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WOMAN’S PAGE.~ MILADY B EAUTIF —f— . BY LOIS 'o.c . Lip Wrinkle, Desr Miss Leeds: For some time I m&mmweflw;fl% wrinkle running herizontally enf :hfi’ ANXIOU; 1ip, open your mouth | rqlp?wn over your | < front teeth. A} a little tissue cream and Jflp with & mo- Do this for sev- or other suitable skin lotion. Give the massage twice 8 After the nightly massage pat a little of the cream (or muscle ofl) on the wrinkle until morning. LOIS Blopde Hair Rinse. Dear Miss Leeds: (1) When I was ounger my hair blonde, but now it | a very gfi brown., I would like to w h uch peroxide to use and | without my hair. (2) I| 0 years of age, 5 feet 434 inches and weigh 117 pounds. What should ? (3) what is the correct weight | woman 47 years of age, 5 feet 2 B01% 14 possible to bisack o er—! e each your mm, but since you are blonde I would advise you & mild rinse after your n ize the is the LEEDS. | | S L KT 8§ T i 5 i £ ity o §§§E ; ] & vise you to LOIS LEEDS. LR | Agnes: (1) The tired feeling you ecomplain of is probably due to consti- ion, overeating and .lack of exercise. are sure that this suggestion is would advise you to have a thorough physical examination by a doctor to see just what the trouble may | 2 A girl who is 20 years old and | | discarded too—and the neck finished with applied band and bow in simple | manner shown in miniature view. The circular skirt hss an inverted plait at the center-front. | Carried out in plain colored crepe silk in the new lighter shades, crepy woolen, | jersey and novelty cottons, it is also | most attractive. Style No. 2881 may be had in sizes 8, | 10, 12, 14. 16, 18 and 20 years. Size 18| uires 3'; yards of 39-inch material | with 1, yard of 39-inch contrasting. | For a pattern of this style. send 15| cents in !'.lmgt or coin directly to The Wi n Star's New York Fashion Bureau, Pifth avenue and Twenty-ninth street, New York. Our large Fashion Book shows the latest Paris has to offer in clothes for the matron, the stout, the miss and the children. Also & serfes of dressmakihg articles. It is a book that will save you money. Price of book 10 cents. | LAMP AND RADIO WIRES OFF FLOOR! S Bl e ST H-CLIP | when you want and leave it | I | AN tall lhwld‘mch about 129 poun: I shall be to mail you my leaflet on how to reduce if you will send a stamped, addressed envelope you write again ask for treatment for lnlnrd Be night give it & al lece of !g ‘Wra] in & and pat on an ls:gnnm, 5 feet 6 inches ds. Tul OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATEL Winning the Prise. “Pussy, the teacher ll{l you are not doing very well in your lessons. What's the matter?” “I don't know. BShe says I'm lawy, but I'm not.” “Now_listen, Pussy. You have to work. You don't want to be left back. Tell you what I'll do. You dred per cent each day this week in spelling and metic, not exactly & hundred you know, as near as you can get to a hundred, ninety-eight, maybe ninety-nine, and a hundred, you get high marks every day and I'll take you to the city to see the sho “Oh, good. I'm crazy to see that show, mother. I'll surely get a hundred. And she did. Every afternoon she reported a per- fect mark, or nearly so, and even showed papers to prove it. “There now. You see?s You can do fine work T'll take you to But _she did not the show tomorro There was a take her to the show. sad reason. Saturday morning’s mail brought a to It was from the her and it read something like this: Tear Madame: Unless your daugh- ter Amelia does better work than she has done this past week she will have to work with the lower grade during some of her free time in order to hold her place in her . If she shows no improvement next week over this one she will not be promoted this term. She recelved a failing mark in every subject, of her grade week."” “Pussy, how could you tell me such a lie? %}hy did you? Tell me.” “Because, mother, I wanted to go to the show.” . Rewards will not help a failing child. Children do not fail because of a lack of desire to do well. All children would do well if they could. Some fundamental Wweakness causes their difficulty and until that is discovered and removed there is little hope of improvement. Sometimes this trouble is caused by health. Healthy children are usually children, provided their home lives and their school associa- tions are what they ought to be. Look first to the material well being of the failing child. Set that right as far as possible. If the failure is serious con- sult a specialist. Character faults are often based upon physical failings. A child who is undernourished is weak throughout. A temptation is harder to resist when the blood supply is not up to standard. of us, grown-ups and children alike, need every ounce of power we can muster to fight off temptation. Clear thinking demands a healthy me- dium for its operations. The example of those about them is highly impertant. Industrv, endurance, persistence, witnessed in the home day by- day have their influence on the character of the child. Spiritual health coupled with physical health the home is reflected in the childrer. The attitudes of those with whom the chii- dren are associated, upon whom they must depend, are all-powerful in termining the attitudes and the stand- they ire. 3 ug.g'udlmlsumuh& the child who can exert himself. They cannot gen- erate power. Power is generated by healthy food, fresh alr, sleep, play and Power is inspired by purpose, will, the deep desire to be and to do what is right. The whole matter is based upon health; health of body, health of mind. Let a reward come as a surprise after ‘work accam ied. It sits better and it is less likely to stimulatg, the child to wrong actions. (Copyright, 1931.) . Steak, Yorkshire Pudding. Pound “half a cupful of flour and some pepper into a round or sirloin steak cut-two inches thick. Heat cne- fourth cupful of ham or bacon drip- pings and brown the meat in it on both sides. Add some salt. Remove the meat and make a gravy, allowing one tablespoonful of flour to each ta- blespoonful of fat. Add more fat if necessary. Blend thoroughly and brown. Add two cupfuls of boiling water and two tablespoonfuls of catsup. Add the meat to the gravy, cover closely and bake slowly for two hours. Chcpped onion may be added if onion flavor is desired. Ten minutes before serving pour the following batter over and bake: Beat two eggs well with one cup- ful of sweet milk. Add two cupfuls of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow- der and half a teaspoonful of salt. Mix well. Before pouring this over the meat add more water to the gravy, as the batter absorbs much of the gravy. Chocolate Delight. Melt one bar of sweet chocolate with three tablespoonfuls of water and four tablespoonfuls of sugar. When melted, take from the fire and mix with the unbeaten yolks of four eggs. Fold in the beaten egg® whites. Place in the bottom cf a narrow deep baking pan the halves of six lady fingers. Cover them with a thick layer of the choco- late mixture, then place the other six halves of the lady fingers on top of the chocolate. Add another layer of the chocolate mixture. If the pan is large, use 8 or 10 lady fingers. This dessert must be made the day befcre Chill and serve with whipped » Dethol Destroys Moths It's no longer necessary to pack away clothing and furs for the season. Elimi- nate this trouble. Leave these articles hanging in closets and just spray them once & week with Dethol. Dethel won't harm or stain clothes—but it will stop the ravages of moths. It kills the flying moth, destroys the hungry worms which do the damage. Also pro- técts your upholstery, rugs and drap- eries. Thereisa money back guarantee. For sale everywhere. Dethol Mfg. Co.. *Inc., Baltimore, Md. Spray a butten? 2 m{ln or s t 8 hun- | di PHE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Yesterday we dealt with those prob- lems of the too dependent child, which had to do with eating. Today we are concerned with some other problems of this same child. Mrs. G. R. asked, “My child puts everything into her mouth. What shall I do when this is AR Bhe takes it nllt.,x teach her to play uzn , inside or out of the house?” Becsuse the mouth is such a sensi- tive porfionmoltflle li_);fl'g'i h)':y. 1t 18 nodt at evel measure % thll'keen. unwry‘ngn measure. e child learns taste, texture and con- sistency by biting and tasti and these are valuable lessons. e the small baby may temporarily discard many things we consider essential be- cause she is disturbed by their strange- ness, the older child develops such a curiosity about almost any object that satisfaction results only when it has been looked at, handled and tasted. For that reason c) e toys for young children at this experimental and in- ting age which may be bitten If decorated with uneat- make excellent toys. Single they are undulub:;.m Simply keep them away in, teach her to & box or pin- of a child is often stimulated by the mothe ef- forts to arouse fear of pins. hux', nasty n]d‘rln bite baby.” . This soun more excif than terrifying. Instead teach the child to associate pins with a box or a pincushion, and chances are that she will hurry to place them there. The mother may let her learn this _habit by thro some pins on the floor and asking baby to bring them to her and droj m in the box or punch them in the cushion. Our leaflet, ing With a Child’s Curiosity,” goes further into this same subject. Any reader may obtain it by sending a self-addressed, stamped en- velope with her reg\!xut to the “Your Baby and Mine” newspaper. If the baby is to learn to enjoy her- self alone, her arations from the mother must be pleasant ones. Play- mates stifie #he first keen of sep- aration and are desirable at ., A first step is to let the child help the mother, and then take over small tasks to be done alone. There are numerous little tasks which children can do at this age, and any activity which is pleasureable for the child and is ac- complished independently of the mother and praised by her will tend to be re- peated. One independent activity leads to another. * Outdoors some tasks may need to be manufactured. Sweeping the walk with her small broom, put leaves or twigs into a basket or wiping off the front door may blind the to the fact that she is alone. Fr They mingle with the tourists on the Honolulu run— They've been around so much they min- gle well, do Puff and Bun. K Our hero gets the raz, though, when hé pins upon its neck. The tail belonging to the Pig that's | hung up out on deck. | | | partment of -this | MODE =====0F T Why Don’t They Tell You? Every time you start on a new job this is what happens to you: You apply for the job. You get it. You come to work on Monday morning. You are put down at a desk and somebody says: “Use this letter- TS awful how quickly painted walls get smoky behind the stove. It’s hard to get greasy grime off, too, unless you go about it the right way. Let “Uge this kind of “We like our let- ters to begin three inches from the top.” And’ that's all. ‘Then you sit at your desk for awhile. You shazp- You arrange your You in with Helen Woodward. en all your pencils. notebook open ready for work. | pile blank sheets of paper neatly. ‘Then you fuss and fidget a your pencils. You don't read a news- peper because it's the first day on the job. ¥ou would like to speak to some- body, but you don't know who's who, | and so you just sit and wait. | " After ‘awhile you get word that you are to go to Mr. Dinglebob’s office to take some dictation. You go in and sit down at his desk. tes & number of letters. He “I have to have them at 4 o'clock this afternoon.” Then you go to your desk and write the letters. All the time you really don't know what you are doing. You don’t under- stand what his letters are about or what his work is. You don't know even what Mr. Dinglebob's job is. In shor, | nobody has you anything that you er o your wo! you should know what the firm sells, ‘what territories it sells in. You should know how its prices compare with those of other firms, who its executives are, who its chief competitors are. You should know what sort of goods it makes and what your particular de- partment is supposed to do; what the various departments are, whom you are o go to for everything you need. ! It you knew all that, how much Smoky Walls the work choose the soap. For cleaning like this use Gold Dust. A tablespoon to a gallon of water will do the trick. Gold Dust gives you a safe, sure, easy way to clean things clean. For cleaning up all dirty dirt, use Gold Dust, economy, ask your grocer for the big House- hold package. Cr a/bfmn,fraol. ot blue aend white printeda slA for the'spring brida Jc..n,iru.d ly Bruyy-;. The white o/-imdy cotlar ties at the The wide Belt is of Blue The Woman Who Makes Good BY HELEN WOODWARD. Who started her career as @ frightened typist and whd became ome of the ngpheu paid business women in America. D._C. THURSDAY, 5 T — HE MOMENT PARIS scarf back. uch better you could write you knew what they your questions. are not a bright girl you will | | | iness houses have some | one who will sit down with each new | ' girl and explain to her all these things? } It wouldn’t take an hour, and it would | save a lot of money. Girls havine problems in econnection with thelr work may write to Miss Woodward, in | care of this paper, for her personal advice. | Brown shoes which are too Nght in | color will become & little darker if treated with turpentine and beeswax. Try linseed ofl, diluted with a small amount of ammonia, if & still deeper shade is required. bad for you if you could! This information comes MAY 7, 1931. something that way, and there is much truth in it, with, of course, such con- splcuous exceptions as the cardinal bird, the bluebird, the orioles and the 8. It {: a fact that & European nightin- is such an uninteresting creature look upon that nobody d suspect him of being the greatest tenor among the trees. A.wren, who looks rather like a fat little, middle-aged housewife, busy about a perpetually tidying up of house and premises, has more song to the cuble bird than anything that fiies. The contralto-voiced veery is almost in- visible, \s0 dull is his plumage. The white throat looks like nothing better than a street 1 you come close t his voice is the most - he skies of Spring. And the hermit thrueh is a greeny-brown singer, who melts into the forest covering un- In appearance he is like the nigl to the nightingale, he is the most - cal singer between the Aflln&mlnd des. ‘With us the hermit thrush is a bird You must listen now or him in Rock Creek Park of a fine Sprin; t ht, within sound of the m-u:’ ur!. But it is true that he better loves the marshy woods down river. Actually, however, thrushes dislike the densest part of the forest, for nesting 5 -tlm and u; thnuahzthey - selves away, 1 suspect it is only the modesty that is seductive. Ll.k); t:'ll Sl B neard: Dane ooms o ard. ] Gares 1itkle Tor Deing seen. T "0 B —_ Oranges. FEATURES. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK PmflAPs 1t was just as well that the Senate was not in session the other day when President Hoover returned to the Tariff Commission, without his ap- proval, a recom- mendation for lower duties on tomatoes. For the tomato has a way of up- ‘Why, that's in | Shortridge blandly. ashington when | “Then,” shouted Ashurst, “if that be the President took | treason make the most of it.” this action, more 5 ey Vg it To Freshen Leather. Leather work, if embossed and stain- ed, loses a litfle of its color in time. It will retain its freshness if rub- bed with a good leather g after the color has been put on. fore re-stain- ing, remove the old color with methy- lated spirit if a spirit stain was used, or w‘u:\ hot water if the color was & wafer stain. over Hawley tariff bill centered around the duty on to- matoes. ‘The duty was finally voted, but not before & real verbal battle. Ashurst of Arizona was the central figure in the tiff. At onc time he got 50 worked up that he roared across’| the alsle to Smoot of Utah that if | Smoot thought he was going to speak | at any one’s permissoin he had mis- | understood him all these years. No Riddance No Pay And Smoot objected irritably to such | an_“explosion.” o Trammell and Fletcher of Florida were opposing Ashurst’s stand that the tariff ought to apply at other times than Winter when the supply of to- matoes is searce. The serious and dignified Shortridge es to be used for table service | Orang will péel more easily, and the white ith will come away with the skin, if e oranges are first covered with botl- f‘;g water and left to soak for five or Keep Felts Spotless Amazingly easy! Just sprinkle Annette’s marvelous powder into the spot, rub in and brush off. Completely absorbs grease or i all fruit stains. food and for straw hi HOUSEKEEPING. TImp: odor and—cannot leave a ri At Dept. and Drug stores. Large Shak- x, 50c. Vanity Shakerette. 25c. Ask at’ counter for Cleaning Guide with new method for both DARK and HT materials. —For generous trial box Send 1 and Guide. send 10c to Annette's, 99 Chauncey St., Boston, Mass. CANNOT LEAVE A RING Camera upsets old theories— Millions of mattresses are foes of vitalizing rest . . . ON'T sleep ““like a log.” Don’t hope to lie in one position all night. You can’t do it—and it would be We “rest in parts.” Healthy sleepers take 10 to 15 dif- ferent positions during the night. One position to rest one set of muscles and organs—other positions to rest other groups. That’s the right way to sleep! out of a 6-year investigation of sleep by a group of scientists at Mellon Institute. Mattresses that limit the number of positions which can be taken in comfort—hard mattresses—bumpy mattresses —these are bad, the investigation proved. Millions now in use are ‘enemies of vitalizing rest. A new type of mattress was shown to be ideal. ‘The Beautyrest or Deepsleep, both made by Simmons. In- stead of layers of solid stuffing, inside these are hundreds of springy, cushioned coils. Alwaysresponsive. Always “glive.” Giving a maximum of comfort in every position. Lead- SIMMONS BEDS + SPRINGS + MATTRESSES TUNE IN! Listen to cLicQuoT has it! A mellower, smoother blend of finer ingredients. Clicquot Club has won the favor of three gen- erations by its EXTRA quality. Let it win yours. Choose your own favorite fiavor. Clicquot’ Clu GINGER ALES go[den—&[a @ry—'ej;e Automatic motion picture cameras recorded the positions and movements of sleepers. ing to the deep, satisfying rest needed for successful days! See the Beautyrest and Deepsleep at any good furniture store. Test their comfort. Decide whether you can afford to be without their benefits! H. M. Johnson, Ph. D., head of the Investigation of Sleep at Mellon Institute, has written a helpful booklet, “Bodily Positions in Restful Sleep.” Send for it—to the Simmons Company, 222 North Bank Drive, Chicago, Ill. The famous Simmons BeAuTYREST Inner-coil Mattress . The Simmons DEEPSLEEP Inner-coil Mattress DeepsLEEP Box Spring to match Simmons ACEOPEN COIL Spring . . « « « « « « « o » The new Simmons SLuMBER KNG Inner-coil Mattress SLuMBeR KiNG Box Spring to match SLumBer King Slat Spring