Evening Star Newspaper, May 4, 1931, Page 26

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=Bl WOMAN’S PAGE, “Use of Cross-Stitch Patterns BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. THE EVENING SPRINGTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. Baltimore, I suppose, would claim the Baltimore oricle for its own, but it is Just as much Washington’s bird. In- deed it s the common property of northern South America and of New England. ‘The same is true of the orchard orlole. About such brilliance there is certainly a tropical splendor, but the song. I fancy (in some ways the most jeyful in all the airs of May), is not heard much in the tropics. It is a mating lyric, and the orioles honeymoon in our clime. To tell the two brother species apart is easy enough, if you see the male birds, for, though both are black on the STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, B ‘Dorothyl)ixl Would Read Riot Act to Children Parents Haven’t the Grit to Rebel Against the Tyranny of Their Children. Tm! is one revolution that I hope to live long enough to see. That is the revolt of American parents against their overbearing and tyrannical children. Of course, I have no real hope that I shall ever be privileged to behold this glorious and impressive spectacle, even though I should attain the age of a lady Methuselah, for the poor downtrodden, oppressed fathers and mothers in this country have been enslaved so long to their offspring longer '.'h that their spirits are crushed and broken, and they have no e courage even to put up a fight for their rights. MONDAY, MAY 4, 1931.. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. FEATU RES. The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD. Who started her career as @ Hanging Your Wash. There's a certain hotel in New York for women only. It is reasonable in price. All who live there are high- priced stenographers, reporters on news- papers and girls with other jobs of that sort. One of them sald to me one day: “P'll bet you cant's guess what's the chief thing we talk about when two of us meet for the first time — you frightened the highest paid business women typist and who became one of in America. one rassiere, and I rinse that eme three times a week. 2 “Now.” she continued, “with all thess new, stiff. starched clothes com! in, | the ‘girls are worried to tears. I don't know how we're going to manage. Most of the girls wear dark silk dresses even in the Summer to save washing.” It does seem a pity that girls have to spend so much time on their laun- dry. Men don't do it. They ecan get their laundry done for reasonable prices. 1 zimply cannot understand why it costs more to Jaunder A woman's ifttle | thin silk chemise than to wash and know, if two of the girls get talk- ing in the elevators g:;n rr’|n" the dining ‘ks“""h some woman who doesn't | room. p | know what to do to make a liv Oh, 1 suppose ‘mhld built up a Ilttle business dfl’::: head, neck. back, wings and tail, the Baltimore bird is orange on most of his other parts except his throat, while the orchard bird is a chestnut color on his lmvert parts, the color deepest on the breast. As for the females—well, the less & man_ tries to describe a female's dresa |1;on & man’'s big shirt that has to be ;url‘hed and takes fully 10 minutes to iron. Tm are worms of the dust that do not even turn when they are trampled upon. They just humbly and meekly submit to any kind of treatment their children accord’them, and 'xlrn the other cheek when Mary hands them one on the chin or Johnny clouts them in the eye. Apparently it doesn't even occur to them that they hold the whiphand, both literally and figuratively, and that they could do a little autocrating themselves if they had the spunk to do it. | you talk about how RisTioe iy’ Meandry Bt Teasonatls your prices for girls in offices and stores. _ SILHOUETTE CROSS-STITCH PATTERN IN BLACK AND WHITE, AS IN- STANCED IN THIS HISTORIC TANDEM COACH. |ent geometric shapes in the sajuares the less he gets in trouble, so I shall only advise you to look around and see which species of gentleman she keeps in her company, and you can draw your own conclusions. Both of the birds are accused by farmers of marauding, but the charge is groundless or overweighed by their love of all injurious insects found around orchards. Crickets, grasshoppers, spiders, caterplliars, are their delight, and beetles, small flies, gnats come not amiss. The orioles ask a few mulberries, cherries and garden peas in return for work that it would cost the farmer many dollars to perform if he had to spray his trees and vegetables against u;e pests that the oroles devour ‘for him. MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. No sight is commoner than to see a household ruled over by a despot not 3 years old, and an otherwise intelligent man and woman conform- ing their whole line of conduct to the whims of an infant in the cradle. Probably nowhere else in the world is obedience in the home so thor- oughly enforced as it is with us, but it is the parents who obey the children, not the children who obey the parents. BY the time boys and girls reach the adolescent stage they have father and mother so thoroughly disciplined that they simply don't have any further trouble with them. They jump when they are spoken to and do as they are told to do without making any fuss about it. You often hear parents say that they can do nothing with their 13 and 14 year old boys and girls, but you never hear 13 and 14 year old girls and boys com- plaining that they cannot manage their parents. As an example of what parents will submit to without a protest, take this incident, which has its repetition in tens of thousands of other Amer- ican homes, to notice it. nd represents a situation so common that we have ceased MOTHER sald to me: “I just don’t know what to do about Lula. She 1s so unhappy and so dissatisfled. Nothing that her father ai T can do for her pleases her. We are not rich, but we are able to have all of ‘There, there, baby, hurry and quit cryin’—here comes some feliers., >y (Copyrisht, 1931.) Household Methods BY BETSY CALLISTER. “I have just becoms engaged and in- tend to be married in the Autumn. As it is my first and—I am sure—my last engagement, I find that there are some questions that I cannot answer for my- self. I have never met my fiance's family. This Summer, during my two weeks’ vacation, he wants me to spend guessed. she sald. you are going to ask for & Helen Woodward. raise.” She fust grinned. I said, “I give up. What's the an- swer?” “Well, the first thing we talk about is how we do our laundry. You can't imagine,” she went on, “how many different ways there are of doing your laundry on the cheap; how many schemes we have. I'm all right. I send my laundry every week to my mother in the country. She has it done and sends it back to me. I wash my own stockings and some of my underwear. “The girls mostly wear glove silk underwear because they can wash it themselves and it doesn’t have to be ironed. Still, nearly all of us have Jobs | { { Your Baby and Mine MY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. . It is not always easy for a mother to | understand why some other mother, no | more conscientious than herself gets | such excellent responses from her chil- | dren. It is no more apparent why one | teacher can inspire her puplls to study arithmetic and enjoy it, and another ‘ can interest only the “grinds.” The an- swer 1s possibly in their own attitudes. The right attitude challenges the child’s interest and the interest inspires the result. Some readers who are unfamiliar with needlecraft have asked me to explain methods=of ml:lé:g fram l;mss-sllkh on pr cross-bar paper. m‘l‘hfie‘m a lesson in methods is ziven We all know that while children ean play all day long, the moment any one “Now it's time to pick up!” there is a long howl of dismay. On the face of it, to pick up room just because the comforts and most of the luxuries, and we have never denied Lula anything since she was born. We have a very pretty home, well furnished, but she thinks it isn't fine enough, and that we should have a more pretentious house on a more fashionable street. She has her own ecar, but it is & moderate-priced one and she is always finding fault with it because it isn't & costly car. She has lovely clothes, but she thinks she Sliced Bananas. Whole-Wheat Cooked Cereal. Creamed Dried Beef on Toast. Doughnuts. Coftee. a week visiting his people. He would not be able to be there at the same time. Would it be considered conven- tional for me to make this visit? Also, as I have no close relatives of my own, my flance wants me to be married at electric irons. It isn't allowed, but we use them anyway. “But the big problem isn't that. It's| where we can hang oyr stockings to | dry. “Handkerchiefs are easy enough. Such a pattern is accompanied by & color chart. This states the colors to be used for the different shades or signs. thus preventing the necessity for color | printing which is expensive, and njust therefore make the patterns costly. LUNCHEON. Cross-stitch is one cf the ancient forms of needlework that is classified as on counted threads. besuty de] on its accuracy. insure “cross-stitch canvas” 1is made with spaces regulated by the weave. Stitches are taken across the threads. To of the meedle either up or down as the juires. Round thread linen or | sufficiently coarse plain weave | be used as well as cross-stitch for counted thread embroidery. Cross-stitch patterns are printed on paper. Each square of the paper in s pattern indicates one stitch 3 .C] for 18 de- e e, design 1s in color, is printed in the color to be matehed in the working medium of silk, tapestry yarn, etc. Directions do not pany cross-stitch patterns except instances. ‘The Tandem m!zd on for 10 and stamped with & request direct- ia Le Baron Walker, care of rinted in are sometimes pi warying shades of black or have differ- Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. Cheap Advice. advice will never harm you some of it for your per- 18 especially true of affatrs, Tt is remark- saved herself misery and money & small sum. She is typical o savings. for it” saves oi pembe. Pay for information and knowl- THE STAR’S /DAILY PATTERN © SERVICE Bben the smaliest member of the Samily must have her jacket suit to out this season. this one answers Fashion's call Just the cutest ever in its sport . And because girls must needs be’s ‘more feminine these days, a A gathered ruffie has been added ta skirt with the plaits ot the Trom 18 & bu to the blouse. blue of & l.7l and 10 years. 1 material for blouse and 1% « 38 ) "fi".‘ g caccloth peinta; wod | WIRES nd | woolen plaids, rayons make uj s pattern of in stamps or coin d! ginghams a attractively. ly. Star's New York Fashion , Pifth avenue and Twenty-ninth | York. Pashion Book shows the | has to offer in clothes for | the stout, the miss and | New & series of dressmaking articles It s book that will save you money 10 cents. Its | The holes are for the insertion | each | and the textile. - | and the lawyer's retainer, are the price | save our health and our money, and simple tuck-in blouse. The kilted starting at either | darling mode. It | Pan sportsweight linen with | @ots with plain white hander- | % yards of 39-inch materisl | t and skirt, with % yard of | this style send 15 lirectly to The | ‘When a pattern is in solid black with a gray or white background. silhouette émbroidery is indicated. The two em- | broidery colors may be black and white, | or any contrasting colors preferred that will bring out the design sharply, or indistinctly, if the worker so wishes. On cross-stitch canvas each stitch is work- ed, background and pattern. If a cross-stitch pattern is to be worked on & textile in which the back- ground is not embroidered nor the tex- tile one of square weave, the canvas is basted securely in position on the tex- | tile. The stitches of the dexign are worked over and through. the canvas ‘When the embroidery is completed, the canvas is clipped close to the pattern and ihreads left con- cealed by the stitchery. Or the threads of the canvas may be pulled out. These are the two ways of following cross-stitch designa from patterns not stamped directly on textiles. Compli- cated cross-stitch designs.are not print- ed on textiles nor do they come in transfer form. Tapestry (needlepoint) patterns come in colors on cross-bar paper. (Copyrisht. 1931.) edge, 1f it is necessary to do so to se- | cure positive facts. } There are amateur lawyers, friends who without legal training or experi- | ence can advise us in almost any case | how best to proceed. They mean well, | but they cost us much. False steps in | litigation are costly and frequently ir- | reparable. They may lead to entirely | | unexpected losses and damages. Cheap advice is not advice which we obtain gratis from persons who would presume if they charged. Cheap advice is that which we buy at a reasonable ualified and equipped to advise us. jeir chal is com- mensurate, or should be with their ad- wice. - Lawyers, doctors, accountants, bank- ers, druggists, all the trained and edu- cated men and women in our commu- nity receive and deserve some reward for their advice. The doctor’s fee, the bank- er's rate of interest, the druggist's profit of advice. Yet their advice helps us Is that | even to profit by our actions. not the real “cheap advice”? —_— — 3 . Summer Bedding. Cotton blankets are excellent bed cov- ers for warm weather because of the | ease with which they can be washed. | | Some housewives who use cotton blan- kets in place of sheets in cold weather use these cotton-flannel blankets for covers in warm weather. | Many housewives dispense with wool blankets of any sort during the warm months. They should be washed before they are put away and then kept from | | moths as carefully as any other sort of | | wool, For each bed you should have | some additional cover in addition to a | pair of Summer blankets. This may be a thin wool blanket of attractive color | and design that may be Tolled at the | foot of the bed or it may be a silk or cheesecloth covered ‘‘comforter.” If you are so fortunate as to possess any old-time quilts there are excellent | for Summer bedding. It is quite the | fashion now to use the finer of these | old-fashioned quilts as bedspreads. In our grandmother’s day it was the ex- pedient of the woman who could not afford to buy a regular bedspread. Now women who can afford to have hand- | quilted quilts prefer to use them as spreads. It is possible to buy machine- | sewed quilts and these are very good for Summer use. They can be washed | eastly, they keep their shape and they | give a fair amount of warmth—all you | would want in moderate Spring or Sum- mer weather Many women prefer thin spreads for Summer to either the conventional thick spread or the old-fashioned quilt. ‘These are made with a pattern in dam- | ask fashion and at most Jaundries are counted as sheets in the ironing, where- ’ as the price for laundering the ordinary sort is many times as great, . i Chicken With Dressing™ Prepare & chicken as for chicken and dumplings. When the chicken is about half done. take it up and make a dress- | ing as foilows: Mix one cupful of yel- low cornmeal with half a cupful of cold water. Cook for 10 minutes, stirring | constantly. Add four cupfuls of the boiling chicken broth, cook and stir. Add one cupful of chopped celery and half a cupful of chopped green peppers | which have been previously cooked in salted water, two well beaten eggs and enough toasted bread crumbs to make of mushlil consistency Grezse the bottom of a Dutch oven or other heavy Put the chicken around the edge f the pan and the dressing in the cen- ter. Cook in the oven until the chicken is tender. The dressing will form a | brown, crispy crust. This is deliclous. HKEEP | LAMP AND RADIO e tools nesded g cusy. ot of § Fed o PUSH-CL Cheese Timbales, Tomato Sauce.. Icebox Rolls. Preserved Apricots. Brambles. Tea. DINNER. ellled Bouillon. Escalloped Ham and Eggs. Baked Potatoes. , Green Beans. Pruit Salad. Crackers, Cheese. Coffee. porsis | DRIED BEEF. A small jar of dried beef: pull into small pieces and let stand in boiling water on the back of the stove 10 minutes: make a cupful of white sauce with one cupful ‘milk, one tabl nful flour and one tablespoonful butter. Melt the butter in a saucepan, add the flour and cook for two or three minutes: then add very gradually so that it will not lump the bolling milk. Cook five min- utes and add the beef and a little pepper. Just before serving add a well beaten egg. CHEESE TIMBALES. Beat three eggs until light and add one cupful milk, one-quar- ter teaspoonful salt, a few grains each of white pepper and cay- enme and half cupful grated cheese. Turn into buttered tim- bale molds, stand them in a pan of hot water and bake until firm. Cook half can tomatoes for 20 minutes with one slice onion and strain. Melt two tablespoonfuls butter, blend in two tablespoon- fuls flour, add the strained to- mato graduallv and season with pepper and salt to taste. Turn the timbales on rounds of fried bread, surround with the sauce and garnish with parsley. FRUIT SALAD. One-half pound dates. one- quarter pound walnut meats, two granges, half pound California white or red grapes. Arrange fruit on lettuce leaves. Cover with fruit salad dressing. (Copyright, 1931.) WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Pstent Office. When Spring_brought out the lan- | tern boxes, made with quaint designs in_colored " tissue paper? i uiet Your NERVES” " i!Vlnm You Snffcr—-‘ : from Nervous Headache, Sleepless- ness, Nervous Tension, Nervous Ir- ritability and similar Nervous troubles try this delightful drink to quiet your “NERVES,” get prompt relief. Just drop a Dr. Miles’ Effervescent NERVINE Tablet into a glass of water. Watch it bubble up like spark- g spring water—then drink it. Ina few minutes your overwrought “NERVES' ¢ soothed and quieted and you soon feel yourself again. Get « package and try them whenever you feel nervous. They make a delightful drink and are harmless to take, At all Drug Stores. Large Size $1.00. Small Size 25c. “n T St Effervescent l ntes: MINE i ought to dress like a movie queen. because it isn't as swanky as some that way about everything. give her everything she wants, but she is never satisfied. fault with whatever we do, and the are so discouraged that we just don't She goes to college, but hates it place she has heard of. And it is Her father and I make every sacrifice to Always finding r child is so unhappy and we now what to do about it.” (J7OR Heaven's sake, woman,” I cried, “why don't you get your back up and read the riot act to her? Why don’t you assert yourself for once and put her in her right place? Why don't you jerk her out of college 50 quick it would make her head swim and put her to earning her own living? Why don't you tell her home you give her she can go live in that since she doesn’t like the good a third-rate boarding house or sleep on a Tumpy bed in & hall bed room and eat around in quick-lunch joints where she can find out the kind of food you can get for a quarter. when you have one? Why don’t you take her car away from her, since she doesn't iike the make, and let her try walking and riding the street cars for a while?” Belleve me, you could bring any one of these arrogant, insolent, insulting children, who despise their parents and what they give them, to & proper sense of their own value and s just appreciation of father and mother and & good home by throwing them out on their own for a little DOROTHY while and letting them rough it. (Copyrigh t. 1991) A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. WABHI'NGTON'S corps of political writers, who daily come into contact | with the great and near-great, was| handed a new experience when Jap-| anese royalty came a-visiting. That very brief press conference which His Imperial Highness Prince Takamatsu gave | the writers the aft. 1 erncon of His ar- | rival will linger " | long in their mem- { ory. | 1t was an extraor- | dinary affair, and ) | s far removed / [ from the usual pro- oedure that it left the news gatherers & bit up in the air. N The prince and % princess, under cort of the Ja nese . Ambassador Debuchi, Richard Southgate of the State Department, ranking United States Naval and Army officers and other officials, were on their way to the White House to pay their respects to the President and Mrs. Hoover. As the party reached walting eleva- tors on the eighth floor of the hotel, his imperial highness paused. Every- thing had been arranged beforehand. An interpreter replied to the questions which one of the newspaper men asked for the group. The prince was in formal morning dress. The princess, smiling, stood in the background, wearing a blue frock and flowered hat. | Three questions were asked: No. 1—“Is his imperial highness happy to be in the American Capital?” | Answer—'Yes.” No. 2—"Is his imperial highness fl-‘ vorably impressed with the United States?” | Answer—"Yes.” gt | No. 3—"Is his imj looking forward to his visit to Canada?” | Answer—"Yes.” Each of the three questions was com- | municated by the interpreter to his | imperial highness. The interpreter | made the replies. It all took about two minutes. When | the last “yes” had been given, prince directed his glance to the wait- | ing elevators. The newspaper men | med back and the royal party en- Ty NATIONAL DARRY | DELIVERS ORANGE | JUICE WITH MILK | Now . pure, treé-ripe orange julce 18 being brought to this city from tropical groves. It is delivered || | with the morning milk. | i | i ‘This new revelation in taste is “National Dairy” Orange Juice. Each morning, in pint and half-pint containers, it 18 left on thousands of | doorsteps. The distributors state its widespread and enthusiastic accept- ance has already been sensational, | and is increasing dally. Because of | its natural goodness and healthful qualities, one of New York's leading | hospitals 1s feeding it to 65 babies daily. " Squeezed mt the groves, oranges used for “National Dairy” Orange | Juice are less than 48 hours from the trees. Four and one-half min- | utes after oranges are squeezed, the | julce s frozen under vacuum. Noth- | |ing is added. Nothing is nmflved.; Packed in a carton, the julce is | delivered in a fronzen condition by the milkman each morning. Melt the icy-orange cylinder and k| the deliclous juice! 15-0z. retall at 20 cents, 7-oz. at 11 cents. OmzstNUT FarMs Damy, Telephone: Potomac 4000. A di sion of National Dairy. Crevy OHAsE Damy, Inc. Tele- ® phone: West 0183. A division of National Dairy.—Advertisement. It was a striking tableaux there in the hotel corridor. On one side stood the tall, fair and comparatively heavy men of the Occldental newspaper world. On the other stood the suave and deli- cate Japanese. Ambassador Debuchi, ruddy-counte- nanced and smiling encouragement at both parties, appeared as the spirit wh;,ch would bring East and West to- gether. To Store Linen. Linen should never be stored in a cupboard near any source of heat. In & warm, dry atmosphere linen is liable to become dry and brittle and to turn yel- low. Choose & cool place free from dampness to preserve the whiteness and silky sheen and prevent mildew or dis- coloration. Linen to be stored for any length of time should not be starched in the final laundering. ¢ N AR 5] In Home and Wardrobe Color Greets The Spring! Tintex Colors Brighten @ Everything From Dresses to Drapes In next to no time, and with the utmost ease, Tintex will restore faded colors to lovel “newness” or, if you like, wi give new and different colors! Stockings, sweaters,scarfs, bridge-sets, bed-spreads, curtains ...give them new color gaiety with wonder-working Tintex. There are 33 Tintex Colors ||| —from pale pastels to vivid darker shades. See them on the Tintex Color Card at any Drug Store or Notion Counter . . . You'll be amazed how beautifully and how easily Tintex brings cheerful color to ‘all drab fabrics! | o—~THE TINTEX GROUP—. Tintes Gray Box — Tints and dyes all materials. Tintex Blue BoxFor lace -trimmed silks—tints the i Tintex Color Remover—Removes old color from any material so it can be dyed a new color. Whitex—A bluing for restorin, wth: ABREe Ty ntex his house. I live at a girl's club and could arrange a little wedding there. Which plan would you suggest? I am a rather old-fashioned sort of person and would not like to do anything un- conventional ’ It is not strictly conventional for an engaged girl to be the house guest of the family of the man to whom she is engaged unless she had previously be- come acquainted with his sister or mother. Aside from considerations of convention, I think you might find the visit very trying. I am decidedly in favor of the little wedding at your club house, where you can be with your own friends. That is always the le’s privilege. “I have a pair of long white gloves that I would like to dye brown to go with & brown evening dress. Can you tell me how to go about it?” It is possible to dye gloves at home by means of package dyes, but it is not easy to do, and I would advise you to take them to a professional. However, if you want to do it yourself, make s solution of the dye according to di- rections. Put the gloves on and moisten them slightly with plain water, and then apply the dye with a sponge. Rub | in dye, but do not let it soak through the kid. Take the gloves off carefully, | | blow them out and hang them up to| ry. But why dye the gloves at all? White gloves are every bit as smart even with | as brown ones, (Copyright, 1931.) a brown Mutton fat can be rendered tasteless by adding one part of pure lard to two parts of mutton fat, passing this through a food chopper and melting it in & steamer with a quarter of its bulk in skimmed milk and a pinch of sweet herbs Strain through a piece of fine muslin. L e Biscuits. Biscuits will keep fresh and crisp for several weeks, even if the bread box not perfectly airtight, if a layer of the box. white sugar is placed in the bottom of i That since the list will be You never know when you have it, and seldom will anyone tell you... ropLE won't tell you, but they'll cer- tainly avoid you! “B. 0.”—body odor —is a fatal barrier to friendship, popu- larity, business success. Don't risk it. Remember, pores are constanily giving off odor-causing waste—a quart daily. Though you don’t notice this.ever-pres- ent odor in yourself, others do! Make sure Spots. Auurdn':mv‘: | ‘We paste them on the window and they dry and are ironed at the same time. “But our stockings! Of course, the Winter we dry them on the radis tors, but in Summer I have wet stock- ings hanging around my room all the time, and, of course, wet underwear. “When I was home,” she went on, “I wouldn't have dreamed of wearing unironed underwear. But,” she said, “it's all worth the price just to be living here in New York. I have just =4 “It seems to me.” our hero says, “that what we need is this: A list of all the places that we do not want to miss.” 4 is | “We want to see them all,” says Bun, “s0 I 8l st instead a blank I keep it in my head. in | mother wants it neat and tidy at night is of really no personal interest to the child. It is probably just a boresome If the mother begins her training to- ward neatness in a way suggestive only i°t the drudgery in it, the task of arous- ing the child’ sonal interest is sim- ply monumen! Suppose she goes on in this vein: “Well, I'll certainly be glad when you are old enough to pick up your own things. My back is broken. Crawl under the sofa and get that block. Do you have to throw them all around the room, so that I have to crawl on my hands and knees to get them? Thank goodness, that's done ,;r another day! Now, do please try and be more careful tomorrow and don't wear mother all out cleaning up your h After the child has heard this often enough, it would be quite natural for him to ery or whine when asked to pick up his things alone. Why should he willingly assume such an odious, tire- some duty? But suppose the mother begins her training by asking the child to help. The toddler wants to have his fingers |in every household activity. Helping { mother is a delight. There are places | for the toys and each night they go in exactly the same spot. Books on top of each other or in rows, boxes piled up, dolls in their beds, small toys in a large box. The child enjoys the orderly pat- tern, it becomes imprinted on his | be thought capabie. | feet lag, and mother bea: (her share of the job, be pleasant about {it. The next night, if not 1s sald | the child may insist on doing it all. | The mother’s own attitude that thia | is interesting, that it demands skill, | that the child is rapidly acquiring that | skill provides the incentive the chil needs to pursue the task with relish. | One attitude is no more difficult than "Lheom!r,mflufflllbo(mfl'm- | cess in teaching the child a useful habiy | while she other leads to | whining and even open revolt. Many a pretty girl has gone without partners at a dance .simply because she didn't guard against "B.0." of not offending. Adopt Lifebuoy as your toilet soap. that vanishes Lifebuoy is & body odor. deep-cleansing 4 product of LEVER Its creamy, abundant, antiseptic lathee cleanses so thoroughly, purifies pores so deeply that not a trace of “B. O.” re- mains. Its pleasant, erira-clean scent— as you rinse—tells you real safeguard against A fine complexion soap Lifebuoy’s pure, bland oils—its gentle, ather—make it ideal for the complexion. Keeps pores free of clogged impurities—freshens dull skins till they glow with healthy beauty. Adopt Lifebuoy today. BROTHERS CO.; Cambridge, Masa Lifebuo HEALTH . SOAP

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