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OMAN’S PAGE, MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Beauty on Cold Days. Oold weather is beauty's enemy for the woman with a dry, sensitive skin. It often makes the eyes red and ‘watery, and even the clearest, finest complexion looks chapped and loses much of its beauty on & cold, bleak day. During cold and windy weather a good cold cream should replace the vanishing or astringent cream gen- erally used. Cold cream forms a bet- ter protection to the skin and makes an excellent foundation for face pow- der during Winter weather. It will soothe and keep the skin pliable, well lubricated and prevent chapping and harshness. Apply it thickly, working t well into the skin, and then remove e surplus cream. Use an upward, rotary, pattering movement to work the cream evenly all over the face, More facial cream on cold days it nses okt i /) neck and throat. It will not give the face a greasy appearance after the skin lotion and face powder have been applied, for the dry, scaly skin can absorb far more cream in cold weather than during the warmer months. The dryer and more sensitive the skin the more need of a nourishing cream or lubricating oil during Win- ter, and the woman who would avoid tiny lines around the eyes and pre- mature wrinkles on the face should be very generous with her creams and olls during a cold spell. Those who need a touch of rouge ghould choose a cream rouge, as both | the compact and powder kinds are too drying for this particular type of skin. Apply the merest trace of rouge before the face powder is dusted on, smooth- | it on the cheeks lightly. fore applylng lipstick massage a | drop or two of glycerin, rosewater and honey lotion into the lips. This pre- vents the possibility of roughness and ‘¢happing, giving that ugly cracked A WASHINGTON and chapped frosty weather. No matter how grimy one may feel, the face should not be washed immedi- ately on returning home, after being out in the cold. First apply a light- weight cleansing cream or oil evenly over the face, neck and throat and with a soft tissue square wipe off the excess cream. The surface grime and face powder will be removed with the only cleanser. Apply some fresh cream and massage it into the skin with the tips of the fingers. Remove excess cream and apply a soothing skin lotion, pat- ting in gently on the skin until it is dry. ‘Warm water, softened with almond, oatmeal or cornmeal and a mild soap, may be used to wash the face before re- tiring, followed with a few mt e with a tissue cream or nourish- lnfno . But never wash this typs of skin, either immediately before going out in the cold or immediately on re- turning from a walk in Winter or in Summer. To do so0 is certain to make this type of skin rough, blotchy and | coarse. Some women with particularly | delicate dry, sensitive skins find the | use of water and soap, no matter how | soft the one may be or how pure the ‘[olher. is always followed by a disfigur- arance seen in cold, minutes’ ing blotchiness which may last for | hours. The problem of keeping the | face feeling clean in such cases is no 1 small one. The above method, together | with the correct cleansing, nourishing | and soothing creams and lotions, will ;:ev; the skin smooth, soft and unirri- | Quick Fruit Salad. | shred some lettuce, with the kitchen |scissors. on each salad plate. Next place half a slice of pineapple on each | plate, next two or three slices of canned | peaches, then a bit of currant jelly, | then a sprinkle of coconut. This may be varied by using slices of oranges, and some whipped cream. Any fruits you have on hand may be placed on | the plates, without mixing together, |in a geometric design, | juice sprinkled over all if the other fruits need added tartness. Love Nest Salad. | Mix one cupful of grated cheese with half a cupful of each of chopped dates | and figs, two slices of shredded canned pineapple, two oranges peeled, sliced | and diced, half a ‘cupful of chopped walnut meats, and one cupful of may- onnaise. Toss all the ingredients lightly | | together, using two forks. Serve on | a bed of lettuce. DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. I'L"s nothing new to Senator Cara- way of Arkansas—this situation involving Representative Cramton of higan. He has sought “personal satisfac- tion” before. More than once he has displayed a wil- “mix of- counters mean any- thing, one might say that the Ar- kansas Senator mean < Caraway had a eontroversy with a man while riding on » Wi n street car. The Senator claimed t his fellow passenger in- sisted on jostling him. + After alighting from the car the two eame to blows on the street. “ Some tim: after this the Arkansan was in a little town in New York. With members of his family he was motoring, THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN \ Ochre lace vest and deep cuffs pro- vide smart contrast to an all-day model of black canton crepe. ‘The cowl necktie softens the bodice and narrows its effect. ‘The skirt hugs the figure through the hips with gracious flaring toward the em. Black chiffon with black lace is ex- quisitely lovely. Printed crepe sk with plain blend- ing crepe contrast is decidedly chic and wearable for all-day occasions. Style No. 2943 is designed for sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 39, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3%, yards of 39- inch material with d of 35-inch contrasting. You will see one attractive style after another as you turn over the pages of our new Spring Fashion Book. Styles for children or the miss, the | matron, the stout—and a series of | dressmaking articles. tI is & book that will save you money. 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. Be sure to fill in the size of the pat- Send stamps or coin (coin pre- | . facsed). of book, 10 cents. W 4 his son driving. The Caraway auto- mobile was in collision with another. The driver of the second car up- | braided the young man for not signal- ing, and endeavor:d to register a com- plaint with the authorities. The Senator took the wheel after the accident, it | car, drove ahead and parked across the road. When Senator Caraway attempted | to pass, the driver of the second car reached in and shut off the switch. It was then that the Senator, it was charged, aimed a blow at the man | which knocked off his glasses. Senator. Caraway denied this, declar- ing that he only “pushed” the man. | verything was smoothed over when | the Senator apologized. i Personal duels with a congressional flavor are comparatively rare in Wash- | ington. Often they are threatened, but few materialize. Perhaps the most spectacular of all was the time Senator Heflin of Alabama, when a member of the House, shot & colored man on Pennsylvania avenue. Heflin at that time sought to have legislation passed that would require | separation of the races on street cars.| In th> midst of the fight he ejected a | colored man from a street car, and as the man landed in the street, Heflin fired at him with a revolver. The bullet missed, however, and land:d in the hip | of a Kentucky sportsman. Years ago the late Hernando de Soto Money, 8 United States Senator from Mississippi, strect car employe in the Capital and ided him. ‘woun i The late Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts was physically attacked | in the Capitol at one time. | BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON. E had been told he was no-account since babyhood, Walter had. He had been reminded constantly that he | was neither as smart as Ford nor as good as Stuart. When he was 4, he was firmly con- vinced of his worthlessness; by the time | he was 5 he had discovered a few | things about people, and when he reached his sixth birthday, he had a workable plan of living. Now he was starting to school and here was a grand flield for attention. For Walter's secret was this: If you couldn’t be good, you could be bad The results were about the same, for both brought you into the limelight and other people had to sit up and take notice. Besides, the other I'tle boys and giris | |in the room had to be shown that he | was important. Otherwise they might think, like his parents, that he wasn't smart enough, or polite enough ur | brave enough to be noticed. Well, he'd change all that. | So the first day he pulled off James Oliver Morton, jr.’s, cap and threw it under a street car. Mrs. Morton called up his mother on the telephone and demanded a new one. The teacher was told, all the chil- dren knew it and looked at him. True, their eyes were unfriendly, but they | looked at him, not past him, and that was something. He was known. A nonentity already celebrated! His small knowledge of th2 | world was accurate. He was on the right track. The next day he stamped when he | marched. The teacher had to rap her ruler on the desk and call his name sharply. Things went on. By the time the | youngest of the Crewe boys had been in | school a week his teacher wished she | were dead. | "1t got so bad finally that the villain was hauled to a child-guidance clinic, Sure Way to Get Girls—if you want plenty of thick, | § beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you don’t. l It doesn’t do much good to try to comb or wash it out. The only | § sure way to get rid of dandruff s | § todissolve it; then you destroy it en- | § tirely. To do this, get about four | § ounces of ordinary liquid_arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most, if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and two or three more applications will com- pletely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it. You will find, too, that all itching | sections of grapefruit, pieces of dates | with orange | became involved with a | agreed The Hard-Boiled Boy THE EVENING: LITTLE BENNY We was eating supper, being under onions, and ma sed, Ive all the arrangements to have my pic- ture taken tomorrow, Willyum, but Im haunted by an obsession that I may not be able to smile naturelly when the critical time comes, and a f ph with an unnaturel smile just at once as a pure and simple ama- ture. I wish I knew the rite thing to | think of just at the proper moment to | make me smile, she sed. G, I know, ma, I sed. Why dont you imagine you was dreeming that I was ran over by an ice waggon, and when you woke up I was safe bed and you was so releeved you couldent help smiling, I sed. Do you wunt a harty slap? ma sed. No mam, I sed. Wich I dident, and ma sed, Then dont call up any more gassly pictures. Cant you suggest sometgtnc, ‘Willyum? she sed. Well yes, pop sed. Id suggest that you imagine yourself in a gathering of 500 wimmin and that each and every one of them is looking at your hat in envy and despair, he sed. I think that mite do it, ma sed. But no, on the other hand it will only re- mind me that my new hat izsent as becoming as I thawt it would be. O deer, now thats just the very thing Ill think of just because Ill be trying not to, she sed. Well then yee gods, make up your mind to order another hat and think of that, let the bills fall where they may, | pop sed. I can make up for the exter expense by wearing my own hat about 4 more years, he sed, and ma sed, O Willyum such a clever ideer combined with such a lovely thawt. Now Im sure to take a naturelly smiling picture, she | | sed. | Wich she proberly will. | Cabbage in Sauce. Chop one medium-sized head of cab- bage rather coarse. Add just a little water, salt to taste, and simmer for | ten minutes. Meanwhile, prepare a | sauce made with three tablespoonfuls of butter, four tablespoonfuls of flour, and two cupfuls of milk. Add about half | a pound of finely chopped cheese to the |sauce and stir until dissolved and smooth. Drain the cabbage, add to |the sauce, and mix. Season to taste with salt and pepper and pour into a | buttered baking dish. Cover with but- tered bread crumbs. Bake for half an hour in a moderate oven. . Prune Cake. Mix together ome cupful of chopped cooked prunes, one and one-eighth cup- ful of sugar, four tablespoonfuls of melted fat, two-thirds cupful of prune juice, and three beaten egg yolks. Sift together two and one-half cupfuls of flour, one teaspoonful each of baking soda and baking powder, and half & teaspoonful each of cloves, allspice, cinnamon and nutmeg. Add to the fruit mixture. Stir only enough to mix thoroughly. Bake in a moderate oven. JOLLY POLLY A Lesson in English. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. ME AND TOM AGREED THAT A HIGHWAY ROBBER'S WORK wLIF“NG. e C. B. M—"“Tom and I agresd” is the | required form. An easy way to avold | this error is to “dissect” the sentence | as_follows: 1. Tom agreed. 2. 1 agreed. 3. Tom and I agreed. No one would think of sa) “me ” in sentence No. 2. Therefore it would be incorrect to say “Tom-and me” in No. 3. | anesthetic is required. If you have trouble with I, me, he, him, etc., send a stamped envelope for | Polly's leafiet on “I and Me.” |hi! mother apologetically holding his and. | A brisk young man took them into his office. “I'm sorry, doctor. but it's not my | fault we're” here. This boy here is | simply——" ‘The doctor put up his hand sharply. | “He’s just the ticket, that's what he is.” I “Wh—why, you don't kn——" she | started to say. | “Boys with that color of hair are always fine boys,” he interrupted quick- | ly. “Walter, do you like dogs? If you ' | do, I've got a dandy. Does tricks. Come | down to my house, will you, on Sunday and see him! great eves. Same color as mine, see?” | He Jaughed and punched Walter in the | stomach. Walter began to talk like a magpie. The doctor learned that he was crazy about dogs. Not a word about his bad behavior. “Now you go out and see if you can find my hat in the hall. It's browr | and pretty old and battered. I forgot where I left it." 2 | Then, Walter gone, he spoke seriously | to the astounded lady. “Killed with | | inferiority. Needs his self-respect back; a bit of friendly petting and | kindness from the family with no ref- erence to his break-overs. It will take |time ‘and patience, but I think it will | work. He can't go back to that school. T'll get him transferred. | “Pra‘se him, help him, give him | sensible meals and a lot of sleep. Make | all his habits very regular. Don't be tempted to scold or punish him. Buy him a dog and get him some rabbits | or chickens. Give him a few cents weekly allowance or pay him small amounts for little jobs. Keep him well dressed.” In two weeks he called up. “Walter secms to be a different boy We got the dog and promised h'm rab- | bits for Easter. He likes his new school, and I think he's getting along fine.” | “Good!” said the doctor. “I hardly |expected results 5o soon, but there | | you are!” | Rid of Dandruff By the way, you've got and dig; of the scalp will stop, and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. Four ounces is all you will need, no mat- ter how much dandruff you may have. This simple remedy never fails. | in America. STAR, -WASHINGTO MODE D. > (0} OF THE MOMENT Wairt effect. Prune cotoured artrakan PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Diathermy. Last April an English doctor, Walter | Collins, reported in the London Lancet | his experience in the removal of tonsils | by diathermy. He had employed this | method in 150 cases, adults mainly, and he believes the method has every ad- vantage of ordinary surgical tonsillec- | tomy and none of its disadvantages Dr. Collins believes diathermy is not suitable for children under 14 years of age, since to them a general anesthetic is not so alarming as the appearance of the diathermy apparatus. In this country some of the more skilled specialists, doctors who know | the art of managing children and gain- | ing their confidence and co-operation, | have found diathermy quite satisfactory for the extirpation of the tonsils in children as young as five or six years. Of course only the exceptionally well bred child can have diathermy treat- ment. For adults Dr. Collins says no general | It is sufficient to spray the throat with a local anes- thetic. ‘The whole treatment lasts only a few | seconds. ‘The British surgeon says it is | advisable to complete the tonsillectomy |in two, three or four stages or treat- ments at intervals of a week or more. The patient should be examined at the | end of a month, and again after the| lapse of three months; should any fragment of lymphoid (tonsil) tissue | have escaped destruction, it is easily| disposed of at this time, with a touch | of diathermy. | Collins has his patients use a simple | antiseptic mouth wash after meals, but absolutely forbids gargling. Following each such treatment the portion of tonsil that has been coagu- | lated or desiccated shrivels and grad- ually sloughs away. | No secondary bleeding occurred in| the 150 cases. ‘It was never necessary | to_hospitalize the patient. | In England perhaps they have never been quite 5o radical, not to say nb!d“ about the removal of tonsils as we have been in this country. From the growl- ing and snarling and gritting of teeth I fancy my plain and unchallenged assertions about the tonsillectomy scan- dal in this country have not been | quite in vain, yet there is still room | for a lot of improvement in the “ac- cepted” way of dealing with bad tonsils Especially do the rank and file of the medical profession here need to stir out of dumb apathy in re- spect to this modern method and at least acknowledge that it is a good al- ternative for patients who, for one reason or another, cannot undergo a general anesthetic or risk the shock of | surgical tonsillectomy even under local | anesthesia. The fact that some of the would-be leaders have conducted a vain | campaign to discourage diathermy in ! The Woman keeps free throat surgery, despite its adoption in brain surgery, goiter surgery and urol- ogy, is a poor consolation for nose and throat men who have failed to equip themselves to provide this boon for handicapped patients. Here is an opportunity for many a good doctor—there are still cities with- out a throat specialist who is able to extirpate tonsils with diathermy. And the intelligent public is more and more demanding this modern treatment. (Copyright, 1931.) To Protect Eyes. By wearing a pair of motor goggles, complete protection is afforded the housewife when peeling onions, when using ammonia for cleaning, and when rforming all dusty tasks around the ouse. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Figs. Cereal with Cream. Creamed Eggs on Toast. Johnny Cake. CofTee. LUNCHEON., Sausage Fritters, Maple Sirup. Blkegr Apples. ea. DINNER. Curry of Veal. Mashed Potatoes. String Beans. Cucumber and Tomato Salad. Italian Cream. CofTee. CREAMED EGGS. Boil three eggs 10 m'nutes. Make cream sauce and slice in the eggs. Pour over hot huttered toast. Makes a nice breakfast dish. BAKED APPLES. Pare and core apples, sprinkle with cinnamon, fill cores with sugar and English walnut meats. Serve with cream. CURRY OF VEAL. Cool one teaspoonful chopped onion in two tablespoonfuls but- ter unt‘l yellow, add two tabl #poonfuls flour, stir until bro and add one teaspoonful curry powder, ore-half teaspoonful salt and a dash of cayenne: pour in slowly one and one-half cupfuls stock and cook and stir until per- fectly smooth. Add one pound lean raw veal cut into dice, cover and cook gently until tender. (Copyright, 1031, by the Associated Newspapers.) of today of colds When you carry VAPEX in your handbag no cold has the chance Your days are so full of activity that you simply cannot allow a cold to interfere with your routine or blight your pleasure. So you will find that Vapex— the delightful inhalant—is a reli- able companion to have always at band. For Vapex checks a cold at the start. Does it simply. And easily. A drop on your handkerchief—a few deep breaths of the fragrance —and you'd scarcely believe you had a cold. The vapor keeps its strength all day. Vapex can also be used on the pillow—a drop at each end. Vapex is very inexpensive. The $1 bottle contains fifty applica- tions—an average of only a2c apiece. Millions of bottles are sold yearly. It is approved by Good Housckeeping because it is eafe for every one—even little children. Ask your druggist for V-A- to grip you P-EX—the original inhalant dis- covered during the war., E.Foucera&Co., Inc., Distribu- torsof Medicinal ProductsSince1849. A drop on your hendkerchief MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1931. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. That contrary streak in most of us makes it very easy for us to criticize those who do differently than we. This desire to have others follow our plans is_the incentive for most unasked-for criticlsm and advice which is poured into the ears of young mothers. Only when, despite protests and advice, the mother pursues her own course with triumph, do these crepe-hangers admit that perhaps she was right. Recently we suggested the advisability of sleeping far enough away from the baby so that small whimpers are in- audible and only the cry for necessary attention heard. Mrs. O. L. W. writes to_indorse this, for she pursued the licy against the advice—in fact, flying in the face—of her relatives and hus- | band. “When my twins arrived,” she says, “I turned the only available downstairs room into a nursery and slept in the room with them. As you sald, a dozen times at night they would squirm and | grunt and seem on the verge of waking | and I would lie there half awake, dead | for sleep, but ready to jump up and | get their bottles. I was almost & nerv- ous wreck when I decided to sleep away from them. There was a regis- ter which opened from their room into mine, and I could hear them as soon as they cried. In a short time I was sleeping soundly, only waking when necessary to give them attention. “They will soon be six years old, and it would be hard to find healthier chil- dren, I have stuck to a schedule, and, while it was hard, young mothers should realize that they are laying up bless- ings for themselves if they will persist. They have no upset stomachs, food problems, temper tantrums or illnesses, and I can see that it has all been due to their regular regime. “I did not even have the co-operation of my husband, and my friends called me crazy. Now they quote my methods and compliment me on my family. Naturally I am proud of the results I have obtained.” ‘This is extremely interesting. It oc- curs to me that when you said “I did not_even have the co-operation of my husband,” you felt as if this were an unusual situation. As a matter of fact, it is commonplace. The parents have two different viewpoints of children, that of the person who is with them occasionally, and that of the persoit.] who is with them constantly. It is easy enough to be lenient and play | for a few hours on Sunday and a half hour at night, but it is quite another thing to live a whole day in such a | gay, carefree atmosphere. | Most. of the conflicts in the home arise because these two parents can- not come to an amicable decision about the proper way to rear infants: and if perchance the new mother is trying to carry out some of the newer policies | of child care, she has not only her husband, who is unfamiliar with them, but all of her husband’s family and her own relatives arrayed against her. The co-operation of the father is a great help, but it is by no means common- place. It is most unusual. Oyster Dumplings. Put some lemon juice over a pint | of oysters, add salt and pepper, then {put the dish aside in a cool place | while you make the pastry. Roll some nice puff paste very thin and cut into four-inch squares. Brush them over with beaten egg. Place upon each square three or four oysters, and put a small piece of butter on them. Bring the four corners of the pastry together and fasten with clean wooden tooth- picks. Bake brown in biscuit pan. Re- move the toothpicks before serving. "VAPEX Brsathe your cold away *Beg. U. 8. Pat. OF. he Vapez radio propram over Sta- in nkr eeer "Saturday_evening from 9:30 to 10:00 Eastern Standard T FEATURES, BEDTIME STORIES Queer Kind of Fruit. In countless To man that Peter Rabbit was much puzzled and his curiosity was growing with the passing of every minute as he watched Farmer Brown's Boy. The latter moved from tree to tree in the Green Forest. He walked all around each tree looking carefully at the trunk and every now and then taking something from the trunk and dropping it in a bag which he carried. “What can it be,” thought Peter. “I don't see anything on any of these trees that looks good for anything.” Peter stared very hard up and down the trunk of the nearest tree but saw nothing but bark from the ground up to the lowest branches. to him that this was a different kind of tree from those that interested Farmer | Brown's Boy. When Farmer Brown's Boy had moved on Peter hopved over to the foot of the tree from which Far- mer Brown's Boy had taken something, and stared and stared. His staring was in vain. “There isn't a thing, not a thing, that anybody would want on this tree,” he muttered, quite forgetting that what- ever had been there had already been taken. At last he happened to look down instead of up and there at the foot of the tree was a little whitish lump of something which Peter never had seen before. He went over and smelled of it and didn't particularly like the smell. “It smells a lot like this tree,” said Peter. and—— Just then a thought pop] into Peter's funny ittle head. “I do be- lieve,” he exclaimed, “that Farmer Brown's Boy dropped this. I wonder if he ; it from the tree and at it is or” He looked over at Farmer Brown's E ] “A jini a riki and a sha,” says Puffy, “in Japan Ccmbine to make jinrikisha—a cart pulled by a man. The jin—that is the man, you see; the riki is the power; ‘The sha—that is the carriage that you pay for hour by hour.” 1t didn't occur | “I wonder where it came from | BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Boy and saw him put something in his mouth. It looked as if he had just taken it from the tree he was so care- fully looking over. “He's eating it! As true as my name is Peter Rabbit, he is eating it!” exclaimed Peter. Once more he smelled of that queer little lump at his feet, but it didn't smell like anything good to eat. No, sir, it didn’t. Anyway it didn't tempt Peter to even try it. In the matter of what to eat and what not to eat Peter trusts to his nose. “That is what a nose is for,” says Peter. Had Chatterer the Red Squirrel been there he could have told Peter what it | “WHAT CAN IT BE?" THOUGHT PETER. was. But Chatterer wasn't there and s0 Peter could do nothing but wonder as he followed Farmer Brown's Boy without letting him know it. When Farmer Brown's Boy moved on Peter would do the same thing, scampering | from cover to cover so as not to be seen. | Now Peter isn't as observing as he might be, particularly in regard to matters which do not immediately concern him. So it was some time before he even no- ticed that Farmer Brown's Boy was stopping only at certain trees. He would pass tree after tree without so much as a glance at it. Finally Peter noticed this and began to wonder some more. “Why doesn't he look at all the trecs?” asked Peter of himself. Being unable to answer this he gave it up and watched Farmer Brown's Boy more closely than before. Gradually it came to him that the only trees in which Farmer Brown's Boy seemed interested were trees that were still awake though resting. That is, they were trees that still carried their green leaves, although it was Midwinter. The sleeping trees, the ones that were leafless, he didn't even glance at. And then Peter made another dis- covery. The trees Farmer Brown's Boy visited were different from the hemlock | and the fir balsam that he had recently | become acquainted with. The little leaves or needles o1 these trees were growing out from all sides of each twig and pointing toward the twig tip. The branches of the hemlock and balsam were lacy in appearance, while the branches of these trees looked almost bristly because the little leaves grew thickly. These were spruce trees of the kind known as the Red Spruce and the queer fruit Farmer Brown's Boy was gathering | wasn’t fruit at all but little lumps of gum which had formed around small | cuts made in the bark in the Spring for this purpose by Farmer Brown's Boy | Sprucz gum is Old Mother Nature's | chewing gum. Popular? - « « « until she ended I,,B,,,, gm; Read one girl’s story HAT a lonely life I used to lead! 1t all seems like a bad dream now. T had no really close friends. People were always pleasant and cordial enough when we first met. But soon they drifted away. Yet I never suspected the reason until one girl finally told me. “She had hesitated a long time. For no one likes to speak of body odor even under the polite name—‘B.0.” “And to think that I had been offend- ing and didn’t know it! But we seldom notice ‘B.0.” in ourselves—only in others. Though our pores give off a quart of odor-causing waste daily, we quickly get used to this ever-present odor. We think we're safe when we’re not! “But with Lifebuoy to protect me, Try LIFEBUOY SHAVING CREAM See how the razor glides over your face. No more \pulling or smarting—even P/ oo those *“Tender Spots.” At your druggist’s, stimulates dull Lifebuoy today. HEALTH stops @ there's no fear of ‘B.0.” now. Lifebuoy lathers so generously, nomatter how hard the water. And this rich, creamy lather is gently antiseptic. It purifies pores—re- moves all odor. I certainly am grateful to Lifebuoy! It’s made a tremendous dif- ference in my life.” Watch complexions freshen You'll never know how radiantly fresh and clear your complexion can be until you use Lifebuoy. Its bland, searching lather deep-cleanses pores—tones and sallow skins back to healthy, glowing beauty. Its pleasant, extra-clean scent, that vanishes as you rinse, tells you Lifebuoy purifies! Adopt Lzver Broraers Co., Cambridge, Mass. Lifebuo o SOAP dy odor— . Y L