with tepid water. Apply a skin lo- tion, a thin film of foundation cream wder. Brush the eyebrows with' & small eyebrow brush moistened with olive ofl or brilliantine. Brush the eye- lashes upward, holding the forefinger of the left hand underneath the eyel es whilst you brush them upward with the brush in the right hand. Be sure that every particle of powder is removed from the eyebrows and eyelashes and from the wings of the nose. Apply the merest trace of rouge and lipstick and touch the tip of your ears with & 1if dry rouge and flesh-pink powder, Another favorite facial pack may be made by mixing together two table- spoonfuls of cal te of magnesia, one tablespoonful of boric acid, one table- spoonful peroxidé ‘and sufficient olly cold cream to make a workable Apply evenly over the.face and after cleansing the skin thoroughly. Massage the cream in oughly for 10 or 15 minutes and apply the mask. Leave on for half an hour or so, theh remove with tissue squares, bent, cotton or a clean cloth. Pat on a mild astringent and blot the skin dry. ly your skin tonic and finish your .- up if you are going out after the treat- ment, (Copyrisht. 1930 To Prevent Waste. If you find upon opening & preserved. fruit. that it tart to eat, do not throw will make an eivellent sweét serve with cold meats. Take one quart of any kind of preserved ffuit that has ln!ured uga add to 1‘1 two teaspool r of groun ‘mixed spices, one cupi\ll malt vinegar and two cupfuls of brown sugar. Let boil until thoroughly mixed and the sugar is dissolved. and fabrics alluring. Of course I'mean Lux. With it, your pretty lingerie, your sheer hosiery, negligees, all retam the full beauty and charm of surprisingly lang. Charm in Your Home, Too - It is important, too, that your' home should always seem dainty and charme ing. Keep the glamour of lovely fresh color in everything about the house, for men love cheerful color. Curtains, lin- color. And they last ens, spreads, cushion covers, all retain (Left) Washed 12 times with ordina- silk fibres color charm with Lux. Beatrice Fairfaz

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