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WOMAN’S EAGE.’ " MILADY BEAUTI BY LOIS LEEDS. - "0 Sallowness. Dear Miss Leeds—(1) I work Bfice and do not get much exercise, haye & sallow, muddy com) Please ¥ gy oopics erage and s STy g B for o " Prematare Gray Hair. 3. . P, 0. Answer—Pirst, see if the esuse of the :‘mb::udmw'w th, mmcmlno;nmhgau lve only general g‘ulfl\. physical and wur scalp stimulating ‘arm-oll treatments are ful in cases like yours. Sc: and brushing of the are Dear Miss Leeds—(1) My germuwn@ wave is too kinky. How can I take the kink out? (23) Would you advise the electric needle for & large freckle on my lower lip? I tried m{u ‘without results. (3) My skin is and dry. I have an aeid . Would that cause whiteheads and blackheads? r)‘glvehm is correct. I avold eating fcods, aecid fruits and vegetables. TESS. Answer—(1) Use one-half cup cide: vinegar in three pints of water as a final rinse after your mpm ‘This will make the waves T and leas kinky. (2) This blemish may be a flat mole and the electric needle would no doubt remove it. Be sure to have an ex- diet; and too much pastry, fried foods | pert do the to “bleach” and coffee. The best way your sallow skin is to keep your 8- tive tract in ordér and to take outdoor exercise. As a local freatment you may use a mild bleaching lotion made of equal parts of _fl!geerln, TOose water lemon juice. is may be too strong for your face and may be diluted with double the amount or rosewater. After cleansing the skin at bedtime, dry and pat on‘the lotion, letting it remain over- night. Wash the next morning. (2) You need fresh air and sunshine in ad- dition to the indoor exercises. The av- and | excess, in It is the proteins and starel make the system acid when taken in Prunes and cranberries leave acl rul;llu. l;n;l plenty of In:ge. to- matoes, celery, apples, etc. blackheads and whiteheads are due to sluggishness of the skin. Local treat- ments for them are given in my leafiet on complexion ills, send & . Please stamped addressed envelope for it. LOIS LEEDS. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM A Quarter Turn. ‘Although Mr. Z has lived in nearby city many years, west is always north to him and south is east. Objectively, he knows directions as well as any- body, but somewhere in his subcon- sciousness he has that little twist. Lots of people complain of similar disorjentation. They get their bearings mixed at the first occasion and then go on for years more or less confused. I think that if one knows or studies & little practical astronomy and has the habit of shooting the stars at night and of shooting the sun in the daytime this annoyance may be prevented and cor- rected. How long it requires to get this habit—that is, so that you do it auto- matieally or without consclously think- ing about it—I do not know. Anlddfimd of Mr. Z h;! the sll;e trouble. ny years ago, he says, he came into town from the west at night. The train was headed north when it stopped in the station, but he knew nothing of this, and so he got off the train and iook his first bearings g the error that the train was heade east. This confusion remained with him for sevcral years. Then for a period of several vears he lived in another State, where he was well oriented as to directions.: ‘Ten years later he returned to the home city and this time arrived by1 dl:yll'htr flnd*&r)tt con;eclly‘ nl;ienud. ofteny struggle to pre- vent ;;riexfijtian ,g’hlle riding on a train. ‘Particlildrly when I get out of a berth, especially an upper, in the morn- ing, I can never be sure which way to start for breakfast. But as soon as can shoot the sun, or even see the shadows, I'm all clear again. Obviously, the confusion arises from loss of any BRADY, M. D. landmarks or reliable bearings in the nl t. ‘{: all the descriptions of disorienta- tion of this sort—it seems quite & eom- mon kink—the error is apparently the nxl.n&‘nn unreliable or faulty landmarks in first place. That is I strongly recommend that _everybody make the acquaintance of Mr. Orion, the Big Dipper and the North Star. I mention Orion because he is generally hnnltn{ around somewhere, and if you sight along his left knee and shoulder you'll eome fairly elose to the North Star, Orion will give you & &wfl steer :q:tamlummhw out of suppose if one earried & good com- pass and copsulted instantly whenever any question of direction oceurred, it THE . EVENING NANCY PAGE Joan Learns She Must Not Share Food With Babies keep on the alert anyway, and besides there was Joan who adored taking care of and small children. S0 it was settled. The pen was set in the back yard and Ann and Peter had & great time. Joan hovered over them like & fussy mother hen and kept call- ing to her aunt: “Oh, Aunt Nancy, see what & good boy Peter is, sharing his toys with the baby. He knows she’s company—don't you think so?” Peter may have known it at the start, but he soon grew sleepy and quarrelsome, s0 his mother took him upstairs to bed and | Y53¢ Joan to watch the baby. en Nancy came downstairs she was horrified to find the baby sucking & lollipop. “Why, Joan, where did Ann get that?” “I had one and she m minute, though.” Quick as & wink the candy was out of the baby's mouth and Nancy was going for a drink of water for the baby. Then later she talked to Joan. *“I am JM 0u were so generous, chick-a- biddy. ut we don’t let littls bables have candy, and we don’t put anything into their mouths that been in serve as well as shooting the sun | they like y: or_stars. Birds and animals have a perfect sense of direction. I've often tried to get Tony the Terrier mixed up when we're out for a stroll, but I've mever had the satisfaction of seeing him start off in the wrong direction after a rough-and-tumble. He may be dumb, but he always knows where he is going. (Copyright. 1931.) Finnan Haddie. If the whole fish is used, put it in a baking pan, cover with cold Water, and after soaking for twenty minutes bring the water {g # boll. Reduce the heat and let §e fish simmer for an hour. Drain, finse and with a fork separate the fish into flakes. If canped finnan haddie is used, it sheuld I|steamed. To one cupfyl of the fish, add one cupful of m ite spuce, Bring 0 & ol with sait, popper , season and pepriks. » Enow that you will never give them candy nor gum and never anything out of your mouth and put it in” the baby's mouth. Can you re- member?” PSR i Coffee Jelly. Make up 8 dish of coffee jelly, then when it is set add half a cupful of cream and beat it up together. Add s little powdered sugar and serve in gm topped with whip cream; aporated milk will make this in place of the cream if desired, and if the jelly is eold when gerved it will be delicious. Spring Greens. Dandelion and other Spring greens will hzwored their bright natural eolor y are put in an open kettle uu‘t‘-mmmumm foaginale sfi;%g;éz eiég;fiifi bahay o P E'gé:*z lin e 6E tis i 5 E i, i1 i 2 g 4 3 £ i fhin : Flieifg iF UNSPOT YOUR HATS! Straws, fabrics, felts, look like new—with Annette’s. Sprinkle on the magic powder, rub in, HOUSEKEEPING. . .imparts no odor and—Cannot Leave a Ring, G =)\ _ At Dept. and Drug Stores. - \ Large Shaker Box, 50c. Vanity ffl‘h‘\ Shakeretee, 25¢. ) Fe ] W\ SEND 10¢ 522 eme Annette’s. 99 Chauncy Street, Boston, Mass. NETTE'S NATURE’S CHILDREN BY LILLIAN COX ATHEY, Tlustrations by Mary. Foley, §§§;‘i§. i g ] % ; | ! ] ¢ § i g s 2 E ¥ H i i i A H of : £ [ o < SEESHEEE BofE AL i tH : E 2 it ge ?9 g . ] Because of the increase ‘in the num- of radio receiving sets in Sweden maore and stronger broadeasting stations demanded. e i 2 5 o '5 i i g5 i ] i 2y E 3 ¥ 55 i Casserole of Beef. Q in fat.. Add to the cans- of oxtail soup and s small potato balls may be ing the last 20 minutes of the beef in pleces aus a Emnn peel. Add one cupful of onions and half a cupful .| mato_soup. Cover and cook in oven until the sauce is redu the meat is very tender. If You just can’t buy a jar that isn't KITCHEN-FRESH! bl i a 7 i g £ i i FRESH AS DEW-LADEN LETTUCE Fast' Service Cars speed this fresh mayonnaise to your grocer—every week I‘I"S still your favorite mayonnaise — the same delicately flavored brand that formerly bore the famous Gelfand 1abel. Now you ask for Kraft Mayonnaise—always kitchen-fresh. .At least once a week, frequently oftener, this new-made mayonnaise goes quick], from Kraft kitchens to your grocer. S You know the difference~—the moment you taste it. Choice eggs, fine oil, mellow vinegar, sweet spices. Made up m small - batches to insure perfect flavor. Delivered to your grocer almost as fast as it’'s made. So that you can have it for your table . . on your salads . . always kitchen-fresh! : THE CARPEL CORPORATION ,h it plnt (fall 8 ox.)y plat, 4 i 2155 Queens Chapel Road N.E. KRAFT . E o ment, if not wholly satisfactory. Kraft-Phenix Cheese Corporation, Division of National ONCE upon a time, there was a lady of generous propors tions, She had taken milk with her steaks, and potatoes, and pastries, and piess and had gained forty -two pounds 4 and a complex. “Lo,” said she, “I . & bave partaken of milk and sm fat!” i Hertroublewas notmilk butmenus, But, you say, what does the milk For milk, of itself, is not fattening! do? It tects. Your body mneeds It took three dietitians and an emi- thirty-six different types of food to net doctor to convince the lady that keep it healthy and good-looking. ] svoirdupois could be reduced to poise Milk supplies thirty-four of these. _ delicious milk .. . . from Chestnut gl i by adding milk to her meals. So if you have too much tonnage, - Farms, the World’s Model Dairy. T Et i : - So they cut out two trenchers of the drink milk, and slow down on the big. . . o Telephone Potomae 4000. = & daily banquet, included milk to bal- ' meals, Let the body draw on the B T ance the diet, and in, six months she fat it has hidden away in every = 'was in the misses’ department looking bouncing curve, and one morn- for new clothes. , ing youw’ll awske with a’grest hsmmthdhudDdryM?mmmTuflqfl,N’lnfi 7.30 to 8.00 (E. S. T.) over Wac and associated N, B. C. stations Chestnut Farms Dairy | # 3 load off your mind - and your feet. But if your srehitecture is lar, eat plent fi-lfi“mm besides. n.-xng the best, the most