Evening Star Newspaper, April 14, 1930, Page 28

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WOMAN'S PAGE. MILADY BE AUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Morning Program. Feeling a bit weary this morning? How lovely to shut off the Insistent alarm clock and indulge i an extra 10 or 15 minutes of sleep. But these extra winks are pretty apt to mean that milady must quickly give her face @ dash of cold water, put on her make- up just as hurriediy, jump into her clothes and then rush off to business or school or out into the kitchen to get the family breakfast. No setting-up exercises this morning =no time for the morning bath, not even time enough for the morning toilette that usually results in the per- fect grooming that brings poise. And after such a hurried preparation for | Press knees to chest the day's work milady is usually wearier than ever and may wonder—"were the extra minutes of sleep worth the price?” ‘To which question the beauty expert would say, “No!" Plenty of sleep is essential to beauty, but the time to think of that is at | night. When the busy woman takes her extra winks in the morning and 80 must go without her morning beauty program, she is encouraging that habit 80 detrimental to health and beauty— the habit of letting her exercises and her morning stimulating bath go “just this once.” The morning program for the beauty seeker should always include 10 to 15 minutes of setting-up exercises, These A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. HREE Italian designers executed the plaster decorations in the ball room of the new British embassy on Massachusetts ave- nue which has been two years in the building And they turned out some delight- fully rotund cherubs as well as some profound looking fellows who st around the walls among fruit and flowers and appear eternally festive. A thing of beauty is this ball room. One end is all French win- dows. At the other end behind a row of marble pillars are more French win- dows. In Washington'’s hot Summer nights the whole room may be thrown en. I will be six months before this million-dollar home of His_Britannic Majesty's Ambassador to the United States will be completed. But it has now reached a stage where some esti- mate of what it will look like is possible. Located on a four-acre tract, well above the city and quite a distance from what has © considered the diplomatic center of the capital, the embassy is a gigantic rembling struc- ture with Queen Anne as its motif. The conception of Sir Edmund Lut- ns, it has been carried out in “fisher g:lck"—l dull particolored brick—and limestone. Variety and beauty of de- sign characterize the building. BEAUTY CHATS A Good Figure. Try as you will, you can't, perhaps, have a pretty face. But you can have | a beautiful figure. Yes, you can. may mean some work, but what does that matter? First of all, learn to walk, sit and stand correctly. Don't look like the girl in the picture. Correct posture is all a matter of habit—and you might as well acquire a good habit as degenerate into a bad one. Forget what you may have been told in gymnasium, or in books about exercises—the flat back, the stuck out chest—remember only one small fact. Hold your chest as high as | you comfortably can. The rest follows mnaturally. Try it now! As you raise your chest, you pull in your abdomen. Your shoul- ders go back as they should. Most likely your chin comes up a bit, and | the neck straightens itself as the rest | of the spine does. Look in your glass before and after you have taken this m&lnon, and see the improvement. ing this, you can't go hollow chested, u can’t droop your chin down so the ine underneath sags, you can't bend your spine and develop rounded shoul- ders. You can't even take that awfnl modern position—standing sideways with one hip out and the other not, Uke a tired old horse who rests him- 8elf on three legs. As for a correct sitting position, that's more difficult. If you keep in mind the high chest, etc., you are apt to sit stiffly erect. as our great grand- mothers were taught. But perhaps if u remember to sit all the way back your chair, leaning against its back, instead of sprawling all over it, it will help you. Your best guide is your look- ing glass—watch how you sit and cor- rect your faults. These are the first steps to a good figure. Janet J.—It is an easy matter to keep WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. /\NONDER WHERE CAN 80V GRSOLINE HERED) | to poise It will do more to keep the body youthful and supple than a few extra winks of sleep could ever do. with a stretching exercise which is done while | lying in bed. Still lying on your back, double up the left knee on your chest and clasp your arms around it, pressing it against your body. Now kick that leg out straight and repeat the move- ment with the right leg. Next, repeat with both legs at once. Go through the exercise several times slowly. Fol- low this with leg raising. keeping the knees straight. Now jump out of bed and do some trunk-twisting and knee- | bending exercises with arm flinging, | Breathe deeply and evenly. After the exercises take a stimulating bath, elther a cold shower or sponge bath. For those who cannot stand the shock of a cold shower in the morning, the rubdown with a stiff brush and tepid salt water may be sub- stituted. Either type of bath will take away the feeling of languor so likely to be present in the morning. A hard rubdown with a coarse towel should follow either kind of bath. Rub until the body fairly tingles, as the skin needs to be wakened to activity. Apply a little toilet water to the armpits and spray a little on the chest also. Dust your feet with talcum powder, as this helps greatly toward avoiding foot weariness. Wash the face with clear cold water unless the skin is especially dry, when cream or ofl may be substituted. Then ' apply witch-hazel or a skin tonic, which acts as a mild astringent and so closes | the pores and rouses the cells to activ- ity. Then apply a powder base and make-up, keeping in mind the fact that daytime m 2ke-up is much more difficult to put on artistically than is evening make-up, for the light of day isn't near so flattering as lamp light, Next, brush and arrange the hair be- comingly. Finally face the day with a cheerful attitude, and if going to busi- ness, try to walk at least a part of the distance, practicing correct posture, a free-swinging stride and deep. breath- ing. Such a morning program will do much toward giving the right outlook on life and will impart a feeling of con- fidence and strength which is necessary (Copyright. 1930.) There are 97 rooms, 28 with baths, as well as spveral showers and a swim- ming pool in the back garden near the tennis courts. There are two nurseries, rooms for | maids, footmen and chauffeurs. And | there " are libraries, sitting rooms, a drawing room, a long dining room and the ball room. There are five miles of water pipe in the walls of the building through which hot water will be pumped to heat the whole structure. The only radiators are in the chancery. Twenty rooms and the Ambassador's study have fireplaces. - ‘rhe windows in the kitchen are 10 | feet above the floor. The kitchen is | set into the side of the hill on which the embassy stands, hence the windows had to be placed near the high ceiling. The Ambassador’s study is a big | square room lighted with a round | arched window overlooking the garden. I But it is in the entrance hall, roofed | with a double stone arch, that one best gets the atmosphere of the place, Here a cantilever staircase spirals its slow and graceful way from the main floor to the second in two complete turns. There are so many steps, three inches high that the climber on reach- ing the second floor thinks he has mounted a tower. It is one ot those suspended stair- cases with no other support than the wall. And its delicately winding progress recalls a famous picture of a generation ago, with ladies in silks and satins and | gentlemen with orders on their breasts | ascending and descending to the slow music of the orchestra in the ball room around the corner. BY EDNA KENT FORBES repeating colds at the close of the Winter months as the system may be- come depleted with each attack. It is Jjust possible that you do not give your- | self enough time to build up before you again expose yourself; or perhaps you do something else that causes the trouble while your resistance is lowered. | For instance, in large cities or even in other places where many people are congregating, if you are susceptible to | colds, it is best to avoid handling rails and banisters, and never let the gloves get very solled betore washing them. If | you are fully built up such extreme | care is hardly necessary, but it is im- portant while you are weakened from a cold. Get out in the sun and air every day when possible. e China that steam rollers lie idle at the side of roads under construction while coolies pull a roller by hand. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Orange Juice Farina with Cream Corn Omelet Bran Muffins Coffee LUNCHEON. lomato Soup with Barley Lettuce Sandwiches Mayonnaise Dressing Sponge Squares Chocolate Sauce DINNER. Clear Soup Fried Pork Chops Boiled Potatoes Boiled Spinach Creamed Carrots Cucumber Salad Orange Pudding Coffee CORN OMELET. Score the rows and scrape out the pulp of five small, plump ears of cor~ or use one cupful canned corn (strained). Mix with five well beaten eggs, one teaspoonful crean., and salt and pepper to season. Have a sheet iron frying pan hot and buttered. Pour in the mixture and shake and tilt the pan until it is evenly cooked. Roll and serve on a hot platter. TOMATO BARLEY SOUP. One quart tomatoes (peeled), one cup pearl barley, two quarts ooiling water, one-half teaspoon- ful pepper, two teaspoonfuls salt, {our tablespoonfuls butter, two medjum - sized onions. Brown onions. cut in small pieces into melted butter, fry until tender, add other ingredients and cook over slow fire two or ihree hours, No_thickeiing will be requaed. If fresh t>matoes are used first cook them and then measure the quart. the rule makes enough for a small family. All measurements are level. ORANGE PUDDING. One and one-half cupfuls stale, unfermented bread, one cupful finely chopped suet, one cupful sugar, .two eggs, juice of one orange or one tablespoonful ex- tract orange, one-half cupful milk. Mix all thoroughly to- gether, fill six cups well, greased, boil 30 minutes. Turn out on dish, serve with hard sauce fla- vored with one teaspoonful ex- tract of . Labor is now so cheap in parts of ' THE EvEoni1.G Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. April 14, 1791.—Five of the owners of property within the bounds of the proposed new Federal city sent a letter to the Commissioners of the Federal district today, refusing to sign the deeds, as agreed upon in their recent conference with President Washington, to surrender a part of their lands for the new city. They claimed that the boundary lines as defined in the documents were dif- ferent from those they expected. They maintained that a greater quantity of land was included in the proposed new Federal city than they had under- stood President Washington to have in mind.when he talked with them | cently in Georgetown. ‘The property holders who declined to sign the deeds today were Robert| Peter, Notley Young, James M. Lingan, Urjah Forrest and Benjamin Stoddert. In their letter to the Commissioners | these men contended that “taking land | we never had in contemplation * * ¢ | would only tend to lessen the value of | the rest,..* * * as the price of lofl[ would diminish in proportion as the number for sale increased.” The Commissioners also today re- ceived a letter signed by Charles Beatty; George Walker, owner of property hith- erto belonging to Overton Carr; Thomas Beall of Georgetown and Samuel David- | son. the last-named gentleman having| acquired the land formerly owned by Edward Pierce, adjoining on the north | the site of the proposed President's house, announcing that they had signed the deeds for the transfer of their lands to trustees for use by the city in the erecting of public buildings, the laying out of streets, and otherwise furthering the plan for the new city. They protested against anything be- | ing done to “frustrate the views of the President.” There is a distinct movement among | many of the owners of property within the area of the proposed city to restrict its size to a much smaller area than that desired by President Washington. Those who have refused to sign deeds apparently want the northern boundary of the city to run along the northern edge of Jenkins' Hill, where it is pro- posed to bulld the Capitol. President ‘Washington has indicated that the| northern boundary of the Federal city should be about a mile north of Jen- | kins' Hill. President Washington, judging from his letters and his recent statements in Georgetown, seems determined to insist upon the larger city. Household Methods BY BETSY CALLISTER. Bedding. ‘This is & good time of the year to | look over your bed pillows. If you have noticed tiny feathers sifting through then it may be that the seams are rip- ping. 1f there are any holes or worn places it is better not to depend on | patches as the ticking is doubtless wearing and more holes will soon ap- pear. It is better to get new cases for the pillows at once. These may be bought ready sewn or you may buy the ticking by the yard and make the cases for yourself. It is not especially difficult to trans- fer the down trom the old ticks to the | new if you go about it in the right way. Sew up the new ticks all round save for | a slit at the top about eight inches in | length. Then rip open the end of the old pillows exactly the same distance and taking care not to let the feathers fly carefully sew the slit of the new | case to the rlgpefl slit in the old pillow. ‘The sewing should be quite firm. It is a good plan to choose a bright warm day for this work and to do it all outdoors, so if a few feathers do fly they will not have to be swept or dusted up afterward. Having once made the joining. the problem is to get the feathers from the old case to the new. and this is done by a sort of gentle kneading motion. Easter Parties Children delight in Easter celebra- tions for it means to them gay Easter eggs, fascinating bunnies, candy, flowers, toys and a feast of delicious goodies to appeal to their ready appetites. There is a_jovousness in the atmosphere that a child's mind quickly responds to, although he cannot know just why there is such galety. Because of the attrac- tion the festival has for the little folk either in having special dishes for their eager aitention, or by giving them parties on Easter Monday. The game ot hunting for Easter eggs is one of the oldest of this Springtime festival. Children in many parts of the globe go in search of eggs distributed in hidden_places by mothers or adult riends. The sport is sometimes ac- companied lz rolling the eggs down some grassy slope. An ‘::I'Efl’:lnmen!" that "fll ]’fl:‘:‘u oungsters to roll eggs (previously ;ud-bofled) down some carpeted in cline indoors, or some terrace in a gar- den. If the day is stormy, or accom- \mod-umu do not pel;mnb;:: ;he Bul-lot- doors rt, an froning rd can sim- | ifate the terrace. Cover the board with green felt, outing flannel, etc., or with a rug from oft the firor. Have the in- cline very slight, just envugh to keep the brightly-colored eggs rolling after they have been given a little impetus by the lm.la'g;lm. If any egi goes next pl ave | off the turn, The the most eggs to rell down the full it becomes a treat to cater to them,|eggs STAR, MODEST WALlnuauN, MAIDENS *IF YOU DON'T STUDY, WHAT DO GROW UP?” “A FLAG-POLE SITTER.” BEDTIME STORIE Light Footsteps. not of things you do not know; ming fact may not be so. —Mrs. Quack. Mrs. Quack the Mallard Duck sat on | her nest in the little swamp at the | As | head of the Smiling Pool. It was a very | Brown's Boy knows she and Mr. Quack | comfortable nest, lined with the soft | feathers from her own breast. Under her were 10 greenish-white eggs. Of | = N L ‘OH, DEAR! WHAT SHALL I DO?" SAID MRS. QUACK TO HERSELF. course, she thought they were the most beautiful eggs in all the Great World She was sure that there were no other eggs to compare with them anywhere. She dreamed about them as she sat there. But with all her dreaming Mrs. Quack never for an instant failed to | be on guard. Perhaps you think she had an easy job sitting there with nathing to do day after day. That is what Peter Rabbit thought. Peter used to visit her every once in a while. Peter is himself inclined to be some- what lazy. He told little Mrs. Peter for Children BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. AS A PRIZE IS OFFERED TO CHILD GATHERING THE MOST EGGS, ONE WILT HESITATE TO EAT ANY BEFO! )RE THEY ARE COUNTED. of the “green” and into a basket placed to catch them, should be awarded a large chocolate candy egg. Provide the children with little baskets. These may be made of paper cups covered with colored paper and having covered wire handles attached. The hunt is for small candy eggs that are hidden about the rooms. Tell the little folk not to eat the candy when found, for the one finding the most gets a prize. A candy toy bunny would be a good prize. Let the children take home their egg baskets with their “finds.” If any child has very few of the candy eggs. the hostess should put some more in lest these luckless little folk be made unhappy. Another good game is “chasing the bunny.” All the children are bunnies. One is “it” and must catch some one. Each must hop on one foot. The first one to stand on both feet, automaticall; becomes “it,” even though not . Daisy eggs with bread and butter sandwiches cut with an animal cutter, preferably a bunny, make a substantial main dish. The eggs are hard-boiled— those rolled can do double duty. Peel off the shells, cut the whites into lengthwise strips, which naturally will be pointed. Arrange like daisy petals, grate the yolks over the center and season with salt and pepper. One egg should make each daisy. Serve bunny and hlrgl undvlflt;hu vm'|" :mhu ‘z cream in tiny flower [y posy stuck (Copyright. 1990 YOU EXPECT TO BE WHEN YOU BY THORNTON W. BURGESS about Mrs. Quack’s nest and how Mrs. Quack was sitting there. “I don’t know of any one who has an easier time than Mrs. Quack,” said Peter. “She has nothing at all to d but sit there. She certainly has it as easy as any one I know of. Farmer | are around somewhere and so he puts corn over in the Smiling Pool. All Mrs. Quack has to do is to get a good meal of corn whenever she wants it.” “That's all right, Peter,” said little Mrs. Peter, “but I don't believe she has such an easy time of it. She must get very, very tired of just sitting there doing nothing And then she must be anxious all the time." “Anxious!” exclaimed Peter. ious' Why should she be anxious?"” “Well, I know I would be in her place.” declared little Mrs. Peter. “Sup- pose some enemy comes along. She's either got to take a chance that that | enemy will not find her or she's got to | leave those precious eggs of hers. No, | sir, Mrs. Quack isn't having any easy | time of it.” | _ Little Mrs. Peter was quite right. Mrs. | Quack was not having an easy time of {it. She knew that that nest was well | hidden, but she also knew that sharp | eyes and keen noses were constantly visiting that little swamp and she must always be on guard. Once Bobby Coon had passed and it wasn't until he was over at the Smiling Pool hunting for frogs that Mrs. Quack dared draw a ‘ong breath. The very next night she heard light footsteps ~They were very | light, indeed. You and I wouldn't have heard them. but Mrs. Quack heard and whe'g};u\:-i whose footsteps they were. Mrs. Q do? | “What shall I and leave these Or shall I take a chance and stay right here? I'm glad it is per- fectly still. I am glad that none of the Merry Little Breezes are dancing around. If they were, Reddy Fox might get my scent.” She drew all her feathers down very | tightly and kept perfectly still. Those | footsteps came nearer and nearer. They stopped right beside her nest. Perhaps | you can guess how Mrs. Quack felt then. She could have reached out and pulled the tail of Reddy Fox. | knew she was giving off no scent and so_his wonderful nose would not find her, unless he should happen to poke his head in under the skunk cab leaves. Those skunk cabbage le than one. You know they have a scent "An)(-l | But she | were helping to hide her in more ways | D. C, MONDAY, APRIL 14, 1930. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. The Weakly News. ‘Weather. Dry under umbrellas. SISSIETY PAGE. Mr. 8am Cross still has a slite amount of sticking plaster on his face as a re- sult of trying to see what it felt like to shave with his fathers razor so he wouldent be serprised by the sensation when he reely has to shave. Mr. Leroy Shoosters sister had a baby last week, Mr. Leroy Shooster being calm about it but saying everybody elts in the family was pritty ixcited. POME BY SKINNY MARTIN. Memories of Childhood. I forgot Lge mumps and the hooping caw! And I can't remember the meezles any more, But one thing I remember plane as daylite Is when I cawt my little finger in the door. AVVERTIZEMENT. Potatoes pealed or peas unshelled while you wait. The Ed Wernick and Lew Davis Pealing and Shelling Co. EXTER! Recovers From Operation! Sid Hunts big brother Fred has had his new little almost invisible mustash cut off alreddy. changing his looks back to what they use to be but not making much diffrents. MOTHERS Removing Splinters. One Mother Says— T have learned after many a lengthly siege of forcing my small son to let me remove splinters, that it is better to permit him to work them out for him- self (unless, of course, they are large bits, deeply imbedded, in which case , one should take the young sufferer : straight to a physician). Sterilizing a needle, I hend it to him, and it is sur- prising how stoically he goes at the probing. finally lifting the foreign sub- stance with a sigh of relief, and great pride. (Copyright. 1930.) Strawberry Pie. Half cupful lard, one and a half cuptuls flour, half teaspoonful salt, three tablespoonfuls cold water, two cupful: strawberries (washed and hulled), two- thirds cupful sugar, two tablespoonful: flour and two tablespoonfuls butter. Mix the one and a half cupfuls of flour with the salt. Cut in the lard and slowly add the cold water. Reserve one-quarter of the dough and roll out the rest to fit into a deep pie pan. Fit! into place. Mix the berries, sugar and | twn tablespoonfuls of flour. Pour into, the pie shell. Dot with the butter. Roll out the remaining dough and cut out one-quarter-inch strips. Arrange these in criss-cross fashion on top of the| berries. Bake for 30 minutes in a mod- | erate oven. | | Sickness in Britain in the last 12 months caused a loss equivalent to a year's work for 514.000 persons. very like the scent that Jimmy Skunk carries. That is why the plant is called | the skunk cabbage. | had ‘been just a little faint odor of | Duck. the ‘stronger odor of the skunk cabbage would have killed it. For perhaps a minute Reddy Fox | stood still there beside Mrs. Quack. He was looking and listening. It seemed longer than a minute to Mrs. Quack 1t seemed to her that he never would move on. more she could breathe easily., (Copyright, 1930.) . Salmon Croquettes. spoonfuls flour, one and a half cupfuls milk, half teaspoonful salt, one-quarter teaspoonful pepper, one-quarter tea- spoonful celery salt, one cupful salmon, one egg, three tablespoonfuls cold water and one and a half cupfuls rolled cracker or bread crumbs. Melt the but- ter and add the flour. When well mixed add the milk and cook until a very thick sauce forms. Stir constantly to prevent scorching. Add the salt, pepper, celery salt and salmon. Mix well. Cool. Beat the egg and water. Dip tablespoonfuls of the salmon mixture into the crumbs and then into the egg mixture and again into the crumbs. Shape. Fry in dee) hot fat until the croquettes are well browned. Cyanide is said to have been used successfully in _destroying weeds in for soups Just sprinkle in some Kellogg's Rice Krispies next time you have soup. Adds the flavor of toasted rice. Delicious! Rice Krispies are the new and different cereal. So crisp they crackle in milk or cream. Wonderful for break- fast, lunch or supper. Try a ackage. At grocers. Made. By Kellogg in Batdle Creek. RICE kRIsPIES So, even if there | But at last he did, and once | Four tablespoonfuls butter. six table- | cereal crops of Belgium during the last | FADED FABRICS Easily, Instantly, Beautifully Resultfull* Dainty, delicate things you wear —colorful things your home wears—any and every fabric that can be washed blooms instantly with fresh new color when Tintex FEATURES Historic Failures Roosevelt Made Hour’s Speech BY J. P. GI Just a little more than two weeks before election day, 1912, Theodore Roosevelt arrived in Milwaukee for a speech. He was making a final tour of the Middle West in the three-cornered campaign for the presidency between himself, President Taft and Gov. Wood- row Wilson of New Jersey. ‘There had been a termendous amount of public discussion of Col. Roosevelt's candidacy. He already had had almost two terms in the White House. One of the arguments of the campaign was that no man should serve a third term. But the colonel went cheerfully on. At Milwaukee he came near paying with his life. As he left his hotel to g0 to the Auditorium, where his speech Was to be made, a crazy man stepped up and fired a revolver at him point-blank The bullet entered his body on the right side. Before the man—whose name turned out to be John Schrank— could shoot again some one threw up his arm. Others seized him. | “Don’t hurt the poor creature.” said Col. Roosevelt, when it appeared that the angry crowd might wreak instant vengeance upon him. Col. Roosevelt went back to his hotel room, but instead of going to bed and calling a doctor he merely put on a fresh shirt and, without knowing how dangerous the wound was, went to the Auditorium and delivered his speech He spoke for an hour, and only at the end did he show fatigue. Later he was sent to Mercy Hospital in Chicago. Dr. Ryan, after an ex- amination, thought there was no im- mediate danger, but said he could not be certain. A two weeks' convalescence followed It was during this time that Col. Roose- velt wrote to Sir George Trevelyan “T must say I have never understood public men who got nervous about as- sassination. What I cannot understand | | at Assassination After Being Shot in Breast. LASS. s any serious-minded public man nc being so absorbed in the great, v.tal questions with which he has to deal as to exclude thoughts of assassination. 1 don't think this is a matter of courace at all. T think it is a question of 'he major interest drivi out the minor interest.” (Copyright. 1930.) Food Problems BY SALLY MONROE. Candy Apples. The trick of dipping small red apples in sugar candy or toffee and letting them harden on sticks is a verv old one, and seems to have originated in England. Most children like this sort of confection and enjoy making it To begin with, you will need per- fect. small. red apples. Wash them and into the stem end of each thrust a clean, white wood skewer, which you cain buy from your butcher. If this is impossible, get some soft white wood and cut ovt your own sticks. Now prepare the toffee. Melt four even tablespoonfuls of butter in a clean saucepan, add a quarter pound of brown sugar and a full tablespoonful of golden sirup. Melt and when it begins to boil stir steadily. Let cook for a few min- utes and then drop a little on a plate. If it becomes set, then it is ready for use. Dip the apples into it one at a time, holding by the end of the stick. Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcass beef in Washington, D C 1 pound and averaged Advertisement ce! to 24.25 19,31 cents per pound me NEW silhouette skillfully molded This girdle of rayon ribbed webbing fits snugly over the - hips, overcoming “spread” ap- /5A pearance. Nipped-in waist. & Style 537. Sizes 24 1032. “Wisp &4 Bandeau” of écru embroidered o net uplifts bust, controls une derarm flesh, practically backs less. Sizes 301038, style 130-14 81 to $2.50. The entire figure is molded to smooth princess lines in this light, flexible combination of French eilk batiste and elastic. Brassiere of écru lace is expertly cut to control underarm flesh, yet permit low décolletage—uplift bust sections. Girdle emphasizes natural waist, flattens back and diaphragm, molds hips. Combines substantial “body™ with lingerie daintiness. Style 16-165. All sizes, 32 to 40. The heavier figure can wear the new fashions becomingly over a Diafram- Reducer Wonderlift Combination. The lnner belt supports and holds in the abdomen, controls the hips. The Dia- fram-Reducer smooths and flattens bothersome flesh over diaphragm. Bro- cade with rayon bust sections uplifis 3 and molds. Style 96-128. In a variety of materials, sizes 34-54. $6.50 to $15. is added to the rinsing water! See for yourself how sim, to use . .. how perfect it is in colorful results. Consult the list below for the Tintex product you'll need for the work to be done—then follow the directicns on the package. We promise you, you'll be as- tonished and delighted. «—THE TINTEX GROUP—, Products for every Home- tinting and Dyeing Need *Tintex fm' Box—Tints and dyes all ma Tintex Biue Box —For lace-trimmed silks—tints the silk, lace remains original color. Tintex Color Remover—Removes old color from any material so it can be dyed a new color. Whitex— A bluing for restoring white- ness to all yellowed white materials. - Atalldrug, dept. stores 15¢ TINTS ano DYES NEWI! TINTEX DRY CLEANER For Dry Cleaning at Home —perfect results— On: Sale Wherever Tintex is Sold A light, boneless, semi step-in combination of satin with doubled eilk jersey top. Cupped bust sections, natural waisiline, snug hips. Flat diaphragm and back mold the figure to smooth unbroken princess lines. Style 82-750. All sizes, 32 to 40; $5. In brocaded batiste with doubled silk jersey top. No.32-500. Nemo-flex At all the better shops KOPS BROS,, Inc. New York : San Francisco * London - Boston Chieago - Toronto

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