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WOMAN'’S PAGE. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Becoming Coiffure. . but you may also wear medium and Dear Mis. Leeds: (1) Tound, full face and & short, small nose, Tather inclined to turn upward. What Wwould be a becoming way to wear my hair? (2) What colors are becoming | o with light brown hair, blue eyes an fair skin? (3) What shade of powder should I use, also of rouge and lipstick? I have been in the habit of using flesh powder. (4) ol T am 18 years of age and | o, c appetite, and perhaps this is T weight 112 pounds, am 5 feet 4 inches Is my weight about right? BARBARA. Answer—(1) Do not let your hair stand out at each side. as that will make your face seem still rounder. your waves (soft, wide waves are be- coming to your type) close to the head, bringing them forward a little just be- low the temples. If your hair is bobl you should wear it rather long, so thal the ends will not be on a level with the base of the nose. A becoming coiffure for your type would have a gl" in the center and waves arranged a ceful, horseshoe effect. You find that blues are very ‘with blue eyes and a fair complexion, THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN outline and button-hole stitching 6f the It's just as dainty as it is practical in gvtemw handkerc] lawn. yle No. 667 can be had in sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Orehid checked gingham with yoke of white pique, spri dimity in pink ml,hpdmn N:‘:m ‘n bmd{eb(.h 'l'.: French blue piping at edge of yoke an hem and tub silk are darling ideas. Size 4 requires 1% yards of H-tnchl material with 3%-yard of 32-inch con- trasting. For a pattern of this style. send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The Washington Star's New York Fashion Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, New York. We suggest that when you send for | this pattern that you inciose 10 cents | additional for & copy of our new Spring | Fashion Magazin dark blue to I have a|dark blue will be more effective if trim- med with a trimmed with eream white or shell pink, pure yellow and orange are also good shades for your type; lovely. weight. ?oundl by eating rle’nty of nourishing oods and getting pi %2, | spoonful of freshly cut fruits. good: | apple and grapes or strawberries are a for you. A pure, bright blue is lovely | Srawber! g three whole sections of grapefruit on the outer edge and three whole sec- tions of orange inside of that, having the curved side uppermost. The grape- fruit sections should be marinated in mint sirup for an hour or so. over all a tablespoonful of mint sirup good advantage. The brighter shade. Black for evening, rchid, fuchsia, rust or pink would be Gray is also permissible for ne with your coloring. (3) You may use geranium or rasp- berry rouge, the same shade of lipstick nd cream or vory powder. (4) You are about 10 pounds under- Try to put on a few more lenty of sleep. Exer- ise in the fresh air will pep up your what you need in order to capture the. extra pounds. Lotion for Wrinkles. Dear Miss Leeds: Will you please ive me a formula for wrinkles and fines. "My skin s dry and T have lines | under my eyes, and also deep frown lines. MRS. U. T. Answer—After cleasing your face at night massage it for a few minutes with a lotion made by dissolving 85 grains of alum in 6 ounces of rose water and | adding_slowly 11 almonds. sure that none of it gets into your eves. Leave the lotion on the face overnight, washing it off in the morning. As your skin is dry it might be wise | XD | for you occasionally to omit the soap and water cleansing at night, merely a good cleansing oil. ounces of milks of Mix well. When applying be using LOIS LEEDS. (Copyright. 1930.) —— Mint Fruit Cooktail. Place in serving glasses one table-| Pine- ineapple and combination. fruits arrange Pour nd place in the center a sprig of mint. ‘To make the mint sirup cook one-third cupful of sugar and two-thirds cupful Wee Moderns. of water for five minutes and pour hot cute with its little pointed buttons on the shoulder. The e yoke is finished with bytton- itch. The quaint puffed sleeves Just like mother's new frock. The skirt vides olk re- over one-fourth cupful of mint leaves. Let stand until cool, then add two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice and strain. Czechoslovakia exported $1,617,000 year. worth of pencils last THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was trying to make his cigar lighter werk, and ma sed, Willyum, we must g0 10 a theater some evening in the very near future. ‘The e we must, pop sed, and ma sed, We absilutely must, and I dont just mean & movie, I mean a reguler the- atrical theater. But _yee gods, the ony thing in town is that musical comedy, “The Lady in Black,” and I understand their charg- ing a thousand dollers a seet, more or less, pop sed, and ma sed, Well, in some cases its cheeper to go to the theater than to stay home, and this is one of them. How come? pop sed. Do you expect a delegation of bill collectors to ring the bell in our absents? he sed. Not at all, ma sed. If we stay home its just a pure case of money going to waist, thats all, she sed. I have a dim ideer that I dont quite follow you, pop sed, and ma sed, Well its as simple as the ferst 3 letters of the alfabet. The ony place anybody wears a Spannish shawl is to the thea- ter, and here I am like somebody on & desert island with 2 new Spannish shawls costing almost 200 dollers, its rediculiss. Do you mean to say we're going to sit idly home and let the in- trist on 200 dollers go to waist? she sed. Yee gods, if thats not high finance it must be something elts, pop sed, and ma sed, You pride yourself on being a good bizzness man, well then you certeny know that the ferst essence of good bizzness 15 to keep money in circula- tion, and if your going to allow 200 dollers werth of Spannish shawls to languish at home with a strange hu- man eye to gaze on them, I dont call that very good bizzness. By gollies Im practically sold on the ideer, call me up at the ofce tomor- row and remind me, pop sed, and ma sed, TIl call you up half a duzzen times if necesserry. Wich she proberly will. l ABE MARTIN SAYS I A woman 1s the most confusin’ thing. She’ll kill her husban’s vote an’ turn right around and charge & new dress to m. “Oh, I fergot to ask him if he’s still married,” said Lafe Bud, speakin’ o Artie Lark, who's jest back from his weddin’ trip. Lots o’ folks are too impatient or busy to vote, but they'll stand in line fer 20 minutes in a cafeteria edgin’ ther trays up to the beef stew or coffee urn. (Coryright. 1930.) Now! A Totally New and Different Hygiene That Banishes All Chafing from Women’s Sanitary Problems Pure RAYON Cellulose Filled Soft and Gentle as Fluffed Silk —And Effective 3 Tivies Longer Tl-ln!! is now an utlerly mew and totally different hygiene for women. Not merely another sanitary pad, but an invention of world-wide importance o women. A sanitary napkin that is NEW in de- sign. New in material. New and re- markable in the results that it gives. ‘Women by the thousande are discarding pads and adopting it. For it does two things no other pad made now or ever made can claim. For Every Woman The most talked-abous aid o swomen of the oy Wear In Safety Hours Longer Made under an exclusive process, it i 10 or more times more absorbent than any other sanitary pad now known or ever known to women. Spehuym-ud.ludendorkm.m is far greater than that of any other pad—and thus ends even slightest dap- Discards, of course, ACCEPT TRIAL Go today to any or department store. Obtain a box of Veldown. Usesix. if you don’t feel that it is a Vast and Great Improvement on any other pad you have ever worn, return it—and receive your full purchase price back. VELDOWN COMPANY, Ine 100 E. 42nd St., New York City - defil& Dont fight against *moth ] R = You can’t fight moths like other insects. It’s useless. You can't kill all the little mothworms and it's the worms that do the damage. Packing things away in bad-smell- “GOOD-BY, UNCLE HARVEY. DON'T TAKE ANY WOODEN NICKELS.” MODEST MAIDENS D. C., TUESDAY, Hot Meat Sandwich. Cut crustless cubes from three-inch- thick slices of bread. inside of each, leaving a bread case or|a teaspoonful of salt, and stir until Add one and one-half butter on every outside surface and|cupfuls of milk slowly and cook well, | Set in the oven to brown. Meanwhile cut some meat into small pieces and brown in butter. rich milk or slightly diluted evap- Thicken with a _little flour and water to make a good brown Salt to taste, and when square patty shell. inside. orated milk cream gravy. the bread cases are a golden brown fill them to overflowing with creamed meat. Brush with melted | well mixed. stirring constantly. Add some | & grater, the }10'- Garnish with pars! Savory Eggs on Toast. Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter, Hollow out the | three tablespoonfuls of flour, and hait | RUD into it thoroughly one teaspoonful Add one-fourth pound of pimento cheese rubbed through until smooth. Arrange six slices of toast on a hot platter, pour a little sauce on each |cider in the pan and use at least an-| piece, cut hard-boiled eggs in halves | other pint for basting the ham. Keep and place them on the toast, allowing | the cover on the baker. one egg to each slice of toast. and beat MAY 27, 1930. FOOD PROBLEMS BY SALLIE MONROE. Milk Supply. One of the first things that the house- wife or mother of a family should ask when she goes away in the Summer is about the milk supply. Perhaps milk dealers at Summer resorts take advan- tage of the fact that most of us are very | | confiding creatures concerning milk. We somehow feel that the laws are such | that impure or improperly kept milk is an impossibility, so we buy any milk we see and ask no questions. In spite of all efforts to improve the | milk supply in every State in the Union, it is still quite possible to find milk that is not pure, and that, it not actually dangerous, 'is at least unwholesome. You should be as careful to inquire about the milk supply in a hotel or boarding house as when you keep house yourself. Especially should you exer- cise this precaution when you are pro- viding for children. Where it is impossible to get a first- | rate fresh milk doctors nowadays are | urging us to use different sorts of can- ned milk or powdered milk. The can- ned milks keep for a considerable time, but care should be taken not to keep powdered milk on hand for more than & week or so, as the flavor becomes im- paired. If fresh milk is expensive there is no reason why you should not use these canned or powdered milks for all cooking, and if care is taken in follow- ing the directions for making milk from | these preparations, the flavor is usually not found objectionable. In the diet of children, when fresh | milk is not given, you should be sure | that they have enough fruits and vege- tables in their diet and then little or no | | objection can be found to the substi- tution of these milks for the fresh sort. Special fiaked Ham. Put the ham down in the sink, the| skin on the bottom, and rub thoroughly | | with a_tablespoonful of baking soda.| | Rinse off with hot water. Place the| ham in a baking pan, skin side down. | | each of clove and cinnamon, two tea- | spoonfuls of celery salt, and then spread | over it one cupful of finely chopped | onion. Make a dough with two cupfuls of flour and some water and roll half an inch thick. Lay this over the ham, completely covering the top and sides.| Bake in a slow oven for half an hour to each pound. Pour one pint of sweet| ‘When done, Pour | remove the dough and there will be an over the rest of the sauce, sprinkle |unusually fine baked ham. The meat | ley. with parsley, and serve at once. l should be basted about every half hour. | FEATURES. BEAUTY CHATS Gaining Weight. | You will not necessarily gain weight | p by going exactly contrary to all the| rules for reducing. For one thing, if | youre too thin you are prohnbly:n anaemic or unhealthy: the fat woman | usually starts by being very fit, though increased flesh often brings bad health. But if you are thin you must eat, and, what is more important, digest, an extra 500 to 1,000 calories a day, just as the fat woman must eliminate that same amount from her food. I've found that taking a tablespoon- ful of olive oil in a wineglassful of grape juice just before lunch and din- ner is an excellent way of putting on flesh. It does not affect the appetite and it is tasteless with the grape juice. | You can without knowing it add 300 | calories a day to your diet in this fash- fon. Then change your diet to an extent, that is, deliberately choose fat- | tening foods when you have a choice. | A thick soup, for instance, instead of | a thin one, and the fat cuts from meat, sauces wheneVer possible with vege- tables, cream whenever you can use it with desserts, and, above all, as much butter as you can eat. The average serving of butter is roughly 125 cal- ories, and butter is easily digestible. Of course it is useless to eat if you do not digest your food. One of our| latest crazes is metabolism, which con- | cerns the amount of nourishment you get from food. If your body does not function properly you'll not get much good out of even the richest food Therefore you must keep up a proper proportion” of green vegetables, salad and fruit, and you must be sure the system eliminates properly, and you must be particular as to the amount of water you drink during the day. Six glasses, at least, and two of them should be taken hot before breakfast. The greatest danger of an increased diet is clogging the system with food which it cannot take care of. There- fore the liver and kidneys must be kept in first-class working order. The extra fat should also be taken in as easily digested a method as pessible. Miss M. M. J.—You failed to include your address, so the “Beauty Pamphlet” could not be mailed to you. Please forward it. A girl of 17 years of age having gray hairs should have the proper attention as soon as possible. The quicket way to get over it would | be to have a scalp specialist care for | the trouble. If you cannot do this, send for the formula for a good hair | tonic, and I shall be glad to to_you. M. M. J—Try some astringent pow- der on the tips of your fingers each | Evelyn Brent tells how to Acttract - - mail it | BY EDNA KENT FORBES time after you bathe or have had them in water, and if your skin continues to peel after a week or two, asked your doctor about it. The Philippines are to have a chain f hotels. MANY FINE WAYS T0 EAT ALL-BRAN All Relieve Constipation and Add Food Iron There are literally scores of wa: that Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN can eaten and enjoyed. Whatever way you eat it, ALL-BRAN is golitivlly guaranteed to relieve both tempoe rary and recurring constipation or your money will be refunded! Many eat Kellogg's ALL-BRAN as a cereal. It is delicious with milk or cream. Another way is to use it in soups and salads. The pra of soaking it in fruit juice has grown very popular. Its addition to all cooked food is an appetizing and healthful one. When you eat Kellogg’s ALLe BRAN regularly, you have the satise faction of knowing that you are ene joying one of the most healthful abits on earth. It not only relieves constipation, but adds iron to the blood. In combination with milk or fruit juices, it brings important vitamins to the diet. Every one should eat it to supp! the bu]K needed to balance the loz foods eaten today. Include ALLe BRAN in all reducing diets. It helps prevent constipation and anemia. Order a package of Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN. You will like th:!lm- rovements in flavor and form. Your grocer has it. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Improved i GIRL may be appealing for ever so many reasons,” says Evelyn Brent, the star whose own magnetism has proved so irresistible on the screen. “But the most compelling charm of all is smooth, soft skin. ““An exquisite complexion, somehow, is always alluring. It attracts and holds attention as noth- ing else will. “Long ago the directors in Hollywood found out that no girl could hope to win out on the screen unless she has the kind of skin that makes you fairly gasp with admiration. The close-ups, you know, are taken under glar- ing lights that would show up mercilessly even a tiny blemish. “And now that the talkies are here, there are more close-ups to face than ever, so you may be AGNE! star: AYRES, Columbiq It’s wonderful soap.'? sure we all take mighty good care of our skin!” To Keep Skin Baby-Smooth “I can’t remember who began it,” this goes on, “but now almost every the same method I do—regular Soap. We find it most refreshing. ‘““Indeed it is Hollywood’s fa- vorite soap. So naturally when girls write to ask me the secret of being attractive, I'd like to say to every one: ‘Keep your skin really lovely—smooth and flawless. This is all-important to any girl. And you can do it just the way we screen stars do.’” Certainly the beauty of Evelyn Brent’s own skin is convincing! And did you ever see a more tempting complexion than Lila , charming star girl in Hollywood uses care with Lux Toilet LILA LEE, charming stars ‘I always use Lux Toilet Soap to guard my skin.” Lee’s? She uses Lux Toilet Soap. And so does Agnes Ayres. Margaret Livingston and and hundreds of others. Nine out of Ten Lovely Dorothy Revier, too, Stars use it— in Hollywood—on Broadway— in Europe Of the 521 important actresses in Hollywood, including all stars, 511 use Lux Toilet Soap. It has been made the official soap in all the studios. On Broadway the stage stars are equally devoted to it. At their request it is kept in the dressing rooms of 71 of the 74 legitimate New York theaters! And even in the European cap- itals the screen stars, like their sis- tersin Hollywood, arenow usingit! You will be delighted with Lux ‘Toilet Soap, too. With the fresh smoothness it gives your skin, with its fragrant, generous lather. Order several cakes—today. p ing annntiom never saved them from destruction. You have probably learned this from your own experience. The new way, the sure way, to prevent moth dam- age is to mothproof the wool itself. That's what Larvex does. It mothproofs your clothes so that the mothworms won't eat, can’t eat. They will starve to death on cloth treated with Larvex. This re- markable motth)oflng agent is odorless, non- inflammable and guaranteed as advertised in Good Housekeepi..g Magazine. amiuvmc x(.)nvtx. for uplhol-m-u‘il f\llmlture. ct‘ms. suits, etc. One spraying lasts a whole year. $1 for a 11-i; Tt pint, or with atomizer which lasts foryyean, $1.50. . :hel?v:;r::: t,;:c:n:'n‘:: ’“A:?.d Gt RINSING LARVEX, for such ; A washable woolensasblan- = kets, sweaters, etc. This SPRAYING is in powder form (50c a LARVEX package) and you just RINSING dissolve it in water, soak and dry—that’s all! ; ) Photo by Otto Dyar, Hollywood EVBL.YN BRENT, irresistibly lovely star, in the bathroom designed by a prominent New York artist and built for her in Hollywood. At home, as in her dressing room on location, she cares for her ski i Toilet Soap’s gentle lather. ’ i i o ISR e = E An exquisite complexion, somehow, holds attention as n.othing else will. So naturally, when girls write to ask me the secret of being attractive, I'd like to say to every one: ‘Keep your skin really lovely—smooth and flawless. This is is always alluring. It attracts and DOROTHY REVIER, Colum~ bia star: “Lathers 30 gonere ously.”” 10¢ Both kinds sold by drug and department stores MARGARET LIVINGSTON, Columbia star: ‘‘Keeps my skin smooth.”” Lusury such as you have found only in fine French Soaps at 60¢ end $1.90 the cake—NOW Lux Toilet Soa