Evening Star Newspaper, October 7, 1930, Page 35

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WOMAN'’S PAGE, MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. the other ingredients. mr hair before applying the shampoo. ve it on for 15 minutes, then rinse Now shampoo % off with tepld water. Rinse well in with pure castile soap. clean water. Avold strong bleaching rinses that brighten the hair for a time, but end by making it dull !nwlxgtue, Tonic for Ofly Hair. Dear Miss Leeds: (1) I wash my hair once a week, but it becomes very olly three days afterward and the scalp itches. How can I correct this? (2) I have & big brown spot on the upper edge of each cheek. Do you think this is caused by my liver? (3) I am § feet 7 inches tall and weigh 146 pounds. Is this too heavy? (4) I have black hairs growing on my upper lip. Please tell me how to get rid of them and also how to treat moles and keep my skin from being dry and rough. . NO NAME. Answer—(1) Wash your hair twice a week, if necessary, a tar soap shampoo preparation. Apply the fol- lowing tonic to the scalp after the shampoo, before the hair is quite dry: One-. dram salicyclic acid, two drams tincture of cantharides, one-half dram |° tincture of capsicum, one ounce alco- hol, four ounces bay rum. Give your hair a sun and air bath for a few min- utes each day. Wash and sterilize your brush, comb and hairpins twice a week. (2) Dark patches on the face are tions, such as liver or uterine troubles. Have a thorough physical examina by a doctor to see what is wrong. (3) Your present weight is correct if you are in your late thirties. You must make & habit of correct posture. Hold your figure as tall as you can, with chest out and abdomen in. Do the following exercises 50 times & day: OO e and, keeping elbows ! rotate the arms at the shoulders, mak- ing large circles in the air with your hands. Cultivate deep breathing. (4) You may have the hairs perma- nently removed by electrolysis. Have a doctor remove the moles, as it is un- safe to try this at home. Excessive dryness of the skin is often due to health or wrong diet. For & treatment, cleanse the skin with . olive oil twice a day. Wipe off the oil care- fully with a tissue square or & pad of clean absorbent cotton. Now pat on a lotion made of equal parts of glycerin and rose water. Use cold cream or an olly lotion as a powder base during the day. Remember that in order to have a good skin and healthy mug.you must see that your whole body is functioning properly. It will pay you to seek a doctor’s advice, so that you may build up your beauty on a sound foundation of health. LOIS DAILY DIET RECIPE FLANK STEAK ROYAL. Flank steak, two pounds; raw egg, one; fine bread crumbs, one tablespoonful; minced onion, one- half cupful; butter, one table- spoonful; salt, one teaspoonful; flour, one tablespoonful; canned tomatoes, two cupfuls; water, one cupful; kitchen bouquet, one- half tablespoonful. SERVES 5 OR 6 PORTIONS, Cut off about one-half pound of the scraggily end of the flank steak and have it ground. Sim- mer minced onion in the butter till tender, but do not let it burn. Add to the cooked onion the chopped steak end and cook it slight ‘Then add the bread , one-half teaspoonful salt, take from the fire and stir in the beaten Spread this dressing on the flat flank steak. Carefully roll steak and hold in m with skewers. Put it in % pan. dust with flour and the other half teaspoonful of salt. Add the canned tomatoes or canned tomato soup, the water and kitchen bouquet. Start meat in a hot oven, reduce heat to moderate and bake about an hour and a half till meat is very tender and gravy rich. Remove skewers and serve. sometimes caused by internal condi- PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Scientific Progress. In routine practice there are few ‘eases more trying to all concerned than fractures of the femur (thigh bone) it in the shaft of neck, known to the laity as the hip. The standard method THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE For Classroom Wear. le long-waisted bodice belts at normal. The sleeves m'mdeml‘- in slight fullness to- Plain blue crepy woolen is trim against the wine red crepy woolen with dark blue dots used for the original Paris model. Style No. 915 is designed for girls ox':bxln, 127 and 14 years. treatmen | tive than cloth, feather- | welght tweed, rayon crepe, linen, tweed printed cottons and wool challis prints are smartly appropriate. 8ize 8 requires 11, yards 54-inch with % yard 35-inch contrasting. For a pattern of this style, send 15 cents in stamps or coin directly to The Washington Star’s ‘Fashion Bureau, Fifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, New York. ‘We suggest that when you send for this pattern, you inclose 10 cents addi- tional for a copy of our new Fall and ‘Winter Fashion Magazine. A copy should be in every home, for of course every woman wants to look her best ml.nh luunut- expense, and this book economical .TIDEWATER Herring i ¥ Roe is one of the most | economical foods you 'can buy.....and it's good| Serve it im!uld of meat, you can almost pay for the rest of the meal with the savings. of treatment for such fractures has always been and still is what doctors call “extension,” a kind of prolonged | of the patient’s leg, ordinarily maintained by means of an arrange- ment of bandages, straps, weights and pulleys; sometimes in the more com. plicated cases by means of plaster casts; and now and then by means of surgical operation, 1 suppose every medical student hears something about *suspension” .treat- ment, perhaps even learns thet this method was notably employed and ad- vocated by one Hodgen, but it is all pretty complicated and the young doc- tor generally sticks to the older and simpler Buck's extension when he is confronted with a case of broken thigh universal use; all doctors recognize and understand it; it is pretty terrible for the luckless patient, but nevertheless it is highly conventional, and so the some- what esoteric Hodgen suspension receives little consideration from the rank and file of the profes- sion, in household practice or in hos- pital. Yet the suspension method of it is unquestionably more effec- the old Spanish custom. Why, then, is it not the method of choice in the routine treatment of such frac- tures? Well, I've indicated the reason; it is not accepted because on casual observation the method seems too com- plicated and difficult, whereas in actual use it is much simpler than the crude weights and pulleys of the common | ta] method. Not only does this suspension method give the patient more comfort and freedom, but it actually ts the fracture more effectively any weight and pulley gadget can, and for elderly or feeble patients it offers a better chance for recovery. Some day, perhaps, when the course of study to make a doctor is cut to half its present length by throwing out all the non- sense the highbrows have succeeded in getting into it, the Hodgen lon principle will be restored to every-day practice and people with broken femur will get better treatment than they get at present. One has to go back 1o the old masters for a description of Hodgen’s suspension treatment for fracture of the femur—say Roswell Park’s treatise on surgery published in 1896, though & weighty word in behalf of the method was uttered by Dr. Joseph A. Blake after his return from France, where his work in the treatment of war wounds was outstanding and added new luster to the fame of American surgery In 1808 Dr. George 8. Brown pub- lished a paper on the Hodgen method in Surgery, Gynecology and Obstetrics (the May number), and in 1915 I pub- lished a paper about it in International Clinics. Both of these papers are filus- trated with drawings and photographs, but it will take more than the’ com- bined efforts of Drs. Park, Blake, Brown and the egotist who conducts this col- umn to persuade any great number of practitioners to revise their notions or modify their technic in the treatment of fractures of the femur. (Copyright. 1930 How oiten have women, self conscious of their complexion faults, longed for some simple, easy and inexpensive way of caring for the skin! The latest advance in skin care is to cleanse the face with cremed magnesia which is safer than soap and more cleansing and more beauti- fying than cold cream. It beau- tifies the skin instantly, in the same easy way that milk of magnesia purifies the stomach. Results are truly marvelous. You will be surprised to see the amazing effect of your first facial massage; it rejuve- nates the skin so perfectly that any woman looks years young- er at once. Doctors’ wives and nurses were first to use cremed mag- nesia. They claim it does more for natural complexion beauty than soaps, face creams, beauty lotions, bleaches or even a bushel of lemons. It fades out freckles THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. O, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1930. LEARN BACKGAMMON in 5 minutes a day BRIDGE TALKS —_— BY MRS. JORN MUNCE. JR. In the hands which were bid last week, and for which the play is to be given today, dealer holds in spades A, K, Q J, 8, 4; in hearts A, Q; in dia- monds A, K, Q 10, and in clubs 4. West or second hand holds in spades 5; in hearts K, J, 5; In diamonds 9, 8, 6, 5, 3, and in clubs K, 7, 6. North or third hand holds in spades 10, 9; in hearts 9, 8, 3; in diamonds J, 4, 2, and in clubs A, J, 10, 5, 2. i East or four hand holds in spades 7, 3, 2; in hearts 10, 7, 6, 4, 2; in dia- monds 7, and in tlubs Q, 9, 8, 3. The final :bid at auction was two spades, but in contract the final decla- Tation was six spades or & small slam. West, of course;, has to lead, and he has a very poorly arranged hand for an_opening lead against a suit bid. It is better to lead from a weak four o; five card suit in & suit bid than to lea from a king and two small ones, w' with this holding West leads the 5-!9‘? of diamonds, his fourth best in the diamond suit. Declarer, by looking ;: his dummy, now sees that he can W this trick in the dummy or in his own hand, but he decides to take it in own hand and leave the jack of dia- monds in the dummy as &n em therefore the 2-spot 1s played B dummy, East plays the 7-spot and cec clarer the king. Declarer is not ‘bount by any of the rules of play that are given for the adversaries and should so play his hand at all times so as to de: ceive his opponents as much as pocd sible. Declarer in planning his hn"l;; knows that riow he has an entry in the dummy in the ace of clubs and ‘“: jack of diamonds, which _insures h! against losing & trick in either suit, ‘l-! well as two entries in trumps, and w! t'l‘l such & strong hand he naturally wan to take every trick, if possible. % To trick No. 2, declarer leads the 4- spot of clubs, West plays the 6-spot, e ace is played from dummy and East -spot. pl!x?; c‘fiik’fl? 3, the 2-spot of clubs is led from dummy, East plays the 8-spot, declarer trumps with the jack of spades and West plays the 7-spot of clubs. To trick No. 4, declarer leads trumps, the 4-spot; West plays the 5-spot, the 10-spot is phye:i from dummy and East the 2- . pl,ry; trick r?:s. the 5-spot of clubs is led from dummy, East Rhyl the 9-spot and dealer trumps with the queen of spades. West plays the king of clubs. Declarer is steadily eliminating the high in the club suit. u'rls: trick No. 6, declarer leads the 8- spot of spades, West plays the 6-spot. and the trick is taken with the 9-spot of spades in dummy. East plays the 2 El'p:tf'.fltk No. 17, the 10-spot of clubs is led from dummy, East plays the queen, declarer trumps with the king of spades and West discards the 3-spot of dia- ds. m“’[‘no trick No. 8, declarer leads the ace of spades to get the one trump which is out him, West plays the 6-spot of diamonds, the 3-spot of hearts is played from dummy and East plays the 7-spot of spades. To trick No. 9, declarer leads the 10- spot of diamonds, West plays the 8- t, the trick is taken in dummy with jlcr:s and East discards thé 2-spot of hearts. To trick No. 10, the jack of clubs is led from dummy, East plays the 4- spot of hearts and declarer get a dis- card in the queen of hearts, West plays the 9-spot of diamonds. To_trick No. 11, the 4-spot of dia- monds is led from dummy, East plays the 6-spot of hearts, declarer plays the queen of diamonds and West plays the 5-spot of hearts. To trick No. 12, declarer leads the ace of diamonds, West plays the jack of hearts, the 8-spot of hearts is played from dummy and East plays the 7-spot This method has the sanetion of | of heas rts. ‘To trick No. 183, declarer now leads his ace of hearts, West plays the king, the 9-spot is played from dummy and East plays the 10-spot. By carefully planning these hands declarer was able to make 7 odd, and in auction scoring was able to score a grand slam, while in contract he could score for the small slam bid and in the honor score for the extra trick. Banana Pudding. Sprinkle half a cupful of sugar over three sliced bananas. Beat two whole eggs and two yolks with three-fourths cu of dry cake crumbs and one cup- ful of milk for two minutes. Add three uls of lemon juice and stir into bananas. Pour into a greased baking dish and bake in a hot oven for 15 minutes. Make a meringue with two egg_whites and half a cupful of sugar. Serve hot or cold. It is best served with sauce. Bean Salad. Mash one can of pork and beans, n cut one small can of pimentos and onion fine, add half a cupful of grated cheese, mix with salad dressing and serve on crisp lettuce leaves. N\ @ , %/}J l-elf VARIETIES PIMENTO =S W1SS—BKICK—STANDARD FORDELICGHTFUL ASSORTED SANDWICHES and quickly lightens the skin many shades, leaving it soft, fresh, clear and youthful. It drives away the tell-tale lines of age and reduces enlarged pores to the finest, smoothest texture, as if by magic. It's wonderful how easily cremed magnesia dis- solves blackheads and clears the skin of eruptions. To prove that cremed mag- nesia will cleanse and beautify your skin better than anything ever before discovered, just test it on those clogged nose pores that look so horrid. Or, try it on your hands—it will make the same delightful, startling im- provement in your complexion, even if you only use it inste: of soap to take off make-up. Not being a _cold cream, it ca not grow hair. To get gentine cremed mag- nesia, gsk your druggist for Denton’s Facial Magnesia. The dollar bottle contains twice as much as the sixty-cent size. " GUARANTEE; 1¥s impossible for Denton's Facial > a mot to improve mu,dn-ldhfnudm BY J. VAN CLEFT COOPER. Moving and Bearing Off. A player may put any number of men on any point not occupied by two or more of his opponent’s men. Two or more such men on & point constitute a_ “block,” and no oppo- nent may play & man to that point. He may jump over a block to s free however. (See Diagram 3, Note A.) If he cannot move without hit! blocked points, he cannot play loses that move. A player must play both numbers thrown if pessible; and if playing the smaller number enables him to use the higher one also, he must play them in that order. (See Diagram 2, Note B.) A single man on a point is called & “blot.” If the opponent’s throw car- ries him to that point he may “hit the blot” and take up the man. (See Dia- gram, Note C.) No point can be occu- pled by both players. A man taken up is placed on the bar and must be re-entered in opponent’s inner table before player can move any other man. If both numbers cast are blocked he cannot enter and loses his throw. If one of the numbers cast is free he must enter on that one, and if both are free he may enter on either. If there is a blot on his entering point he may take it up, After entering, JABL (A) White cannot move his man from point 9 either four or five, but can move it six. (B) White cannot move his man from point 9 five and three, but he can move it three and five. Since this is the only possible way to play the five, White must move this man. (C) By moving the man on point 9 three and then five White takes up Black’s blot on point 17. (D) Black cannot enter the man taken up in (C) on a throw of four and three, since these points are both blocked. He can enter on a five and three and take up White’s blot on point 20. Then he can move the same man three and hit the one ‘White has just left on point 17, AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “The quarrels o’ married folks don't amount to nothin’ after a year or two. They just cover the same ground an’ don’t make no new sore spots.” (Copyright. 1930.) Free government distribution of 500 tons of seed has just been completed in Porto Rico. Fit for a King Makes every meal & banquet. Imparts an uncommonly fine fla- vor to steaks, fish, soups, gravies and salads. It has the true Oriental flavor. p-y itat your grocer’s Oriental Show-You Co. Col Osr froe recipe book will give you some good swggestions. Write for is. *Sugars for quality and economy “Sweeten it with Domino” Granulated, Tablet, Superfine, Confectioners, Dainty Lumps, Powdered, Old Fashioned Brown, Yellow: Domino Syrup. Always full weight . American Sugar Refining Company may take his other number with the board. (See Diagram H s 5 = ey Eie ] -3 point is vacant and he may throw off a man point. If that point is vacant he may throw off from his 4 man on any point higher than the number thrown. Thus, if his 4 point is vacant and he has men on points 5 and 3, he cannot bear off from point 3 for the throw of 4. If the loser has borne off any men it is a “single game.” If he has not borne off any men it is a “gammon,” double, game, and the score is doubled. If he has not thrown off any men and still kas a man in the win- ner’s inner table or on the bar, it is a “backgammon,” or triple, game, and the score is tripled. Today in- Washington History they will pursue in the enforcement of the law prohibiting the sale of liquor to soldiers. It was stated today that these justices of the peace have generally retained in hands the amounts paid to them. order " Teiative. o thy moneys disposst ler ve money’s and in other instances it has been offi- - | clally returned. streets of the Federal Capital as the result of excessive by the thousands of volunteer soldiers who have come here continues to be an unabated nuisance. the Merrimac, which they have shod and cased in iron, in a contemplated attack on Newport In order .to be effective against this place the Merrimac will have to come within fair range of the United States squadron lying off Old -~ 40 MILLION WOMEN couldn’t possibly be wrong. Coty Face Powder is a daily necessity on their dressing tables, used constantly through the years for the greater beauty it gives to the complexion. ONE DOLLAR LES POUDRES. ‘ The Mark of Safety, Saving and Servise WEAR-EVER J - 5+ 3 ALUMINUM See the difference, feel the difference, KNOW the differ- ence between “Wear-Ever” and ordinary utensils...The “Wear-Ever” trade mark stands for something more than mere aluminum cooking utensils: It is a guar- antee that the utensil is made of hard, thick, SHEET aluminum—the metal that heats evenly and insures better-cooked, better-flavored foods with a saving in fuel ««. The “Wear-Ever” utensils shown here are offered for alimited time at attractive money saving prices in order that you may test any or all of them in your own kitchen. ‘Take advantage of this opportunity. *Wear=-Ever’” , Aluminum =pt. STEW PAN 5 Thick sheetalu- minum, seam- less construc- tion. Patented adjustable There gre dozens of daily uses in every home for this “individual” size flat bottom Stew Pan. You'll need several. FEATURES. BALANCE that Beefsteak! * Snappy cold weather . . . a good thick steak at one end of your table! * Fine! But when you do that, remember to balance that steak with a salad. A salad weighs less than a steak, but you’llfinditsupplies exactly those ele- mentsthat you don’# find in a steak and therefore does won- ders for your health and enjoyment! * Especially when it is“served with Best Foods Mayonnaise «+ + @ mayonnaise 5o smooth, so creamy, so0 deliciously fla- vored that it makes every salad a joy! RS Best Foods Mayonnaise Ovir 50 MiLLion JARS SoLp LAST YEAR - Distributed GOOD DISTRIBUTORS, Inc. 1100 Maryland _'A'l-c m:‘ ‘V.I.Ilhlm D. [ - Special Money Saving Offer on 3 Genuine “Wear-Ever” Utensils for limited time only YOU SAVE A1 @onsevcePn 21@onsewrn 97‘3 on Tea Kud;.. *3.03 L5 five most useful “Wear-Ever” utensils THICK SHEET GRID])LE, Bakes rich, nicely browned cakes grease—without smoke. Recipe and instructions with each griddle. Flae for cooking ce- reals, pud- dings, mak- ing sauces. Choice of green or One of the handi. est pans you can own. Fine for heat- ing soup, boiling vegetables, making sauces and gravies —and dozens of These stores, we know,can supply YOU: S. KANN SONS CO. THE HECHT CO. A. J. Berlin, 603 Penna. Ave. 8.E. Cavanaush & Kendriek, 3271 M Bt. N.W. LANSBURGH & BRO. DULIN & MARTIN CO. D, Feldman, 326 Cedar St., Takoma PX. W. A. Fineh, 3414 18th 8t. N.W. Fred. M. Hass, 3016 Rhode Is. Ave. NE & MoGattigan Co. 3834 13th St . Boffembomg B0 H 80, M. . PALAIS ROYAL GOLDENBERG’S W. S Jenks & Som, 728 Tth 8t. N.W. Krasmer & Dushring, 1414 14th St. N.W. . Landy & Som, 3030 Ga. Ave. N.W, & Caln Ce.. 3216 dth St N.E BARBER & ROSS E. B. ADAMS & CO. o -y w Ave. B.E. iwe, Ave. N.W, 37 Lauwrel Ave, - R K

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