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Becoming Arrangement of Hair appreciative day, and’ grew up 5 ITTLE girls with red hair stood | the teasing and jesting of a less turally curly hair and girls with *“waved hair are going to | the hairdressers to have their hair to find & world waiting to admire | made as smooth and straight as pos- | red. And now the little girls who | sible. ste bresd crusts diligently through childhood without getting the curly or wavy hair they had longed for may re- foice in the fact that straight hair has come into its own, Pact is that within the past few months straight, smooth hair has come #0 definitely into fashion that girls with MILADY BEAUTIFUL ‘ BY LOIS LEEDS. Keeping Youthful Facial Contour. No woman likes to see the signs of age appearing on her face—fiabbiness | forehead to the temples, followed by & | that was a thing of beauty in its finish about the cheeks, loose skin at the|)ight pattering massage from the wings | and accuracy. throat, telltale wrinkles and enlarged facial pores. Usually not until she can no longer deceive herself about these blemishes does she become sufficiently alarmed to do anything about them. It is very hard to think of middle age when one continues to feel young in- side Yet we all know it is impossible to stop the passing years and that they bring deterioration in beauty unless we take special pains to prevent it. We must give face and neck correct local treatments as well as invest in a youth insurance program before it is too late. I have in mind a pastor's wife who has been so busy in her good work that she has never given a thought to the condi- tion of the skin on her face and neck. She has never used a cleansing cream, massage or any other facial treatment, and now, in her late 40s, she wonders if she can rejuvenate her complexion for her Summer social program that is to take her away from home. One of the best ways to help keep the facial contour youthful is regular massage and exercise. One's weight must be correct and one must eat the right kinds of food to keep the system in good working order, as well as give the skin the local treatments and care that it needs. Begun in the 20s, such treatments will prevent the facial mus- cles from sagging in the 30s and 40s. | The old idea used to be that a smooth, straight coiffure was all very well if your features were of the classi- cally regular sort, but that if you had features that didnt measure up to the | Greek goddess you had to put your | hair in"curl papers or something of the sort. In fact, this opinion was so well grounded that if a girl with just the ordinary sort of features appeared |'lth her hair worn straight some one was likely to accuse her of personal conceit. “She must imagine herself very beautiful,” they would say, wear her hair so straight and smooth.” ‘That point of view has changed, and by actual experiment many women have | discovered that straight, smooth hair | has distinct advantages. old story of knowing yourself, studying | your own type, and discovering which | type of hair arrangement is most be- | coming. (Copyright, DAILY DIET RECIPE BAKED RAREBIT. Raw eggs. 2: melted butter, 2 tablespoons; tomato soup, 10'a ounces 1, teaspoon: Amer- ican cheese, !; pound; toast slives, 3 average size. SERVES 4 PORTIONS. Cut very crisp toast in slices about 1 inch wide and 3 inches long. Line sides and bottom of greased casserole with _toast. Slightly beat eggs, add butter, can tomato soup, salt and very finely cut cheese. Pour this mix- ture over toast and bake in mod- erate oven about 20 minutes. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes protein, starch, | | = littie fat. Lime, iron, vitamins A B and C present. Can be eaten by normal adults of average or undeg, weight and by children over 10 1932) massage movement around the sides of the nose. Fourth. A light stroking mas- It's the old, | OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRL ! AVE you a sulky, sullen, argu- ‘mentative child in the house? Set about making him suc- ceed, for these are likely to be signs of failure. The child | who fafls to shine in school mn:m the | playground, who cannot win the ap- S’rofi&’nn of his mates, struggles with might and main to retain his self- respect. Loudness, bullying. sullen- ness, bad manners, are his shield. All children cannot be successful in all branches of living, but any child able to do the work required in the elementary schools CAn be & success in some one field or other. Somewhere within him there is a vein of power which, when tapped, flows like a river and bears him to the city of his dreams I b v ke the mistake of demanding the camesort of success for each child “Your sister is wonderful. And look {at you” That sort of thing is about as bad for a child as a drop of poison | on his tongue. He knows that his sis- ter is wonderful in your eyes. What he wants to hear is that he. too, is | wonderful in your sight. That is where your art &s parent or a | teacher “comes in are to so set | this child’s wor place him atop of it ou can, if you | are willing t his own' success |as his and ep thrusting the Success of some other child before him as his goal When you have to do with a_ child whose achievements are In the lowest scale by which you measure the group just know that this particular scale is not the one by which this child is to be measured. There is another that was made for him when he was | made. Find it. Search for it intel- ligently. A child’s gifts are not packed and ticketed in neat little cells waiting to be calied for. They do not come that way at all. More like this: A rather “gull” boy made sad work of composi- tion. He didn't kn anything to write about. He hated to write. That meant a poor mark in English. That meant a loss of class standing. Things went from bad to worse until a teacher decided that the boy must find a way to succeed. She noticed that he put on color with a lavish and understand- ing hand and praised him. He exerted himself to win more praise. He got the prize for the best poster. The teacher took care to see that wide publicity was given his success. One day the science teacher noticed a very careful drawing. He remem- bered the poster and praised the little a You sage movement from the center of the | of the nose to the temples. Fifth. The | |same two movements (first the light | | stroking followed by the light patter- ing massage) from the wings of the nose to the temples. Sixth. To erase | scowl lines, rub gently with tips of first | two fingers of each hand. Seventh., | A very delicate pattering massage | around the eye socket, avoiding the eye- | ball itself, starting at the nose and | going upward and outward. Repeat 10 | to 20 times very lighily. | After the massage wipe off the ex- | cess cream. Apply & towel wrung from | hot water and remove cream from be- | hind ears, wings of nose and around | |eyes. Follow this by applying a towel | wrung from cold water sprinkled with | mild astringent or witch hazel, if you like it. If the skin is particularly sen- sitive, only the mildest astringent should be used, followed directly with a sooth- |ing skin tonic, which should be allowed to dry on the skin. If the treatment is | taken at bedtime, pat on a little skin | food cream or oil around the eye wrinkles, mouth lines, and if the skin is excessively dry, leave the lubricant | on overnight. If going out after the treatment, finish the facial by dusting | with face powder, a light touch of | cream rouge and the merest trace of | “ tipstick if ‘desired. Crude ofl produced in the Nether- Various facial treatments have been de- | veloped for this purpose that are more | land East Indies in the first three or less effective, but the actual home months of this year weighed nearly trestments used in facial massage are very important. One cannot expect a beauty operator, or a specialist for that matter, 10 undo years of neglect with | one or two professional facial treat- ments. The home care is just as im- portant as the weekly or semi-monthly wisit to the beauty parlor. The movements used in the every- @ay facisl massage are very easy, but important, and if one will practice the following instructions carefully after cleansing the skin with a lightweight cleansing cream or ofl, one will be sure to obtain good results: First, Begin under the chin at throat line and work 1,300,000 tons. drawing. The boy again exerted him- self and made a model of a machine Now he is in the en- gineering school and standing high in the estimation of his fellows. One success leads to another and it is never safe to predict just where the road leads. But it leads to happiness if it is the road of success. Pind one thing the failing child can do, though it be but keeping count of the leadpencils used each day. Make | much of whatever quality shows itself | in a high light and you will set your failing child on the road to success. Not everybody's success, not yours, not the brilliant child's, just this particu- lar child’s success which is what mainly concerns you—and the child. My Neighbor Says: Pan broil all tender cuts of meat, as steaks and chops. Place the meat in a frying pan and place 6 inches below the fire, ‘When browned, turn and brown the other side, season with salt and pepper. No fat is needed for cooking and the natural flavors and juices are retained A ‘tablespoonful of condensed milk, added to a bowl of whipped cream and beaten into it before serving, will increase the amount of cream, Do not have the pan more than three parts full when making jam or jelly, otherwise there will not be room enough for the mixture “to boil as it should. SCREEN ODDITIES { | | — | BY CAPT. ROSCOE FAWCETT. | the massage cream or tissue cream up- | ward and back to the lobes of the ears. Use tips of the fingers, making patter- ing movements very light and soothing to the facial nerves and at the same up facial, neck and throat ute this movement 10 to Second. Begin at the tip of the chin | and slide up to the nose. Do this very lightly four or five times over the spot where mouth wrinkles are present or spt to come. Follow by a light pat- mflfi movement over the same area. Third. With the tbumbs use a rotary MENU FOR A DAY, BREAKFAST. Grapefruit Halves With Grape Juice Oatmeal With Cream Eggs in Bacon Ring: Toast Coffee LUNCHEON. ‘Tomato Boulllon Fresh Vegetable Salad, French Dressing Strawberry Bavarian Cream Jced Tea. DINNER. Kidney Stew Baked Potatoes Boiled Spinach Cabbage Salad, French Dressing Lemon Ple Coffee EGGS IN BACON, Butter inside of earthen rame- kins or custard cups. Pry strips of bacon and line each cup with one slice. Into each slip an egg Beason with salt and pepper and . set in warm oven until whites are firm. STRAWBERRY CREAM. One and one-half tablespoons granulated gelatin, 1 cup cold water, Y3 cup boiling wster, 1 cup sweetened fresh strawberry pulp, powdered sugar, % cup whipping cream. Soak gelatin in cold water and dissolve in boiling water. Add fruit pulp. Cool mix- ture until it begins to thicken; then add cream beaten until stiff Mold and chill. Garnish each serving with a dash of whipped cream KIDNEY STEW. Beef kidneys are the sweetest in flavor, Cut in pieces and trim off fat. Bosk in salt water ); day, then rinse and scald. Dry each piece well and dip in flour and brown in butter. Then place in cold water enough to cover: let come to a boil, add & finely sliced onion and simmer until tender When nearly done, season With salt and pepper. Let cook down thick. A tablespoon of table sauce gives it a nice flavor for some, (Copyright, 1932.) | Bepe DANIELS , TO SHOW SHE WAS PODULAZ WITH BOVS, WORE || PRATERNITY PINS WHEN SHE APPLIED FOR MER FRET MOWVE 108 MAKE A RILLIPS Delicious vegetables and very wholesome. The extra flavor and extrs healthful mineral salts. vegetables or soups. LOS ANGELES AND SAN FRANCISCO TO P/ NOT PHOTQGRAPH REALISTICALLY / Conrmai 1AL b o0 HAILSTORM- HAS NEVER SEEN WIM- SELF IN A COMPLETED PicTuRe ! 627 Srntsen inc). soups make such tempting meals. Many fine combinations can be made from the many varieties of Phillips Delicious vege tables, An all vegetable dinner with tomato juice, beans with pork, as the beadliners is appetizing and ness of Phillips Delicious vegetables come from the Eastern Shore of Maryland. The bot bright sunlight adds to the vege- table sweetness. The rich fertile soil supplies additional Nourishing, delicious, economical — Phillips Delicious Make your selections DELICIOUS CAMBRIDGE, MD. | tunity. | with them, and then ask them to budget STAR, WASHINGTON, On xeatleat™ dress fon ackivy Afm‘s e devileped n paigen. W. e piths /;on% : with o fd/‘ and. ;w,fnm'du} J.u«?,m f\imm'? one (ML, 8 o pmat reur nefe . (BT A iana, Merwin | button or lace them too tightly. Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. Determining Child's Allowance. |it is necessary to omit some items to CHILD should have some sort | include others. Naturally ne will se- of an allowance. He should | lect those most necessary to his happi- become familiar with the use | ness. That simple little lesson of sacri- and handling of funds, even | fice and thrift is worth more than mere I others 11 Some mothers complain that their | Words can tell | Ch e always asking for pennies | Let the child submit the budget to | and nickles, Yet it does not occur to | YOU. Make suggestions that seem ad- them that if & child is not given a | Visable. If the amount required by the Liated ‘allowance, begging In his only | budget for his allowance is too steep, Tecourse if he would be honest. | advise your son to that effect and ask | : [ him to prune his budget down. | An allowance not only encourages ~Ip budgeting for son’s allowance let | honesty, fosters responsibility and makes | him take into account all of the things a child independent in his own small | yhich you ordinarily would “give” him | right: it is also an educational OPPOr- | during the next month or so. Convince | him that it is best to have a drawing Why not consult your son now, and | account of so much per week, and to your daughter, too, if you have not | keep the balance on deposit to allow for | done so already? Talk over spending | “special” expenses. | Interest once aroused in a scheme of this sort has far-reaching and bene- | ficial results. It becomes habitual to think and plan spending ahead. The child knows the extent of his resources and governs himself accordingly. their “living” expenses. You are in doubt, you might say, just what al- lowance would be excessive or inade- quate. As the child budgets, he will find that | ADVERTISEMENT |1t | diet JUNE Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. UST when mothers are about to lose their allegiance to stiff shoes for baby, some one is cer- tain to reiterate the ancient warning that babies must have a support for their ankles when walk- ing. Stiff shoes are the answer. A baby does not meed support for his ankles any more than he needs braces for his back when he is learn- ing to sit up. Both walking and sit- ting up come about when the child is old enough and strong enough to ac- complish them. If the child needs ar- tificial supports to make these activi- | ties possible,. there is something very wrong with His bony development. And is that physical deficiency which needs attention by the aid of a better sunshine or cod liver oil, fresh air_and egercise. Shoes do serve a purpose. The baby who is learning to walk needs shoes, not to help him walk, but to prevent his feet from being bruised by sharp ob- jects, to protect them from hot or cold | or hard or rough surfaces. Babies and children can go barefooted safely when | walking about their cribs or in & soit sandpile or on a soft rug The type of shoe chosen should per- mit all possible freedom of foot action. A baby learns to walk by spreading his great toe and grasping at the floor and by spreading his legs widely apart to | give him a more solid base upon which to stand. A pair of stiff-soled shoes is as great a handicap to baby's walk- ing as a stiff glove would be to the free | use of his hands. A soft and shapeless shoe also has disadvantages. Shoes without a defl- nite sole do not stay on the foot well slide about and make walking herous for the baby. The best choice of a first shoe is one with a soft, flexible sole that bends easily in the | hand and yet one which is molded to | fit the wide, straight foot of the baby. | First shoes should be high, so that | they can be kept firmly in place on the | foot. Buttons or lacings are both satis- | factory if the mother is careful not to | When | baby’s shoe is removed, note whether there are any ridges or wrinkles that would indicate a poor fit. If baby whimpers and cries when he tries to walk and refuses to stand on his feet, he may be suffering from too narrow or too short a shoe. Mothers worry unnecessarily about | flat feet. All babies and small children | have flat feet. Nature has provided | them with a pad of fat that protects the bony structure of the foot until| the arch develops. The baby doesn't | need any special make of arch-pre- | server shoe. He needs a shoe wide | enough to allow his toes to spread hap- pily, long enough to allow the toes to stretch full length, and high enough so that it will y in place on his foot. GETS’EM ALLY ADVERTISEMENT GOOD TASTE TODAY BY EMILY POST. Pamous Authority on Etiquette. Home Beautification. OW lovely might our surround- ings be if tangible objects were to be had for the thinking! I'm sure we all wish that the following letter could be an- swered with an unqualified “Yes.” “Dear Mrs. Post: We are a family of six. We live in a village 20 miles from a Southwestern city. We have a wonderfully good school, with a highly cultured principsl, w h o settled In this cli- mate f or his health. We are also a progressive community. Each household s u b - scribes to a differ- e n t magazine, which is then cir- culated in subscriber And every now and then one of us buys a really worth - while book and shares it (your ettiquette is all worn ragged at the edges), and you can imagine how eagerly we read your daily column in the city newsnapers. But we wovld like to ask if your book about the personality of a house wil enao.e us w Emily Post. | make our surroundings beautiful with- | out needing to spend any money. You see, we do try to keep improving our minds and our manners, but we haven't the wherewithal to do much to our homes, except keep them repaired and clean. So will you tell us whether read- ing your book could bring us beauty?” Answer—Without a single cent of expenditure I must (though I hate to) say “No.” But my whole object in writing that book was t» enable a house owner to produce the greatest amount of beauty at least expense. Meaning, for instance, beautification by paint and dye and slip covers, sometimes the operation on furniture and the giving of serious thought to comfort. If you will watch this column, I will keep yov in mind and give you the best sugges- tions I can for beautification at lea: cost of material, and if you and e, |husband are handy about the house | without any cost of labor. (Copyright, 1932.) Eggs in Potato Border. Por this use small individual baking dishes of glass or china and cover the bottom of each with a half-inch layer of riced or mashed potato, either sweet or white. Then pile up onto the potato a border of extra riced potato, making a nest, into which drop a raw egg and cook in & moderate oven until the eggs are set. Garnish the border with minced chives or parsley Ugly yellow vanishes TEETH WHITE If you think yellow, stained, unsight- ly-looking teeth are natural, start using Kolynos—a half-inch of this amazing dental cream on a dry brush twice daily. In 3 days you'll see your mistake. Your teeth will look 3 shades whiter! Kolynos—unlike any preparation you've ever used—contains two im- portant ingredients that clean and whiten teeth remarkably. One—the finest cleansing agent known—erases stain_and tartar, foams into every tiny fissure and washes away decay- causing debris. While the other ingre- 3 Shades in 3 days dient kills the millions of germs that cause most tooth and gum troubles and helps to make teeth absolutely clean. _Thus Kolynos gently cleans teeth right down to thenatural white enamel and soon makes them more attractive than ever. It refreshes the mouth and stimulates the gums. Buy a tube of Kolynos today. KOLYNOS DENTAL CREAM ADVERTISEMENT SUCH A SWEET BRIDE . AND BOTH SO MUCH IN LOVE | THE FIRST TIME HE CALLED, SHE WAS THRILLED — HE, TOO! BUT BEFORE THE EVENING WAS OVER, HIS INTEREST COOLED WHO WOULD EVER DREAM THAT ONCE SHE NEARLY LOST HIM? | KNEW THE TROUBLE $0 | TOLD HER GENTLY HOW SHE SOMETIMES OFFENDED mAND HOW EASILY LIFEBUGY WOULD END HER FAULT...."B.0.° HOW DO YOU GET YOUR CLOTHES SO WONDERFULLY WHITE, MRS, HERRICK? —AND MRS, HERRICK JUST TOLD ME SHE DOESNT EVEN BOIL THE CLOTHES, RINSO i P WASHES THEM : SO WHITE THAT SOUNDS GREAT, LETS MRS. HERRICK KNEW WHAT SHE WAS TALKING ABOUT, JEAN. | USED RINSO TODAY AND MY WASH (S THEM MARRIED TODAY ! POIL HER CHARM. SHE'S WHITE AS SNOW 2 1 USED I, T0O, FOR THE WASH AND THE DISHES, DID YOU EVER SEE SUCH TIME PASSED SHE WAS HEAR' . HE DIDN'T COME BACK . BROKEN. ONE DAY SHE CAMI AND CRIED ABOUT ITON MY SHOULDER Mrs. O. Lam 3 bed spreads 6 face cloths low cases 7 sheets 3 table cloths 197 towels (£ . Dbt 15 dish towels sink and tubs times a day for 11 days.” A lirtle Ri BIG box. S NOW is a danger time risk friendship, for “B. bot, sultry days when we how easy it is for “B.O." onr knowing it! And if we do offend, we pay for it! popularity—perhaps Lifebuoy: ks creany, abundant, o-”h*’ 20 freely— Why love itself? Bathe lather purifies and deodorizes pores—stops “B.O.” Removes germs from hands—helps safegiard health, Its plessant, hygienic scent vanishes as you rinse: Wonderful for complexion Lifebuoy today: A PRODUCT OF LEVER BROTNERS CO. ITS THE SOAP | USE. IT GETS CLOTHES SPOTLESS WITH NO HARD WORK you beat this Lampron, ‘;m:g 28 snow and colored clothes 43 handkerchi 9 chilirens ey children’s suits 9 children’s 3 overalls 4 men’s pajamas loor three ti several times, and did the dis gives a lot of thick, . See how much work i el 16 pairs children's stock: ; 4 'm- washing record Munchesfer, A one large package I did this big 10 children's nightclothes 7 aprons 2 suits y 13 men's ngheaswenr