Evening Star Newspaper, July 9, 1930, Page 24

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WOMA N SUEAGE. \ 9. 1930. FEATURES. How Parents Can Lower Automobile Casualties. 'DIA LE BARON WALKER. Parents will have to be constantly | alert to keep their children off the roads | frequented by automobiles. The number of deaths caused by autos during the | last vear ix appalling. Reckless driving | has become a menace. Various regula-| tions and laws are under consideration however, is the thoughtless imprudence of those who know no better. It does not prevent the dangers to which they are exposed and to which they expose themselves, Unless parents can impress their Ilittle folk sufficiently with the terrible possibilities of accidents that | they incur on thoroughfares they will | need to take more stringent methods i keep them within bounds, such | watching them while they are playing | out-of-doors, kecping them within ) fenced-off areas, or even resorting lo the old-fashioned method of tieing them to some sheltering tree with clothes- ne. hard on the children. It must be remembered that motorists are distressed by the liability of acci- dents that children playing in the streets put upon them. Occasionally a child has been killed through no fault of the person at the wheel. but because A heedless youngster has run directly in front of a machine. Not even putting on the emergency brakes could prevent the dire disaster. Parents can spare themselves and motorists needless worry through taking proper precautions to keep their chil- dren off roadways. They can help cut down death and casualty lists some- what in these ways. It is for the Gov- ernment to put a ban on issuing licens* s to irresponsible persons and to oe stringznt in laws to take licenses .awav from {hose who are found to be re.kless (Copyright 1930.) Everyday Psychology BY DR IESSE W SPROWLS Compensation. Compensation is a mental mechanism, | | Tts function is to repair damages, fill | out deficiencies, correct errors. And | here are some of the forms of com- pensation: 1. The untraveled read books on travel, in order to maks up for the lack | of travel, 2. Some play games in order to re- vive the lost arts of their childhood years. 3. Some: go to the movies to get the romance they have never experienced and can only faintly imagine. 4. Some gossip about one person to another to bolster up their shrinking sense of self. 5. Some day-dream in order to find out how it might feel to get a grasp on the impossible. 6. Some who have bad dig>stion turn out 1o be expert dietitians, 7. Some people steal for no other pur than to satisfy themselves that | they are still clever. A CHILD SHOULD BE TAUGHT THE| 8. Some people act rudely merely be- DANGERS OF PLAYING IN THE| cause they are afraid STREET. | 9. Some people gamble in order to | hurl defiance into the face of that un- to diminish the casualties. Something | beatable law of averages. assuredly will have to be done, but in| 10. Some people change their resi- the meantime caution on the part of dences and even their vocations for the pedestrians, and careful supervision of | sole purpose of trying to show the children’s boundaries in home play- | world that they are independent of men ground areas must be followed. and economics. - Chiidran often are reckless. This, (Copyright, 1930.) EsisDTIME STORIES By Thornton W. Burgess. she disappeared under water and Peter saw no more of her da Jerry Muskrat spent most of his time taking thinfs easy. There was plenty to eat and little difficulty in getting it. There was no work demanding his at- tention. So Jerry swam about, visited and had a good time generally. Peter | Rabbit happened to remember that when Mrs. Muskrat had had that big family in the house in the bank of the Smiling Pool, Jerry had had to go else- where. “I suppose,” said Peter to Jerry, “that now the family has gone, you are back in that home of yours in the bank.” Jerry grinned. “Supposing so doesn’t make it so,” said he. “What do you mean by that?” manded Peter, “Just what I said.” replied Jerry. “Do you mean that you are not liv- ing there?” Peter asked. “You've guessed it,” said Jerry. Peter at once became very curious. “Why?” he demanded. “Why aren’t you Hving there”™ “For the same reason that I didn't live there before,” replied Jerry, and grinned again, “You mean—you mean——" began Peter. “Exactly,” said Jerry, interrupting. “That is just what I mean.” “How many this time?"” quired. Jerry shook his head. “I don't know yet,” sald he. “Probably plenty.” “Now I know,” said Peter, “why Mrs. Muskrat hasn't seemed to miss the chil- dren who went out into the Great SHOULD THINK YOU WOULD | World.” BE VERY LONESOME, MRS.| “That's it.” replied Jerry. “She had MUSKRAT,” SAID PETER. | something else to take up her mind. By | ut_your own - L 8 | the way, Peter, what al ®he didn’t. She didn't seem to miss | family? Haven't you any babies over in them at all. | the dear Old Briar-patch?"” Peter Rabbit rioticed this. “I should | “I did have when I left home,”| think you would be very lonesome, Mrs. grinned Peter. “Some of them were be- | Muskrat,” said Peter. | ginning to think that they knew all| ‘Is Mrs. Peter very lonesome when |that 1 could teach them. So by the | the last of her children goes out into |time I get home again they may have ! the Great World?" asked Mrs. Muskrat. | started off into the Great World. Your Peter considered for a moment. “Well, | children don’t seem to worry you much, ssid he, “sometimes it seems to me | Jerry.” there isn't any last. You know. one| “Nor do yours seem to worry you family is hardly out of the way when | much, Peter,” replied Jerry. “Buf then. | another one takes its place. It seems | I guess the mothers do worrying enough | to me sometimes as if there are babies | for the whole. family. Worrying: seems | in the dear Old Briar-patch all the time | to be. part of a mother’s job. Hello! through the Summer.” Here comes Longlegs the Heron! No, Mrs. Muskrat grinned. “We mothers | it isn't Longlegs! Now, who can he be | do not have much time to be lonesome,” and wh-re did he come from?" | said she. And without another word (Copyright, 1930.) Mrs. Muskrat. Whatever is, you are bound to find, A cause or reason has behind. -——Old Mother Nature. Jerry Muskrat's children had gone out into the Great World to make homes | for themselves. All of them had gone down to the Big River, for you see, they wanted to see something of the Great World, and the Smiling Pool was not a big enough place for them. Now, you would have thought that their mother would have missed them sadly. de- Peler in- . as| None of these ways is actually | | Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG. July 9, 1861.—A large assemblage was | present at the Executive Mansion to- { night and participated in a Midsummer reception held by the President and! Mrs. Lincoln. The heavy downpour of | rain outside did not appear to dampen | {the ardor of the guests nor diminish | their numbers. The levee has seldom ! | been exceeded in brilliance even by the White House levees in the regular so- | cial season each Winter. ! All branches of the Government were | well represented. Prominent among- the | cabinet was Secretary ot State Seward {who in the east room attracted respect ful crowds of spectators whenever he| stopped to chat with friends. | Manv Senators were also present; | |also Speaker Grow and many of his| | colleagues from the House of Repre- | sentatives. Army and Navy cfficers in| their bright uniforms were everywhere | in_ evidence through the large assem- | blage. President Lincoln appeared to be as {hale and hearty as when he first en- !tered upon his arduous duties at the| : White House on March 4 last. Mrs. ! Lincoln, surrounded by a group of | | friends, was a center of attraction. She| { welcomed with unaffected grace and! | ease the many guests of the evening. In addition to the volunteer troops! that are flocking into Washington to! juphold the Union, detachments of | United States Regulars continue to ar- | {rive from time to time. About 200/ | United States Cavalry arrived during | the last 24 hours from Carlisle Bar-| iracks. The Cavalrymen went into bar- | |racks here near the Park Hotel, on| | Seventh street. where they are today| | awaiting further orders. | *“The members of this Cavalry detach- ment all came with fine horses, and are apparently quite ready to go into the field against the Confederates at a mo- ment’s notice. The same railroad train | that brought them also brought a large number of horses to be used by other Cavalry and for baggage trains. A | gleat many recruits also arrived for the | various New York regiments that are already here, including about 100 for {the 79th, or Highland, New York Regi- ment. | Five men of a Rhode Island battery | of artillery were terribly wounded, two| of them fatally, this morning when a caisson on which they were seated ex-| loded accidentally. ~They were just| starting for their drill ground. The accident occurred at Sixth street and | the boundary (Florida avenue). No cause has yet been discovered for the| explosion. NANCY PAGE Nancy Studies Styles and Iced Coffee Making. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. Nancy had her pencil in hand. She had gone down to the style show in her favorite shop. She was making note of the new sleeves which were taking the place of the sleeveless dresses of last Summer. She noted the little puff which was picturesque and youthful,” the fitted style with a small tie matching the tie at the neck line and then the flowered type which seemed to be in keeping with the pattern of the goods since it had_scalloped edges. After the show she went info the | tea room for lunch. She chose fellied | R \ | | | chicken bouillon which was just stiff | enough to hold its quivering, broken | bits in the cup. Then she had a fresh vegetable plate—new peas, Flemish car- | rots, fiecked with chopped parsley, mealy | white potato, Summer squash enriched | with eream and butter. For dessert she | chose raspberry parfait cookies. As she finished her dessert and the | tall tumbler of iced coffee she noticed the popularity of stitched linen hats with ‘brims worn off the face and with shallow crowns. Then she studied the tea room'’s method of making iced coffee. A tall and crisp tumbler filled almost to brim with rather large chunks of ice was plaged | on small plate. A pot of freshly made, steaming hot coffee was brought in. A bowl of powdered sugar and a pitcher of rich cream were put beside it. The hot coffee was poured over the ice. ' Then sugar and cream were added PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE || VI;Y_V“'_ILLIAM BRADY, MT D. Physiology of Rest. Sheep jumping through a break in the fence are too congruous. Thackeray called humor a mixture of love ap? wit | quack publication about glands and be- havior that appeared about the time he was writing his book. The quack had A plausible treatment for all human frailties or faults which customers | paper, Lowell regarded it as a perception of might care to blame on their glands. as liked and the whole was : tirred with the long handled spoon. There was a sparkle to coffee made this way which was missing when coffee was iced be- | fore being served. | Write to Nancy Page, inclosing~ a stamped, self- | addressed envelope. and ask for her | !leaflet on cool beverages in tinkling | glasses, | | (Copyright, 1930, Publishers Syndicate.) | | can afford the upkeep before you set one up. Otherwise yeu will regret it. | that changes the character of a woman and turns a moron into a blue stocking | them day in and day out. | taste and judgment in women, and if you make & mistake, blame your own lack | | of intelligence, not her. | manager, and the best looker, i the worid, even if you never tell her so, or pay her a compliment. care of this ~— the incongruous. (Erudition by Web-| But even if Mr. ster) What Schopenhauer thought | for a full book he did drop one or two about it T haven't time to look up, but | TNl bet it was good. I have observed | ing.” vs the best place to begin something about insomniacs that I want | relaxation in any circumstance is in the to tell for their own good. uniess they neck. He cultivated a habit of look- are quite hopeless. They are self-|ing up from his “work” (which was eentered rather than self-conscious, ' evidently loafing over a desk) At regu- they have no inferiority complex: on lar intervals, say hourly, and noticing the contrary they feel it should cause|just what he was doing with his body grave concern to all and sundry when |He found he was using his neck more they complain or boast they have slept | than his head. He was stiff necked. So only three hours or not at all last night | he sought to let go or loosen or relax and for many other nights before. In|his neck, and this seemed to bring an short, they have little or no sense of |agreeable sense of relaxation through- humor, which explains why many of out the body and the mind. them resent this observation. Sounds reasonable enough to me. Of Most of us who contrive to live with- course, I may be a bit prejudiced by mv out working dealt according to our | Qucer notion that somersaults are a divers lights with the phenomenon of 800d thing for dignified folk, particu- Nurmi. One Gerald S. Lee was <o im- | 1arly at middle age and afterward. 1 pressed by the easy-running Finn that | Am sorry I eannot recommend Mr. Lee's he took a vacation and wrote a book on | book ‘to readers, because of the large the theme of taking things easy. The Quantity of extraneous twaddle about title page and frontispiece of Mr, Lee's glands he has dragged in. Anyway, he book are fine and subtly calculated to|has developed only a vague idea, aud 1 appeal to all who loaf to live or live in | believe you have the gist of it right Lee lacked material | good p:‘fic!lrnl hints in his “Rest Work- | e hope of loafing later on. It runs thus: “Rest Working. A Study in Relaxed Concentration. with some observations | on gland-balance, body-balance and the | #ight to let oneself go. By Gerald Stanley Lee, Author of ‘Crowds’"” The | frontispiece shows the easy-running | Nurmi overtaking Ritola in a race. That title “Crowds” betrays the au thor as 2 latter day psychologist, so we | there in"the suggestion about the tend- ncy to become stiff-necked and the habit of putting your mind on it regu larly and endeavoring to relax at least all unnecessary rigidity. (Copyright. 1930.) Tutti-Frutti Cake. One-half cup fat, 1}, cups sugar, 2 WHO REMEMBERS? | BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. How Do ~ = ART OKEEP AWAY? Tury NG’ CuIlkINGY | 500 | GRugfoMe/ | | | RuESOME!| | | ERoReReNoNReXe1| R?‘\" q e e 11 “WHICH SHALL WE SEE”" “OH, I'M NOT PARTICULAR.” \DorothyDix| “Take Your Time and I.ook About You Before You Enter Into a Life Contract to Put Up With Temper and Temperament and Pay Bills of Any Woman,” Is Author’s Advice to Young Men. cerning marriage. Advantages That Men Have in World. Tells How to Assure a Happy Marriage. YOUNG man asks me to give him some advice appertaining to and eon- Well, son, my first bit of counsel is not to be in a hurry about marrying. Take your time and look about you before you enter into a life contract to put up with the temper and temperament and pay the bills of any woman. And, above all, don't marry until you are good and ready to be a fireside companion. As long &s & man wants to spend his evenings playing poker with the boys he should stay single. Don't take a girl out of a good home, where she has kind and loving parents and brothers and sisters and friends for company, and where she leads an interesting and amusing life, and drop her down into a bugalow or kitch- | enette apartment and leave her to spend her evenings alone. A woman marries | to get a companion, not a stuffed shirt that sits up with a newspaper in its hand and out of which she is lucky to get & grunt when she essays to engage it in conversation. Don't marry until you have the price. A family is an expensive luxury in these days of the high cost of living and you want to be very sure that you Don’t marry a girl for one thing and expect her to be the exact opposite | as scon as you get her home. There is no magic in the marriage ceremony | or a spender into a saver or a petter into a prude. What a girl was before marriage she is going to be after marriage. Only more so. Remember that kittens grow up into cats, and flappers cease to flap, and that the cute little ways that are so entrancing in the days of covrtship, wh!ni you see only a little of them, will get on your nerves if you have to live with | Also, that while a little Dumb Dora who rolls her | eyes at you and asks you artless questions when she is 18 will be a fool who | will bore you to tears when she is 48. Don't forget that you pick out your wife yourself. She represents your For every girl tips a man off before marriage to just | the sort of wife she is going to make. If he has inteiligence enough to be let out without a keeper, he should know that the thin-faced, nervous, neurotic girl is going to make a nagger; that the bossy girl is going to henpeck her husband out of his life, and that the daily hint from Paris will keep the man who has to pay the bills with his nose to the grindstone. Nor does a man have to be a Sherlock Holmes to be able to deduce that the swee-tempered, good-natured, unselfish girl will be mighty easy to live with, even if she is not so much to look at. Don’t marry out of your class. The happiest marriages are those in which the husband and wife are near the same age and have been brought up in the same school of thought in religion and politics and raised on the same kind of pie. - Congeniality of taste is the strongest bond between two people. The men and women of whom we never weary are those who enjoy doing the things we like to do, whether it is playing golf, or reforming things, or listening to the radio, and as long as a man and his wife ride the same hobby-horse they are never on their way 1o the divorce court. Don't cut out all the love-making as soon as you are married. Matrimony does not cause a woman to shed her sweet tooth, even if she does cut her wisdomn teeth on her wedding ring. Don't take 1t for granted that your wife knows that you still love her and thal you think she is the greatest little Few women are mind readers or possess the gift of clairvoyance, and when_their husbands neglect them they are likely to think that it is because they have ceased to care for them. There is nothing more pathetic than that there are thousands of women breaking their hearts with longing for their husbands to say to them the words they are too stupid and stingy to say. Show your wife appreciation. Compliment her upon her thrift when she saves your money. Give her the glad hand for the way she manages your home. Don’t gobble down the dinner she has spent hours in preparing for you without giving her a word of thanks for her labor. Remember that you are your wife's audience, to which she is always playing, and that she likes to have a few words of approbation for good work from you, just as much as you do from your employer, or from the men with whom you are associated in your busi- ness or profession. Don't marry unless you are willing to give your wife as liberal an allow- ance as you can possibly afford for her own personal use. Probably before marriage she got a fat salary for her labor. Don't make the wife job any more unattractive than 1t is by making it the only job in which an intelligent, educated woman has to work for her board and clothes and then have them glven grudgingly to her. Every wife earns more than she ever gets by her labor. Don't force her to corkscrew every dime out of you, penny by penny. If you are a tightwad, be a bachelor. Pinally, don't neglect the little courtesies, little attentions, little amenities of life, just because you are married. your wife as if she were a lady. Show her tenderness and appreciation and that you are really trying to make her happy and she will overlook all your sins of omission and commission and still love you. e DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1930.) Spring Style Asparagus. Scallops of Roast Beef. Arrange some bolled asparagus stalks| Season some rice with one teaspoon- through rings 3 inches wide cut from |ful of butter to each cupful of rice o s | used, and put a layer of the rice in a e jpeel of aJemon. | baking dish. Cover with cold roast beef pleces of buttered toast from which the | chopped, but not too fine, then a layer | crusts have been removed, and moisten | of sliced tomatoes or stewed tomatoes | with water in which the asparagus was |or canned tomato pulp, seasoned well | cooked. Brush the lemon rings with | with salt and pepper and dots of but- melted butter, place in the oven to ".Im, Repeat until the dish is nearly | | heat the asparagus, and arrange on a|filled and cover with bread crumbs. serving dish. Brown lightly in the oven. Place on oblong | Y7 THiS LIQUID KILLS FLAG FLIES and MOSQUITOES double-quick Black Flag Liquid brings quicker death toflies,mosquitoes, moths, roaches, ants, fleas. It penetrates their tiny breathing tubes. Every last one dies. Always costs less than other well-known brands. Money back if not satisfied. © 1930, B. F. Co. LE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Im reeding the 2nd volume of Sidyey Sly, Detecktive, being even more ix- citing than the ferst, and this after- noon I smelt a swell smell coming from our kitchen. thinking, Ah hah, theres cakes being baked on these prem- ises, where's my trusty blud hound, on the trale. And I took a umbrella out of the umbrella thing and held it out in frunt of me and started to follow it as if I thawt a dog was on the other end pull- ing me, and I went up the frunt steps and down the back stairs into the din- ing room, and I looked in the kitchin | and our cook Nora was just opening the oven door and closing it again, me say- ing, Ah ha, cawt in the act. Your room_will be more appriciated than your cofhpany, good by, Nora sed. Id like to ask you a few questions ferst, madam, my name is Sidney Sly, Detecktive, I sed, and she sed. Your name will be Mud if you dont take your funny face out of that door. Have you got anything in that oven? I sed. and she sed, Tll have something in me hand in a minnit, and by the { general shape of it it'll be a broom. Meening to chase me with, and I sed, Have you ever been accused of any crime? 1 expect to be accused of a merder in 2 shakes of a lambs tale, Nora sed. And she made a grab for me and I forgot I had the umbrella and it stuck agenst a chair and tripped me, and I Ot up aga'n like lightning and ran out | of the dining room door, and there was a noise in back of me, me not stopping to see what it was but it wouldent of needed much of a detecktive to gess it was a cook falling over a umberella. THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Lounging Pajamas. No wonder so many smart women are adopting this new pajama mode. For instance, take this style No. 640 T've selected for today. It is a Paris replica. It is captivating in flat silk crepe in orangey-red shade. Trimming bands of red and of black crepe lengthen the effect of the basque bodice. The jacket is lined in the biack crepe. The trousers are extremely full and swing with the same grace as afternoon gown when wearer moves. pajama model can be had in sizes 14, 16, 18, years, | 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Sapphired blue silk crepe with aqua- marine . blue crepe bodice, which ap- pears again in coat lining, is chic with trim of the darker blue. For a pattern of this style send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The Washington Star's New York Fashion Bureau, Pifth avenue and Twenty- ninth street, New York. Our Spring Fashion Magazine reflects the latest Paris vogue. It shows the new length for skirts and the smart ways of sleeves. Also interesting em- broidery designs that lend French ac- cent to the home. So, in sending for your pattern, I suggest that you inclose 10 cents additional for a copy of our fashion magazine. NEW 'BEAUTY CREAM REMOVES WRINKLES An amazing new cleansing cream | has been discovered called Marinello Tissu: Cream. It is already the | favorite among leading beauties of the stage and society, as well as ) cosmeticians everywhere. Doesn't look nor work like any |cream you ever used. Melts the | pores, lightens the skin slightly, cannot enlarge the pores, cannot grow hair on your face, overcomes | dryness, removes and prevents lin flaking and wrinkles and wipes awa beautifully. leaving the skin as soft and clear in color as a rose petal. Get a jar of Marinello Tissue Cream from the stores name°d below. | Cleanse your face with it twice & | day for 10 days using no soap or water. If you are not overjoyed at the way it removes wrinkles and gives new softness and beauty to . your skin, s°nd us the lid of your Marinello jar and we will refund your money. The Marinello Com pany, 72 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Sold at these beauty shops: Cathedral Mansions Beauty Shop | 3000 Connecticut Avenue Corkery Beauty Shop 819 18th Street N.W Vanity Beauty Shop 1348 Connectiout Avenue N.W Fleanor Snyder Reauty Shop 1090 National Press Butlding Helen Powers Beauty Shop 725 19th Street N.W. Florastelle Beauty Shon 808 H Street N.E. Malone’s Marinello Shop 2 Columbta Road Mrs Ames Beauty Shop | | 2 4th_street N.E Marinello Daylight Beauty th‘" A | 705" 1200 Street N.W. Anne Campbell Beauty Shop 727 120 Street N.W Colony Beauty Shop PR 4911 Georgia Avenue N.W. Marinello Approved Shop i 1203 F Street N.W. | The Cosmetique Beauty Shop 1_Mount Pleasant Street Historic Wisecrackers of the Table 3. Duke of Wellington Said Prince Talleyrand's Epigrams Were Unforgettable, BY J. P. GLASS. Prince Talleyrand, the great Frgnch | statesman of the period of Louis SVI Napoleon I and Louis Philippe, set per- haps the most famous table in the Paris of his day. In the conversations that accom- panied his dinners he was apt to pro- | vide the best bon-mots of all, but he was not one of those individuals who attempt to monopolize the conver- | sation. “Talleyrand was a very agreeable companion, though not a talkative one,” said the Duke of Wellington. “He would remain for an hour in com- pany without speaking, and then come out with an epigram which you never forgot.” The famous Sydney Smith decried | Talleyrand’s ability as a conversa- tionalist. | “He had no teeth, and, T believe, no roof to his mouth.” he said after a visit | to the prince’s house, “no uvula—na | larynx—no _trachea—no _epiglottis—no | anything. It was not talking, it was gargling.” Reproduction of a few of the prince’s witticisms may serve to upset the Rev. | Smith’s contention, which seems to have resulted because he called upon the Frenchman when he was very old. | Here they are: | When asked if a certain_authoress was not “a little tiresome,” he replied, | “Not at all; she is perfectly tiresome.” “My mother was a magnificently beautiful woman,” a new acquaintance {told him. Talleyrand said, “It must | have been your father, then, who was | | ugly.” | Mme. de Stael, the mannish author- ess of “Delphine,” was supposed to have | painted herself ‘as the heroine of the | book, with Talleyrand as the countess, one of its characters, On meeting her, Talleyrand said: “Madame, I am told you have placed us both in your romance, disguised as ‘women.” Some one said that Chateaubriand complained greatly of deafness. “MADAME, T AM TOLD YOU HAVE FLACED US DISGUISED AS WOMEN!’ ,|only one mistake." “He thinks he is deaf because he no | longer hears himself talked of,” com- mented Talleyrand. A well known Neutralize And Look Years Younger Tonight! The greatest foes to complexion beauty arec acid skin excretions. s pecially during warm weather, per- spiration deposits acids on the skin that wndermine even the loveliest complexion. In spite of ordinary washing and cleansing, pores become enlarged, while dust and grime ad- hering to moist skin oiten cause ir- ritation, blemishes and unsightly blackheads. The newest discovery in heauty culture is that cremed magnesia new- tralizes acids on the skin in the same easy way that milk of magnesia puri- fies the stomach. The complexion glows with health and beauty, en- larged pores are'reduced to the finest texture, and the tell-tale lines of a disappear almost over night, author remarked, simple 1o All you do {3 ed magm is as use as washing your face 3 is anoint vour face, massage for a few minutes and rinse with water No other washing is necessary. DENTON'S CREMED M BOTH IN YOUR ROMANCE During my life I have been guilty of * Talleyrand asked him, “When will it end?” Of a well known woman he said, “She is insupportable.”” Then, as if to soften the harshness of the remark, he added, “but it is her only fault.” Talleyrand's tendency to duplicity was beautifully described by Napoleon Bonaparte. He sald: “Talleyrand was always in a state of treason, but it was complicity with for- tune. He conducted himself with his friends as if they were enemies, and with his enemies as if they might be- come his friends.” SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Gh! Baby? So you have a ice-cream comb, What does you say we has a party and Bruvver will help you eat it? Skin Acids first cids Shonld vour face tingle at the splication, it is a sign that face ¢ at work. You can have the clear, lovely com- plexion of youth, if you will try cremed magnesia. You will be sur- priced at the added beauty of your skin because even a single trial will make any tace.look vears younger in five minutes, To get the genuine cremed mag- nesia, ask your druggist for Denton’s I Magnesia. The large dollar bottle contams twice as much as the sixty cent Get your magnesia and lovely tonight CHARIS is priced from $6.95 up. The garmens illustrated s TSRl Jlight Comfortahle cHARL, If you expect your fitted, Summer frocks to look well —you must wear a foundation garment. And, if you expect your foundation garment to really correct your figure and sull be comfortable — you should wear a CHARIS. The adjustable design of CHARIS—an exclusive patented feature— enables you to re-proportion your figure wherever and as much as needed. This unique design also makes stiff, heavy boning unnec- essary, permits excremely lightweight construction throughout the entire garment, and insures the wearer of freedom from pressure, restricted movement or objectionable we#nth. Craris models, designed especially for Summer contain importane features such as cool, net top and decollete back. These models weigh only 12 ounces and may be had in odd and even sizes from 32 to 39. Other models up to size 54. To arrange for a private examination, at home and an individual firting by our expert fitters later, just write or 'phone the address below. » CHARLEL OF WASHINGTON ‘ | 8ax See Beauty Sian! are not surprised to find him rambling |eggs, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 1 cup chop- for 276 pages before he utters the ped candied pineapple, 1. cup chopped \ amazing thought that Napoleon's glands | figs, 1 cup. milk, 2’ cups flour, 3 tea- | g made him what he was. A safe bet,|spoons baking powder, s teaspoon salt. thet: you can say it of any human be-| Cream the fat and sugar. WHEN THE LAWL WAS VERY ing and no one ‘can refute Your argu-| of ingredients and beat 3 minutes. STRINGENT AGAINAT PERSONS ment. Mr. Lee may have been intrigued. [ Bake 45 minutes in loaf pan in moder- WHO DOCKED THEIR HORSES' aithough 1 eannot be sura of this. by a ately slow oven. gty © - “TAILS IN SUMMER TIME. Homer Building <) BLACK FLAG LIQUID Kills quicker— Afways costs less MADE BY THE MAKERS OF BLACK FLA 1319 F Street N.W. Phone: National 7931-32 Marguerite Beauty Shop o. 3 Penn: sE Lady Jane Beauty lhnn" 1o 1304 F Street N.W. | Marti-Nita Beauty snap’ © 0"t ¥ | 5 E Ror i | Dorothes Mae Beanty aiond. Baltimore 364 RBeants shoy POWDER 6 34tk St., Mount Ramier o~ » P W S RS L]

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