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WOMAN’S PAGE. THE EVENIN BEDTIME STORIE Peter Misses Something. miliar things may pass and we eir passing do not eve Pool, hoping that Jerry Musk- rat would reappear. Jerry had just startled Peter 50 that Peter had nearly ped into the water. But. though walted and walted, he saw no sign of Jerry Muskrat. The little ripples that | Jerry had made when he dived grad- | ually disappeared. The Smiling Pool luy‘ WS G, | | “WHAT ISN'T HERE?" ASKED, GRANDFATHER FROG IN HIS GRUFF VOICE. | fuiet and peaceful. In it Peter could see | yeflected the blue, -blue sky and the drifting, fleecy clouds. The Big Hickory } tree seemed to have its double in the | water. | Peter looked over to the green lily-| pads and there on the biggest of them sat Grandfather Frog. Grandfather Frog was looking very fine with his green coat and white-and-yellow waisf coat. Even as Peter looked. Grand- father Frog opened his great mouth and | oolish green fly disappeared. “Chug- rum!” said Grandfather Frog with a great deal of satisfaction. { Over in the alders near the head of BEAUTY CHATS Nightly Treatment. | ‘The real time for a beauty treatment | §s at night. The more tired you are, | the more necessary the treatment, for | great fatigue puts lines into the face | and an“immediate beauty treatment will | Tub these out. Also, the treatment is| followed by hours and hours of relaxa- | tion and sleep, which makes it even | more effective. So, no matter hdw late the hour nor how much you long for bed, go through | & regular routine, one which you have | thought out as being the best treat-| ment for yourself. Pull your hair back | (no use getting it greasy from cream) | and cover your face and your neck | with either a light cleansing cream or else almond or olive oil. 'As you are, or should be, partly undressed, cover ur elbows with a bit of the cream, too. b gently but briskly into the skin end wash it all out with warm, soapy ‘water. ‘This is a general direction, everybody. If your muscles saf. give yourself a quick massage while you use the cleanser, with upward mo- tions to lift those muscles. If you've a bad chin line, use ice under the chin and, perhaps, if it is very bad, use & chin strap for the night. If your hair is not thick, use a tonic, 3 of all, scrub your hands thor- hly, using & brush; clean under the use & bleach if you need it, and rub cold cream into the cuticle, JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. “ADAM'S AND EVE'S HOME WAS CALLED PARADISE BECAUSK THERE WERE NO NE\GHBORS DROPPING IN TO SPOIL AN OTHERWISE PLEASANT EVENING BY PLAYING BRIDGE " S | GROWLED DAD. R. O.—“Adam and Eve's home" is the required form. When two or more nouns are used to denote joint posses- slon, the sign of possession is added to | the last noun only; as, “I bought it at | Bmith & White's”; “He lived during William and Mary's refgn”; “I spent Sunday at Tom, Dick and Harry's| eamp.” | | MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Rhubarb Wheat Cereal with Cream Minced Lamb on Toast BDoughnuts. Coffee LUNCHEON. Fresh Vegetable Salad | Baking Powder Biscuits Cocoanut Cream Ple | Tea DINNER. Cream of Corn Soup Brofled Calves’ Liver and Bacon Baked Potatoes. Boiled Spinach Tomato and Cucumber Salad, French Dressing Banana Pudding. Coffee LAMB ON TOAST. Remove dry pieces of skin and gristle from left over cold roast lamb, and chop. Heat in well buttered frying pan, season with zalt, pepper and celery salt, dredge well with flour, and add enough hot water to meke a gravy. Pour on slices of hot buttered toast. COCOANUT CREAM PIE. ‘Two cupfuls of milk, 25 cupful sugar, 5 tablespoonfuls corn- starch, ¥, cupful cold water, 2 egg yolks, 1; cupful cocoanut, 1 tablespoonful butter, vanilla to flavor. Heat milk in double boller, add sugar; mix cornstarch in %2 cupful cold water and stir in egg yolks; add to milk slowly, atirring constantly. Then put in other ingredients. Cook 20 min- utes. Pour in baked pie shell. Use whites of eggs on top for frosting. Brown in oven. BANANA PUDDING. Put 2 cupfuls milk in double botler, dissolve 3 tablespoonfuls cornstarch in 1, cupful milk and pour into hot milk. Add ?: cupful sugar, little salt and lastly beat in well beaten whites of 3 eggs, then mix in 3 sliced bananas and pour into mold. Serve cold with botled custard sauce, made of yolks of eggs. | she was. | place where you find him. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS the Smiling Pool Redwing the Black- bird was singing joyously. On & stone on the edge of the Smiling Pool Teeter | the Sandpiper was bobbing up and down in that funny way of his. Rattles the Kingfisher, with his topknot standing up straight, making his head look as if he were topheavy, was sitting on a branch of the Big Hickory tree that overhung the water. Peter knew that Rattles was watching for fish. Suddenly it came to Peter that the Smiling Pool didn't seem to be quite what it should be. All these things were as he had seen them many times, but he had a feeling that there was something odd about the Smiling Pool. Peter slowly scratched a long ear with a long hindfoot. “It seems to me,” said he thought- fully, “that I miss something. I don't know what it is I miss, but I miss something.” He sat up very straight and looked the Smiling Pool all over. There was the Big Rock on which he had so often seen Jerry Muskrat, or sometimes Billy Mink. There was the Laughing Brook coming in at the upper end and leaving at the lower end. There were the green banks, high in some places and low in others. It was all very, very familiar. Still Peter had a sense of missing something. Then, quite abruptly, it popped into Peter's head what it was he missed. ‘1‘1V isn't here!” he exclaimed right out oud. “What isn't here?” asked Grandfather Frog in his gruff voice. Jerry Muskrat's house!” cried Peter Of ‘course it isn't here” replied Grandfather Frog. “Have you just dis- covered that?" Peter nodded. “Yes,” said he meekly. “Has it been gone a very long time?" “Ever since the Spring flood,” replied Grandfather Frog. “You don't use your eves very well. You've been over here times enough to discover long ago that Jerry Muskrat’s house is missing." “It's too bad, isn't it?” said Peter. “What's too_bad?” inquired Grand- father Frog in his deepest voice. “Why, that Jerry Muskrat hasn't any home.” replied Peter. “Who says he hasn't any home?” de- manded Grandfather Frog. “Who he hasn’t any home? I didn't say 1. (Copyright, 1930.) £ BY EDNA KENT FORBES. pushing the now soft and pliant cuticle back with an orangewood stick. This :15 the way to look well groomed every ay. 8. J. M.—The diet in cases of colitis is usually like that for the very young child just beginning to take solid food. Individual cases would vary some also, As some persons may find a small amount of acid helpful, while others could not take any acid food at all. In choosing cereals, all those with husky particles would be f{rritating to the colon, bran would be very irritating, and it would be best to keep to sucl foods as farina, rice and similar grains if one must have cereals in the diet. Fish, chicken and lamb are taken, and for vegetables, potatoes, baked or mash- ed; spinash, carrots and asparagus. Puddings of rice or milk and eggs are best. Milk in abundance and also but- termilk. UR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL Brief Autho.ity. Just a few years and it is over, this brief authority we hold over our chil- dren. So swiftly they pass that there seems but a day between the shorts and the striped trousers of the bridegroom, between the blue rompers and the long white gown of the bride. So brief a time before we must render account of this authority to those upon whom we exercised it. “I got away from home as soon as I could because I never had a moment of liberty. If mother wasn't bossing me, father was. I had no chance. Maybe it might have been wiser to wait a few years, but with home as it , 1 thought I'd rather take the risk.” That is a sad arraignment of authority. “School? I left school as soon as ever T could and went to work. I had a teacher who nagged us from morning | | to night. The principal always said the teacher was right, no matter how wrong I know I gave them some trouble but nothing to make them want to drive me out. That's what they | seemed to want. Nothing I ever did was right. I was forever breaking their rules and forever in trouble. I had to get out.” It is a terrible thing to drive a child out of school. School ought to be a place of adjustment. Any ,normal-minded child can find a place in school pro- vided the teacher puts affection and understanding in the place of authority. “Because I want to help you,” will do what “because I have authority over you,” never can do. We are made that way and teachers above all people should know what children are made of and how to direct them to better ways. Laws are poor enough forces for aid- ing a child to righteous living. They are always the last resort of intelligent people. They should be the very very last resource of parents and teachers. Take for granted that the children want to be right and do right. You may do so safely, for rightness is the basic law of spiritual growth. All humanity tends toward rightness. Then study your child and find just how far along the road to rightness he has traveled. Some g0 farther and faster than others. You must place each as he travels and be ready to go along with him in that It is im- possible to help him where he is not, isn’t 142 So place yourself by his side without making any remarks about his delaying, his slowness, his poverty-stricken equip- ment. Stride along by his side and lead him, not by authority, but by un- derstanding and affection. Like him. Want to help him. Forget about your certificates and degrees, your place in society and your duty to convention and law and order. Your first duty is to this child who needs you. Let authority sit in the courts where no child ever should be, never would be, if we under- stood our duty better. There i5 a word above authority and | | that is love. (Copyright, 1930.) SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Muvver say her is glad my school is out, 'cause now I can keep baby ‘mused. I don’t mind doin’ it. Swing brovver a ‘iitle higher, baby. ,(Cevfl’llh!. 1930.) G STAR, WASHINGTON, § LR Fashions of Today BY MARIE SHALMAR. A few pounds extra weight evenly distributed are hardly a detriment, but when those few pounds all settle in the region of the waistline or just above it—as they so frequently do—they are hardly a blessing. But they may be i disguised if one chooses one’s clothes with care. ‘The old-fashioned lower waistline and straight 'silhouette had its advantages for these women. The new, more close- ly molded lines and the raised waist- line have their distinct advantages. Certainly no woman of this group should attempt a dress of the new prin- cess description. Boleros and cnPea are usually thought to be inappropriate to the woman of generous build and so they are to the woman who carries many ounces about the shoulders. Short boleros are a bad choice for the woman of full diaphragm, but the longer bolero effect may be adapted admirably to hide her defects and the shoulder cape that ends in fichu drapery at the front is another good choice. The figure that is thick near the waistline has a tendency to bring the lines of the dress upward at the front, especially when a ready-made dress has been bought that does not make allow- ance for this fullness though large enough in the shoulders and hips. If a dress with a distinct blouse effect is | chosen this is not apparent. Dresses | with skirts that are made to hang | longer at the back than the front should | be avolded as they tend to exaggerate this defect. THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Sketched is a picturesque printed chiffon that is conservative in its smart simple lnes. It's the sort of dress every smart miss and matron includes in their Spring wardrobe. It proves its economy, for it is just the dress one finds so useful for those week end vacations. It's easily packed into the overnight bag. It shows the slightly dipping back hem that gives the figure height. Bows at either side of bodice indicate the natural waistline. The shirring at center-front gives prominence to the smooth-fitting hipline. Style No. 633 can be had in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches | bust. The medium size requires 4, vards of 39-inch material with one-half | yard of 39-inch contrasting. Printed voile, printed cotton net, printed batiste, crepe silk, canton crepe and pastel handkerchief lawn are ideally suited to this model. 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, you inclose 10 eents addi- tional for a copy of our new Spring with, Alesy < jacRels, dhe Javors .C‘{ue’é\..‘pin A Qmd, 3}1_69"/9, Ahinred, MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS Dry Skin. A great many of my readers appear | to be greatly distressed because the skin is inclined to be of the dry type and at the same time to have a tendency | toward enlarged pores and tiny black- | heads forming about the chin, mwa} and mouth. The question is how to counteract this beauty blemish and how | to combine a treatment that will serve | both purposes—that of lubricating the | skin and stimulating the relaxed facial pores, especially those obstructed by the tiny blackheads that mar the clearness | of the complexion. | An ofl facial pack is splendid for complexions that are of the dry type and, combined with astringent com- presses applied to the parts affected, is one of the very best remedies for a| skin which is of the above type. It is possible to work a great improvement | by a serles of home treatments that I | shall describe for you in today's beauty My readers must keep in mind, how- ever, that the chief factor in retaining and’ preserving & clear skin is good health. Nothing can take the place of this, for the healthy skin has a texture and glow about - it that cannot be counterfeited. Milady's complexion may | be sald to reflect the condition of her digestive tract; if her skin is rough and | her eyes dull, the cause is almost al- | ways digestive trouble. Remember, too, that lack of fresh air and sunshine or | out-of-doors exercise will rob the skin | of its natural beauty. A sluggish cir- culation and a wrong diet will made | the skin look old. So milady must | watch the unhygienic habits that are the underlying cause of complexion | blemishes and at the same time use the | correct local treatments. This dual method cannot be beaten. ‘The materials required for this par- ticular facial treatment include (1) a lightweight cleansing cream or oil, (2) a good skin food or massage cream, (3) a skin tonic and astringent, (4) muscle oil or oil of sweet almonds, (5) absorb- ent cotton, tissue squares and small | turkish towels. First—coat the skin of the face and neck with cleansing cream or ofl, then wipe off the surplus cream with ‘the tissue square. This softens | the skin and removes all the make-up and dust. Wring out a small towel in hot water and with it wipe the face free from every particle of the cleans- ing agent. Next moisten a pad of absorbent cotton in a skin stimulant nd go over the entire face and neck with ‘a gentle upward pattering move- ment. Now your face is ready for the skin food. Apply generously and mas- sage with the usual upward, rotary, pattering movements with the finger tips for several minutes. Wipe off the excess cream and apply the warm oil in the following manner: Heat about two tablespoonfuls of the muscle ofl or oil of sweet almonds and pat it all over the face and neck. Cut a square of gauze or use a thin towel large enough Fashion Magazine. Be comfortable and safe. to fli hold Flitkills Insist on F He may think the hum is in his radio, find it’s on the back of his neck. Of cou discovered Flit yet, will suffer a good bothersome, sleep-destroying mosquitoes. And yet it’s so easy not to have one single mosquito in the house, day or night. Keep your home insect-free. Spray Flit, which is guaranteed (or money back) to be quick-death es, mosquitoes, moths, roaches, bed bugs and other house- insects. Yet its clean-smelling vapor is harmless to humans. quicker if you use the special inexpensive Flit Sprayer. lit, and don’t accept a substitute. Get yours today! LEEDS. pat on fresh warmed ofl, not hot enough to burn, however. After about 20 minutes, wipe off the ofl carefully. Apply gouze mask. vinte) Moisten pads of gauze in the mild astringent lotion such as the following: One ounce cologne water, twenty grains powdered camphor, one ounce witch- hazel, one ounce rose water. Lay the compresses over the affected parts and leave on for about 10 minutes. Cover the compresses with a towel wrung out in jee-cold water. Remove the com- presses and sponge the face and neck’] with your skin tonic. Allow it to dry on the skin, patting it in with finger- tips. This treatment should be taken at bedtime. If you are going out after- | ward, howeves, apply your foundation cream, rouge and face powder, Pure well known brands of cosmetics may be used in this treatment or you | may use the recipes that appear in ‘my beauty column from time to time. There are numerous commercial lotions, creams and oils avallable for those of my readers who have not the time to | make the homemade ones. (Copyright; 1930.) Cucumber Cups. ‘This makes a dainty dish for lunch- eon. Cut the unpared cucumbers into sections two inches long and cook until tender in water salted just before cook- ing is completed. Scoop out the center of each section, leaving half an inch thickness all around the sides, as well as on the bottom, thus making green | cups with the cucumber. These cups |may be filled with creamed chicken, | sweetbreads, mushrooms, y other | G o filling that is held togethe: th white sauce. Crab Stew. Boil six hard-shell crabs. Remove | the meat and saute it in one table- spoonful of butter with one small onfon. { Cook until the onion is quite brown. Add one tablespoonful of flour and & little salt and pepper, cook a little longer, then add one ‘quart of water and some minced parsiey. Simmer for ten minutes, add one pint of rich milk, MONDAY, JUNE 16, to cover the face. Lay it on and then S € T'he World's v.s.pAT 0P8 Ugest but soon he is going to rse, people who have not deal this Summer from reheat and serve. Flit s sold only in this yellow can with the blackband. an smelling LI Selling Insect 1930. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Some questions pop up so constantly and are answered so often that we sometimes forget to include them in the column. Because we meet them dally, we think all mothers are conversant with them. If you haven't asked these typical questions in the past, you've no doubt wondered about them. “I am writing to you again,” says Mrs. A. M. M, “to ask you some ques- tions. Baby is 11 months old and| weighs 21 pounds. When he is getting one quart of milk, should it be boiled? Need it be warmed for him to drink? “When can I discontinue putting wa- | ter in his orange juice? | Up to w age should baby have sieved vegetables and fruits?” Boll the milk daily during the Sum- | mer months, especially if you are not using pasteurized grade A milk for the | baby or are uncertain of your milk sup- | ly or do not have large quantities of | ice. Always do this when you get milk from a city dairy, or from a small town dairy where a hygienic measure may not be strictly enforced, or when baby changes milk for any reason, even for the day. Boil the milk in hot weather. There is no one rule so eminently advisable to | follow. After the milk is boiled it should be | cooled rapidly and kept ice-cold until used. When a child is being fed vege- tables and cereals and other warm | foods at a meal the milk need not be | served hot. The child of 1 year| should be taking his milk by cup, and a cup of hot milk is not as appetizing as a cup of cold milkk. When the milk is taken from the ice box let baby's cupful stand for a_moment in & pan of hot water until it is just cool, and not ice- cold. If baby is still taking a bottle at night, that bottle may be warm, as warm milk is soothing and sleep-provoking. Plain orange juice without water can be given after baby is 6 months old, providing it is mild, naturally sweet orange juice. If the oranges are sour | (some of them are this time of the year) dilute the juice to make it more agreeable to baby. There are no set dates at which vegetables need not be sieved. Usually | after about the fourteenth month the child of good digestion can manage un- | sieved vegetables if they are young and cooked until very tender. Cellulose, which makes up a large proportion of most vegetables, is practically indiges- tible. This is the portion that gives bulk to the stools and thus stimulates bowel activity. In large quantities it might be irritating to the child, so for young babies this indigestible element is best sieved out. Try some unsieved vegetables for baby, and if he takes them easily and shows no unusual bowel activity because of them, cook them well and mash instead of sieving them. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILL “I start on a diet ever’ time I hear some insultin’' remark about fat, but I can't stay mad long enough to do no ) (Copyright, 1930.) E KNEW he wasn't girls. But he never until one day a clerk in a gested Lifebuoy to him. That simple change i changed his whole life! For it ended the fault that had made girls unwilling to go out with him. “B.0.", the polite name for a condition people dislike even to mention—body odor . . downs now. Girls accept gladly. He knows the easy way to keep perspiration odorless. Hot weather no Even if the thermomete: nineties—even if we are perspiring more freely—no need to let * Just take this simple precaution. Millions of particular men and women LIFEBUOY SHAVING CREAM Sootbes as you shave— ends “Tender Spots™ Ar your druggist’s ) FEATURES., Psychic Adventures of Noted Men and Women. Tito Schipa and the Innkeeper’s Lost Will, BY J. P. GLASS. “HE PULLED THE PAPER OUT When psychic occurrences are being discussed, Tito Schipa, tenor of the Chicago Opera, always has interesting experiences to describe. Once, for instance, he saw the ap- parition of a woman with a Spanish veil and fan. He was only a boy then, in Lecce, Italy, and he had not seen such a woman, or such a costume in actual life. Later, however, visiting with his_mother at the home of an uncle in Parma, he came u| the pic- | ture of a lady in a Spanish vell and carrying a Spanish fan, in a photo- graph atbum. “Mama!” he exclaimed, “this is the lady I saw in the apparition!” It turned out that the photograph was of his uncle's lately deceased wife. It had been taken in Spain at the time of their marriage. Furthermore, it was proven that she had died on the very nlll{ht that Tito had seen her appari- tion. This experience, however, does not rank with the adventure met with by Schipa not long after he had started his career as an opera singer. It was at Vercelli, where he had made his de- but in “Traviata.” ‘This was long before the time when his great talent was to bring him a princely income. In fact, his pay was small, and at Vercelli the inn where he stopped was old, gloomy and none too comfortable. The place was wrapped in an at- mosphere of uncertainty, which made efficient management unlikely. Schipa had not been staying there long when he learned the reason. The ownership of the inn was in doubt. The previous owner had died without leaving a will. At least one could not be foun ‘This was embarrassing. For generations it had been the custom that the inn should be inherited by the eldest son, whose whole life was a course of prepa- ration for this evert. Now, because there was no will, the eldest son would not inherit the place, which must be sold so that the proceeds could be di- vided among all the family. The eldest son, now serving as manager, was and discouraged. His feeling through the entire personnel. Notwithstanding .this, the inn was crowded, there being an unusual num- ber of visitors to the city. The conse- quence was that the inkeeper had had to place Tito Schipa in the room in which his father had recently died. The singer had no foolish fears of ghosts, perhaps because he already had had an experience with on He took the room philosophically and soundly. His second night in the room was more eventful. To begin with, he had a hard time getting to sleep. When he finally .dozed off, he was quickly awakened. He heard a noise above his head as of a bird whirring about ran . s AND TOOK IT TO A WINDOW.” “Perhaps a bat has got in through i"h" open window,” he sald. He got, up, lit a candle and looked about. there was no bat. He went to sleep once more. | dawn he heard 1§truulln[ agains | ety About 1 whirring ain t the bonds n:.l.ht eavy sleep that often follows unrest- fulness, he could not get wholly | awake. With his senses thus obscured, | he heard a husky voice speaking with a great effort and with marked inter- vals between words: ‘Look—on—left—wall." Had he dreamed this, or had he really heard a voice? This was the question Schipa asked himself as he finally struggled into full wakefulness However, he got up and examined the left wall of the room. It looked ex- actly like the three others, except that an old ofl painting hung against the wood panels with which it was wains- coted to the ceiling. Nothing about the wall to Interest him, the tenor decided. He got back into bed. At once he heard three raps against the panels of the left wall, “After all, there must be a bat caught somewhere back there,” he sald to himself. “I must get it out if I | wish to sleep. Perhaps it is behind that old picture.” He dragged a table to the wall, mounted it and took down the paint- ing, which depicted the martyrdom of St. Sebastian, showing the = bleeding wounds. At its back the gleam of white paper caught his eye. There was & sheet of it, neatly folded, stuck be- tween the wooden stretcher and the canvas, He pulled the paper out and took it to a window. It was the lost will of the dead inkeeper. A sudden tremor shook him. His knees knocked. The voice he had heard must have been the voice of a dead man! But doubts seized him. He concluded, after all, he merely had dreamed the events that had led to the finding of the document. Of course, there might have been a bat in the room to arouse his dream thoughts, al- ready suggested by the story he had heard, with its rich appeal for a sen- sitive, imaginative artist. Still, it was strange, the.way which he had found the will. in Rolled Angel Food. Mix one and one-half cupfuls of nlrnt»’mg" with one cupful of flour, one teaspoonful of cream of tartar, half a teaspoonful &f baking powder, one teaspoonful of flavoring and eleven e; whites. Bake in & large, flat pan in 8 moderate oven for forty minutes. When cool, ice with your favorite icing, adding nuts if desired. Roll like jelly roll. She thought: I bate saying ‘no’ again, but ‘B.O.’ spoils you as a dancing partner.” Yet, to be polite, “Too bad I She said: didn’t know about the dance sooner. I'm dated up for that night.” Girls always had ‘another date’ —until he ended ‘B.O. popular with real suspected why drugstore sug- (Body Odor) ing how quickly others notice “B.0.”, have switched to Lifebuoy te be safe. And they like this delightful toilet soap more and more every day. n toilet soaps No more turn- his invitations excuse r is up in the ‘B.0.” offend. HEALTH Everything about ', creamy lather—even in hdrdest water. Its pleasant, exfra-clean scent that van- ishes as you rinse. The gentle antiseptic lather that cleanses so thoroughly —purifies pores so deeply—removes every trace of “B.0.” it. Its bountiful, What a complexion soap! Women add a special word of praise for Lifebuoy as a complexion soap. Its bland, deep-cleansinglather gently frees clogged pores of beauty-stifling impurities— freshens dull skins till they glow with healthy radiant loveliness. Adopt Lifebuoy today.LEVER BROS. CO., Cembridgs, Mas. Lifebuo c SOAP tops body odor— 5,