Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
aru my be made of heavy crepe; m.hgr plain or striped. ‘The diagram shows how to cut Lhe material. !'l!flll of all you 3 Ihalflfl“ ht AW & st e T Inches lon and mask ihe end G D s 4ia Inches “r r dicular " inches m and mr end E. A and C c and B e sten: Tnee Draw o stontiy Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Migration. glden plover leaves its home in st Indies in early meds to Alaska or Greenland or one of the way-stations in the same latitude, In the Fall it strikes out over n sea and returns to the exact the West Indies from which it lly started. a year the fur seal makes the between the Pril G MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. * Grapefruit. Oatmeal with Cream. ‘Waflles, Maj Dip tomatoes in mmu water and remove skins. If small ones are used, leave whole; if large ones are used, slice them, on let- tuce leaves. Top them with Prench dressing, with of without cucumbers, green peppers, pine- apple or asparsgus. SHORTCAKE. One en well beaten, 't‘w'; table- spoons one es) n W m‘“wupwn 7= m‘( 3 cream of and one-half teas) 8 an cream and put together. (Copyright, 1931.) JOLLY POLLY A Leseton in Etiquette. BY JOSEPH J. FRISCH. IMA DUDD THINKS THAT AN AFTER-DIWNER MINT IS A PERSON WHO TIPS THE WAITER A TEN-DOLLAR and | handicap f Islands and | oo L) be mled to e, edges AB-BA .l‘}‘n.on the lM the ncrnn} the and 1 R m itk on his Tork and ate & with ume material, OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL A Child’s Garden. Every child loves a garden. There is a close affinity between children and growing things. When there 18 a patch of ground to be had for garden work the children ought to to have their iece. “Of course,” you will say, and then give them the piece you o not want because it is impossible for gardening. The soil is sour, it 18 wet, it is shaded, it is stony, it has never been cultivated. Now what good is that? If the child makes any attempt to rden in this unlikely spot he must adl. - That takes away any impulse to grow things, He gets the wmng notion about nmmin: It means nl. putting in a plant or some and watching the death. Not & good way to foster love for growing things. ‘This Jove for plants and trees, love of & len, is one of the most precious of life's offerings. It brings ease to troubled minds. It brings beauty to desolate places and hope to aching hearts. Many a sorrow has been worked into the rose beds to rise in color and perfume and beauty to sing A song of praise. A garden completes a home. The earth that is tilled and fed and watered responds with all the enthusiasm and grace of that garden once planted toward the east, the first home. Shel- ter and food and work are not enough. There must be the feel of the fruitful blossoming earth in & garden. It is in the garden that the spirit of home is created and expressed. The children must have a share in that surely. in the delph\mum bed, nor to float their boats in the lily pond, when the lilles are blooming. I know they cannot be allowed to dig holes in the lawn and trample the beds. But they can have & piece of garden that is ',heirs and where things will grow if { are given half a chance. I say half a chance, because that is a fair for & child’s garden. Select & bit of ground that is screened numefromnurmnr . D p; fertilize it; rake it it two spades dee) flne let it settle. While this is done e chi look on and help when Stones can be picked up = uumos léfhzmdc wuldomer When the soil is -settled and warmth of it just right, help the chll- dren to plant it. It is better if they have planned what they want in it small rake, & sérvice under degl" m&;’num only as mli:h nx;; a8 mal under the ;m“&flr E en!.h\:nalm demands. Jupervise, ent ), et ok with (b chE y hing v.hm week, BEDTIME STORIES Black Pussy Grins. Yn'll lnd it yul"-lch fo: ‘while, —-Oid Mother Nature. Old Mother Nature is quite right about that. A grin and a smile are really quite different. We always like to see a smile, but & grin may give us & most uncomfortable feeling. We do not fear those who smile, but we sometimes do fear very much those | who grin, and the more they grin the | less we like them. Yellow Wing and Mrs. Yellow Wing were bothered no more by the Starlings or any one else, and in due time there were nine white eggs on the bed of clean chips in that new house in the BLACK PUSSY BAT FOR A WHILE AT 'flil FOOT OF THE TILE-\ telegraph pole. Very e;wa of_those eggs were the Yellow Wings. It was the largest number they ever had had, but this was the largést house they ever had had. With plenty of room not a large family? The Plickers eve in large families. Yes, sir, they .o Race suicide never will be known in the Flicker family, Now, Yellow Wing is a model hus- band, always ready and willing to do his share about the home. When Mrs. Yellow Wing was lflfin, on those prec- jous eggs he found joy in taking special tidbits to her and feeding her as she sat on those eggs. Then when she be- came tired of sitting and in need of exercise he would take her place on the eggs. they never were left unguarded, and always were kept warm. Sometimes Mrs. Yellow Wing would feed him when she had found more nice. Of course, every one in the neigh- borhood knew about the home of the Plickers. There was no secret about it. There couldn't be very well. Yel- low Wing and Mrs. Yellow Wing are of good size and it isn't possible for any one in the neighborhood never to see them leaving or entering their 8o it was that Black Pussy sat at the foot of that pole look- up and wishing that the pole had branches, or at any rate wasn't 0od. clim it,” thought she. “I can climb it, but I'm not going to until sure that is wme'.hln. ¢ vither. ¥etlow Wing . Whichever hap- get out bflm I ‘when they have babies THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. We was eating supper, being lem- min merrang ple for dimsert on ac- count of ma having made it special on acoount of me and pop both liking it better than all the other kinds put to- gether. Being one of the swellest lem« min merrang ples she ever made, with the lemmin part about 2 intches thick part looklu like » 8now, pop took nnn-lon Ilkc going to heaven, say- O boy I recommend this ple. I Evlsltmyohw 1 vouch for it and highly in favor of it, he sed. Thats the way I like to hear you carry on about my cooking, Willyum, ma sed. Thats the sort of praise that makes baking a ple seem an unadulter- ated plessure insted of an unmitigated duty. But look at Benny, my good- ness he’s hardly taken hu hm bite and he's eating as though he was afraid every mouthful would be his last, she 1 dont blame him, If I was his age and I had &' ceo! ple as mar- vellous as that Id try to make it last & he sed, and ma sed, I know, but theres no use drawing it out to that extent, its paneful to wateh. My lands Benny go ahed and eat it and in- joy it. Put some animation into your appriciation, theres another slice wait- ing for you just as big as that one, she I think Ive got a stummick ake, I Thlnk yee gods he thinks, pop sed, and ma sed, How can you think when it comes to such & subjeck, you either have or you havent, havent you? It feels like it but I dont wunt to make up my mind till I eat my ple, I sed. Il finish my 2nd peece and then Tl decide, I sed, and ma sed, You crazy thing youll do nuthing of the kind. And she quick took the rest of my ferst peece and put it on top of the mantlepeece, saying, Now, when youre ‘n‘;l rite again you can eat your ple, the eer, Me being glad of the relief of mnot having to eat it in my condition, and 1 made ma put my 2nd peece up there with it, and she gave me some mede- cine and just before I went to bed I felt almost all better so ate both peeces. 25 They land at Pago Pago, Puff and Bunny do, today (They later lelrn you say it “Pango Pango,” by thi a meal oryw. yes, of course—a meal for BY THORNTON W. BURGESS it will be a different matter. “Then, ah tnen. um-e Will be something worth Do every mornlnl and sometimes in the afternoon as well, Black Pussy sat for & while at the foot of the telegraph le. Now and then she looked up, it most of the time she seemed to be merely listening. She was listening. That is exactly what she was doing. She was listening for a certain sound that day after day she failed to hear. However, this didn’t discourage her. No, sir, this didn't discourage her. She was engaged in watchful waiting, and this often takes a long time. ys and still Black Pussy visited foot of the telegraph pole, listened, looked up longingly and went he noticed grinned and that grin was 'lckud an n ) PFrom then on she spent much time where she could watch the going and coming of the Plickers. “There must be a large family” “Yes, sir, there must be ringing Well, the l-rcer the family the better it will suit me. I'll wait until those youngsters get ttle bigger. I haven's heard them yet. X'll wait until I do.” It was several mornings later that as Black Pussy listened at the foot of the telegraph pole she heard a buzzing sound that seemed to come from the pole. Then once more Black Pussy grinned, and it was not only a wicked grin but a hungry grin and a cruel n. (Copyright, 1931) FOOD PROBLEMS BY SALLY MONROE. Sandwich Materials. Here are some good fillings for the most delicious sandwiches: Equal parts of grated carrots and cannec or cooked fresh peas (put through a wire sieve) spread on but- tered white or whole wheat bread. May -be used with lettuce and mayon- naise. Chopped cucumbers mixed with cream cheese on buttered whole wheat bread. One-eighth of a pound of Roquefort cheese—2 ounces—and one-fourth cup- ful butter creamed. Add dash of than she needed of something extra | 8Ta! well and spread on buttered thin slices of whole wheat bread. Equal parts chopped cucumbers and radishes on buttered rye bread. One cupful chopped salted peanuts, a teaspoonful of chopped sweet pickl spread on bu(tered whole whut or brown bread. Equal parts chopped cucumbers and chopped celery mixed with mayonnaise spread on white or whole wheat bread. One cupful chopped cooked prunes (without juice) -to one-fourth cupful chopped nut meats, moistened with & lespoonful of orange juice on but- whole wheat bread. ual parts chopped hard cooked eggs and chopped cooked ham, with & little prepared mustard and sweet chopped pickles, on buttered whole wheat or white bread. Artificial Flowers. i will be & different matter, Yes, sir, MODES OF THE MOMENT SATURDAY, APRIL 25 1931 A Sermon for Today ‘What David sald in his haste was that “all men are liars”. He might have meant this for the ears of some ard he " aaid ' 1t,"and confessed with he had in DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Should a Lover See No Fault in the Beloved? DIAR MISS DIX—My girl friend we have agreed to leave to you to settle. girl he cannot find love with chn everything she does or says is perfect. and I have had an argument that She says if a fellow is any fault with her physically and But I claim that a chap who really loves a girl can still find just as many faults and xmp:fl;c’}lona in her as in any one else. Which of us is right? D B. Answer—You are, of course. No human being is perfect, and any man who really believed a girl to be without flaw in mind or body or tem- vietim perament would be a fit subject for an alienist. He would be the of delusions and seeing things that were not there. Being In love with a girl wouldn‘t make you think that she was & great beauty if she hap pened to have carroty hair and & snub nose and & freckled face. Nor would it make you think a girl slim and willowy if she was fat and chubby. Or brilliant and scintillating in wit if she had just an ordinary set of feminine brains and was & quiet and demure little' thing with nothing to say for herself. T!n: fact that you didn't think the girl a paragon of beauty and cleverness wouldn't keep you from loving her. ‘The fact that you didn't consider her something she was not and attribute to her qualities she did not in the world for you. 100ks, but you woul and naturally curly hair, would never set the river on ould, niot keep you from thinking her the one girl recognize that she was short on know (hlt she ‘was long on other qualities and other virtues that meant more to you than a You might know fire with her brill hes-and-cream complexion rructly well that she llance, but you are not looking for a wise-cracking wife, anyway. A GIRL s certainly silly if she demands that her sweetheart shall nnnk hzr Ferlece before marriage, because if such a thing were be the most disillusioned of mortals after marr: 'hen he that he had been the victim of a hluucmn’l’:‘n‘. GW!M Imagine his disillusion when he discovered that most of her good ll‘mn vanished when she took off her make-up and her good clothes. Fancy tment when he found that he was not married to an angel as he had supposed, but to just an ordinary flesh-and-blood woman with 'mper and nerves and funny, fussy little ways. had always tter for her if - Far seen her as she was and she just suited him anyway. TH] real test of love is in not being blind to a person's defects, but in seeing them clearly and lovi are not those that think us beautiful, the faults, Those who love us it to whom our homely faces are & more welcome sight than any movie beauty would be; who know that we are no spellbinders, yet love our are often companionship; who know that we unreasonable, that we are prejudiced, that we are quick- umpered, that we have a million faults and weaknesses, but who love us still. 'l'hlthhve.Mlthmeklndm&mm&flhb\lfltmfld DOROTHY D and not on fiction. (Copyright, 1981.) Sunny Glow for Sunless Room BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. " — i " A NORTH WINDOW TREATED In every home there are certain north windows that admit no sun. In many homes, and especially in apart- ments, there are other windows throulh which no sunshine can stream, because the light is cut off by bleak walls. Not only is the sun kept out, but the view is Anythinl but pleasing. Into such & window sunny effects should be instilled, plus an attractive- ness that otherwise would be totally lacking. Two elements are needed—a yellow and & hint of greenery to suggest ouue of trees and grass of lawns. first can be lhldl of yellow as hangings at a wins dow with a view. Beneath the hang- ings use yellow-tinted glass curtains drawn or looped back, unless they are 80 sheer they do net hide the view. Do not screen out a good view. It will reveal real foliage in warm weather. In Wintry months ivy and myrtle will fl ourish without sunshine and will sup- the wanted note of green. ‘m the -window wlt.hout a ‘view use SUPPLY SUNNY EFFECT. hangings will conform with the color scheme of thé room they are just the thing to use. If they will not, use some gay color, such as salmon pink, in a plain tone, or & many-colored chintz or linen, which features the de- sired hue among its several bright ones. Flowers will suggest a garden in bloom. One woman transformed & north window with a poor outlook into one that appeared to be aglow with im- penetrable sunlight. She cut very thin, warm, yellow tissue paper to fit the windowpanes. After sticking it to the glass with a transparent agent, she varnished over the paper. en she proceeded to dress up the window with very. sheer glass curtains, gay hang- ings and a big hanging water-filled bowl of ivy that fell trailing below. One north chamher in my country house seems even on cloudy days to be full of sunshine. At the windows are yellow, crinkly, crepe hangings and v‘!lncet otdnnt s :m:n w: 8. A bedspread of the same ives & big splash of color, while sev- eral ornaments in yellow [lue Carry their sunny tones to the old, white- painted mantel aboge the frepiace, spoken in haste. ‘We are all the time saying and doinl in haste things which re‘::k ‘We speak and act on uu tm- of the moment to the disturbance say timely speech and unseemly conduct of which we have been guilty because we allowed our imj to get the better of us, I suspect we could all look back on our past lives with a greater satis- faction and happler memory. It is well to be impulsive. other says, “An impulsive n: moving, impellent one.” We can only pity & cold, frigid nature that is never stirred by a warm, impelling impulse. Life must mean little to such natures. Surely they mean little to anybody else. Impulsiveness is indicative of a strong nature. To be impulsive means having power to drive ahead and accomplish things. But as all force is perilous un- less properly reflxllud and safeguarded, 8o of our impulses. They must be dis- ciplined, trained, controlled and di- rected. Otherwise they will be forever leading us to say and do the wrong things and getting us into all sorts of | trouble, If we want to make sure that our impulses shall be true and safe, we should look to the source from which they spring. “Out of the abundance of the heart thé mouth speaketh.” “As he thinketh in his heart, so is he.” According to your heart and thoughts will be your impulses. One who has all the while been\cultivating pure and good thoughts and building in his heart true and noble ideals is not likely to off on a tangent on the impulse of ti moment. While our human nature is auch that we shall always need to keep & check on our passions and impulses, ir’et we may 8o discipline our minds and earts until we reach the point where almost automatically we will say and do the proper thing at the proper timi Look to this and you will hne far less | NANCY PAGE Good Grooming Counts— And Not Prettiness BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. ‘The club members were discussing good looks. “Do you notice, we don't say beauty any more, but talk about ‘good looks’ And the women we have picked out as being smart and good looking are the ones we ‘would have thought homely and ugly ducklings in our mother's day. = Remember how proud a girl fised to be of her rosebud mouth? ‘What do we admire now? A generous mouth, & too longish one, # wide one. Isn't that so?” “Yes, but a wise woman knows how to use lipstick on that mouth. She does not rub the stick directly on the lij Rather she rubs her fingers over the lipstick and then puts her finger to her lips. When her mouth is erous in size she does mn wm-k rouge to the her lips are too full ot beauty she rubs lipstick into the upper lip only. “I'll tell you one beauty hint I learned. I put cream rouge on, dust l‘l'lfl’lfllel ; mn:ndthnnl l’lunt suspicion o e dry rouge compact. It gives my skin a livelier lp- pearance. d because my face is broad I make it appear more slender keeping the rouge in close limits higl up on cheek bones. “Martha, whose face is long and slen- ?er. mbv,u ‘more wp-:;m. width wtgzr spreading the rouge rather broadly toward the ears. But she kee, hers high, too. “Want to know what I learned? I put & dob of rouge on top of chin. I ruba bit of face cream over my eyebrows to give them that sleek look, I g:: a tiny suspicion of rouge on ear lol and a dash of perfume just back of each ear. Then I ?"1 equal to a difficult dinner x;ty or & first meeting with & new re- tion.” Household Methods BY BETSY CALLISTER. “I am planning to give a dinner for two of my husband's business asso- ciates and their wives,” writes a corre- spondent. “It will be a dinner for six. I have no maid, but am planning to have a ytmnil girl in to wait on table. What time should be set for the din- ner? How should the guests be seated, and should we have place cards? 1If so, should they be used at my husband’s and my own place as well as the guests'®” ‘The dinner hour should be set to suit the convenlence of your guests. Seven is & usual dinner hour in the city and if the guests have some distance to come it 18 usually most convenient any- ‘where. Your husband should sit at one end of the table, you at the other. The elder or the more distinguished of the two men should sit at your right, his wife at your husband’s right, the other man -at your left with his wife at your husband’s left. Place cards may be used, but are not necessary. It is usual to arrange them at all the places. “I have been doing over an old floor,” writes Mrs. A. L. 8. “It had a yellow- ish brown stain that was badly worn and I have removed this with paint re- mover. ‘Now I find that there are & good many spots 1eft on the floor, and I want to remove these before. putting on_the new stain.” s Vi et b o 23 roxide o en. T! should be Applled full nnnrxh and al- lowed. to dry before rinsing. If this does ndt remove the spot sused a satu- rate solution of oxalic acid crystals— that is, add as much of the acid crys- tals as a t or quart of water will dissolve. Heat the. solution and lwl{ fl'eei taking care not to let any touc! m 19300 FEATURES. The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD. mmmumu-mmm-uummmmq paid America. he highest ‘Which Is Better Off ? Two girls started to work together. Mabel and Ida had gone to public school tegether, to business school together; they had looked for jobs to- gether, and- by a stroke of luck they | had found work in the same office. It was a large| organization. None of the men had staff of girls der a head ste- nographer. tv;':mf:; a man wvante flelen Woodwatl. * gictate he applied to her, and she sent whatever girl she thought best. for Mabel, but it didn’t work for Ida. On the way heme at night they used to talk busily. Naturally they disposed first of “what he said” and “what he did.” Then came “what she said” and “what she did.” And she was always Miss Johnson, the head stenographer. “8he's unfair,” said Ida. “She never gives me a chance.” “No, she isn't,” said Mabel. to send every man the girl that will suit {Iéml best. You can't blame her for at.” A “Oh, she's & grouchy old maid,” sald “Well, suppose she is. That's noth- ing to you. You're better off that way than she §s.” “Well,” said Ida, “anyway, I don’t like to take dictation from so many dif- ferent men. I'd like to work for just cne man—be his secretary.” “Well, I like to work for a lot of dif- 1t worked out all_right | “She has | 98 !mz pewle.‘ Mabel sald. “Homest ¥ w., -morn Mgmmu: t every minute. excited and then I try h And 1 learn so much abcut the business. | Gosh!” she said. "I know all about this 3;?\ now. I just know everything that's | doing.” | “Oh, well,” said Ida, “I like & nice | qulet boss. Just tend to his work and | 80_my way. Today Mabel is a court stenographer and makes a fine living. She says that the experience gained in that first job inr:: };er th: ciurnge to go ‘hw her ent worl assure you it's very rd work indeed. > Ida, after 10 years, i3 rather faded. She's the kind of secretary she wants to be for a emall business man. She ‘mlkfa $35 a week, and she will never make any mcre. She has a safe job. Mabel dresses beautifully, and seems to have an interesting, vivid life. Ida wears one suit for four years and seems to_have a dull life. But don’t be sorry for T think she’s just as happy eur‘ Mabel. Her temperament likes the quibt secur- ity, fl'le dullness. She doesn’t know she's faded. She would be in an insane nylnm if she had to do what Mabel Mlbel couldn't live Idas life. She {would be bored into doing' something dnnnrg;n:. They don't like each other more. re's & moral in this, If you sre a Mabel you will always want éxcitement and never be satisfied. If you are an Ida you will always want peace, and also never be satisfied. (Copyright, 1931) (Girls having problems 1n roa'nuilon with their work may write to codward Rre” of Unia Puper: for Rer Bersonsl abvi MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Flabby Upper Arms. Dear Miss Leeds: Will you please tell me what can be done to reduce upper arms that look like hams? H. M. Answer—This ,f‘" of the body usual- ly. gets_very little exercise and o be- comes flabby and bulky. Obviously the thing to do to improve the condition is to exercise regularly. also will help reduce large and flabby upper arms. If you read my beauty column regularly you have probably read my views on swimming as an exercise. If you can go -to a pool twice a week and will practice a vigorous arm’ stroke I am sure you will find it does wonders toward reducing flabby upper arms. you can't go t0 & pool the next best thing is to practice the same strokes in your own room. Other effective ex- ercises for reducing this part of the body are: (1) Stand erect with both arms stretched over your head, palms facing. Bring the arms down briskly, elbows bent upward close to face. Now touch the shoulder blades behind with finger tips, until you feel the flabby muscles underneath the arms pull tightly. Re- pen 10 or 15 times, (2) Btand erect @s before, arms stretched above head and hands sped. Bend to the right until you feel the pull, then to the left. Alter- nate right and left, bending 10 to 15 times, (3) Stand erect, with both arms stretched over héad. Inhale as you raise the arms. Bring the arms down briskly, elbows hnt close to the body, hands on the chest. Shoot the arms un'lll;nbovemomuwnmpuu 0 Ahoulfler level. 3 with vim, Befors beginning the Tassage apply Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYSR ELDRED, Plea, in medicine, mesns. an ap- petite for the uneatable. The child suffering from pica nil from his erib, bites ch ofi wooden toys, picks up ashes and -coal and fuzz and hair and swallows them with relish. Whatever thé .name, the habit it- self presents difficulties for the mother all over, ‘goes to bed &t six-thirty and sleeps until seven. . "she refuses to eat cereal, potatoes, baked custard or vegetables. She will cluw all the pnmt oft any chair she 'r wool or fuzz minh hormau if T don't reach ume xh-ntmanmwm Tésult As WHD her chair and bed with strips of adhesive tape or of tightly wound muslin_strips, so that all surfaces are covered. eep pairited toys away from her, ulln[ lain’ wood, cellulold or rubber toys. Give her no toys with fuzz or hair on them—good advice for all babies—and keep. paper out of her hands. Thus you have taken away all avpcmmmu !or her to indulge this lncounu & better appetite by re- stricting her meals to three a day. Feed regularly and cut down the amount of milk by one-half, so that she will take the other half in the form of solid food. She will if she is hungry. Put the spoon in her hand and show her how to use it. If she begins to spill the food, set the dish out of reach. Some messiness is a part of the process of learning to eat and should not be treated too harshly. Substitute & raw, ripe banana or a ripe, baked banana for cereal. She ma accept that willingly, Our feeding leaflet, “Diet From 12 to 183 Months,” contairs full menus for a week from which you can get some idea of the va- rious desirable combinations. . With your request please send a self-address- ed, stamped envelope to the “Your Baby and Mine” department, in care of this newspaper. You may aiso give her one-half tea- spoonful of cod liver oil, four times a day, and one teaspoonful of dissolved yeast or brewer’s yeast three times a day. The first takes care of the vita- mins A and D, which the needs in her present limited diet; and the latter, & vitamin B product, is a spur to a better appetite. Orange juice gives her an abundance of vitamin C. ‘The baby’s present npfleme for these peculiar substances is clearly the out- growth of her limited diet, for, with- out any of the additional foods, she is evidently trying to satisfy herself on milk alone. If you cut down on the amount of milk, using one-half for drinking and the rest in the form of the essential solid foods, this unnat- ural appetite should soon be corrected. My Neighbor Say: Leftover baked or boiled ham, chopped and added to potatoes and seasoning, makes a vu'y tasty hash when baked browned on top of the stove. Glasses ‘which are used -for milk or any milky substances should always be washed in cold water in preference to hot. The latter is apt to leave a cloudy appearance and necessitates & more labor in the x| down smartly Repeat 18 to 20 times | tions two or three hot towels in successlon around the arm. Remove the last and rub in a little massage cream. Place the thumb on the upper part of the arm and with the fingers massage with a rotary motion the flabby museles, uaing a little pressure: then with the d fingers pick up the flabby musch and knead it well, drawing the fingers and thumbs together. To mase sage the upper part or top place the thumb beneath under arm- and repeat the movements. Remove ‘excess cream, apply .another hot towel or two, men cold compresses, dry well .and ly an astringent or massage alé¢ohol. A dry and dust with talcum powder. Give this massage treatment two or three times & ",'}} 1S LEEDS. Worrled—~Won't you please send for my leaflet on the subject of oily plexions? ques- fi more hm Yes, the please remember to inclose ped, self-addressed envelope to 8over maile ing LOIS LEEDS. (Copyright, 1931.) 3 THE STAR’S * DAILY PATTERN- For wear now, you'll be interested in this printed crepe silk two-piecs model. It makes emart use of fagoting in the pointed yoke of the blouse, This fagot« ing may be bought alre: and is quite as effective as made by band. The crossover collar of plain rrepe and simulated buttoned closing end charming individuality. The short cuffed sleevea are chic, . The skirt, to ha certain, ;!Iv'l‘u fullness through plais in kllé:flhnrnnxement at the mm ) 3 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. You'll like ‘this model immensely! in opaline yellow or opaline green flat washable crepe silk. i stnnzung wu.n plain skirt snd ed bl Skipper blue lm Jetsey skirt linen, aun. with onn‘ unen blg\ue are snln?y ol wit -ineh coni gl’ a pmm of this cents in stamps or coin {2st Pari as 1o o latest Pa 10 offer the matron. the the. children.. Also & articles. It is