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MAGAZINE PAGE MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Metallie Tints. HERE are two general classes of | beauty alds. By far the greater proportion of cosmetics aim to enhance natural beauty. The woman who uses them wants jer drug-store complexion and her nted hair to look genuine. She wants kper coiffure to resemble naturally curly Bair after it has been waved artificially. Thon there is a smaller group of gocmetics that gives decorative rather ghan natural effects. They are usualy ¥a‘her faddish and never gain the wide opularity of the former type. Among em are metallic colors for finger tips gnd hair Ruby-tinted finger and toe mails with gold or platinum tips are not 1} according to nature, but they are v a certain vogue. is ultra-chic just is not difficult to achieve. What is more, it is easy to remove the metallic coating when milady wishes Ber hair restored to its normal color. There are different shades of bronze owder which may be used as they are or else blended to obtain original ef- They may be purchased at stores here art'sts’ supplies are sold, and gome beauty shops have them, too. Before the coiffure is treated with the metallic powder it should be, finger- waved and thoroughly dried. The hair g5 not combed out because a smooth, scu'ptural effect is cesired. Of course, the bronze powder will not adhere so weil to a loosely waved, vty type of $air dress. After the coiffure is given its final ghape it is sprayed all over with bril- Yantine. which will hold the powder on the hair. The powder itself is then dusted on with a piece of absorbent cot- ton. Pat it on as smoothly and evenly as possible. Now, if you want a very striking effect, go over the ridges of the waves with a little bronze powder of a lighter shade than that used for the zect of the hair. A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. 'HE only woman ever elected to the United States Senate—Mrs. Hattie Qaraway of Arkansas—has served notice that she intends to employ the old-style campaign exhortation in her fight to retain her t this Summer. ‘T don't believe "Il make many ong set speeches,” ghe says, “but you may see me flail- ing my arms around &nd shouting.” That sounds a bit odd to those around Washing- ton, who during the past few months have | ‘The final step is to spray the coiffure with banana oil to keep the powder on and to give luster. Use an ofl atomizer for the purpose and go over all parts | carefully. Now the coiffure is finished and ready to be the cynosure of all eyes at a formal party or costume ball. The bronze powder is removed by i | | | | shampooing. _ Just use a liquid dry : shampoo which may be bought at any shop where a complete line of cosmetics | is for sale. Finish with your usual soap-and-water shampoo. is at all inc'ined to dryness, have a warm-oil treatment before washing your | hair. ‘The lacquered coiffures we have been hearing so much about are similar to | the metallic ones except that the bronze powder is not used. The coiffure is finger-waved, dried and then brushed over with a small camel's hair brush dipped in French varnish or banana oil. Some people use plain varnish, but it is harder to remove. Alcohol may be used to take off the varnish when de- sired, then the hair should be sham- pooed as suggested for bronzed coiffures. has been loath to take his title from him. To her there is only one “Sena- tor Caraway.’ She still refers to him as “Dad.” and her primary interest thus far in the Senate has been to further leg- islation in which he was interested. “I will attend first to the measures Dad was interested in,” | she took her seat. that I cannot say | will be.” Her colleagues have come to know {her as a person perhaps more fem- | inine than feministic. keen wit. an ironic sense of humor, and [l level head. | Huey Long thinks so much of her ability as a Senator that he took the floor recently to proclaim that “It would be a fatal error, it would be a what my course if the hair | possessed of a G STAR, WASHINGTO LITTLE BENNY We was eating breakfist this morn- ing and the doorbell rang and Nora went to anser it and came back hold- ing a vellow envelope, saying, It's & telegram. O goodness a telegram, Whose it for, she said, For you, Nora said, and ma said, O deer isn't that dredful? Why is it, for Peet sake? pop said. You're not expecting any bad news, are you? he said, and ma said, No, that's the werst part of it, if I'd been | expecting it I'd be prepared for it, but | a bolt of bad news from a biue sky, that's too much, O deer Here it is if you want it, Nora said And she layed it down on ma's plate and went back to the kitchin, and ma picked the telegram up and looked at | it, saying, It's for me, there's no ques- | tion about that, O deer. It must be something terrible why elts would any- body send a telegram? she said. Hand it over and I'll open it for you and put you out of your mizzery, | pop said, and ma sald, No, it's address- ed to me and I feel I should have the brunt of opening it, O deer. O slush, if you dont open it I will |pop said. And he started to reach {over and ma_quick sald. Il open it, | {T1 open it, I mite as well know the werst now as never. And she opened it and red it, say- | ing, Well of all things. | Were many people killed? pop sald, | and ma said, Such a thing to do. Was anybody saved? pop said, and | me said, It's from my sister Fanny, the ideer of her sending me a telegram to wish me a happy birthday when she | could of told me all that and much |more in a letter and spared me all | that terrible mental disturbants. That's just like Fanny, I declare to goodness she just did it for a practical joke, she always did have a mean streek in her nature. If she really had some gassly tragedy to impart she'd proberly put it in an ordnerry letter just to delay the suspents, ma said. Yee gods give me air, pop said. And he quick rolled up the morning paper and started for his office. ma said. Star Patterns Printed Home Frock. All that your heart could possibly desire in a home frock. is embodied in this “perfectly eatable” pattern. It's | different, it's smart, it's easy to wear, | comfortable, and above all, thoroughly | | economical to make. | From the charming capelet sleeves to the square neckline with the unique pulled-through tab, to the diagonal | | pockets that emerge into inverted pleats | his style is becoming to all types 1t is No. 770. 16, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. i ages. Sizes 14, \ Give Enumerates Advantages a of Vacation for “Ma” Mother \DorothyDix| T is one of the little ironies of life that the one individual who most needs a vacation seldom gets it. That's mother. Other members of the family get tired and need a change and rest and diversion, but mother is supposed to get all the recreation she requires in slaving for them and seeing that they have a good time. Yet mother’s work is the hardest, and the most monotonous. and never-ending. There is no union card and six-hour day for her. She doesn't even get laid off on a strike. Of course, in well-to-do families mother gets an alleged vacation when she takes the children and goes to spend a month or so in the country, where she has to work ten times as hard as she did at home because there are no city conveniences and no market right around the corner. She hasn't had a thing to do but to keep a lot of bored children amused and nurse them through spells of ivy poisoning and cuts and bruises and too much green fruit, and run a free roadhouse for her friends and their friends. T is popularly believed that a mother can never get enough of her chil- dren’s society, and that to separate her from them for even an instant would cause her unendurable anguish. Rest! Never was there a greater mistake in the world. No matter how much & mother loves her children, no matter how willingly she sacrifices herself for them, in time she gets fed up on them. Two weeks, or even one week, of a vacation would straighten out the kinks in mother's nerves and give her new perspective on her job and make her see that bringing up a family is the most glorious and worth-while career a woman can follow. VIOST mothers would say that this idea of mothers taking a vacation is a fine theory, but that it is something that can't be done. That no one could take their places. That they have no one to leave the children with. But that is all nonsense: None of us is absolutely necessary in the scheme of things. I commend this subject of giving mothers vacations from their chil- dren to husbands and to junior leaguers. And to junior leaguers I say that they could perorm no more beautiful or worth-while work than organizing a band of trained substitute mothers. DOROTHY DIX. MODES OF THE MOMENT | these are usually the instinctive ones. | Children are afraid of injury and death. | the |in consequence, skill, that we have to (him to use it with caution, to guard it | D. €, MONDAY, JULY 25, 1032 OUR CHILDREN BY ANCELO ®ATRL Safeguards. The first love of a small boy's heart is a knife, the sharper the better. Naturally mothers are afraid of the knife and quite as naturally they forbid it. The small boy pleads and mother is torn between the desire to make him happy and to keep him safe. What | shall be done? Teach him not to| touch a knife? That would not do. We want to teach a boy, or a girl, to handle | tools with sureness and skill. If we make them afraid of the sharp-edged things we cannot hope to train them in_their use. Fear is a poor educational force at best. Some fears we must have, but Their instinct draws them back. We rarely need to accent such a fear once child has evinced it. Usually a child is cautious in using & sharp-edged tool. It is his lack of experience and, dread. If we don't let him have a knife he cannot learn to use it. Ibelieve that every child ought to own a knife and know how to handle it. | him, Put a sheath on every edged tool. ‘The sheath on the knife will teach the | child to respect its possibilities without | teaching him to be afraid of it. He | | reduces the danger and at the same | | time becomes conscious that this pre-‘ caution is necessary. He becomes care- ful instead of fearful. | Small boys love hatchets. They like to take them into the woods, or, failing | |that, into the playground or lot where they can chop to their satisfaction. Hatchets can do a lot of damage, but I | think the boys ought to learn their use. | Put a shield on the hatchet and teach the boy that this is the way of all good scouts. No experienced woodman car- ries an unsheathed knife or hatchet. If he falls he is not in great danger from | the edged tools with the shields snugly | fitted. Without the shields a fall in the | woods while carrying a sharp tool holds many possibilities of danger. The best teacher is example. Keep your sharp tools sheathed in their leather coverings when you are not using them. Teach the children to put the guards on when they are through using the tools and insist that they ask permission before touching your tools, sharp or otherwise. When a child learns to respect a tool he has gone & long way toward acquiring safety in handling them. Have a handy first-aid kit and teach the child to use it. A slight cut needs attention, and if you take a few minutes to teach the technique of the first-aid kit you will be repaid by freedom from anxiety in the time to come, when the small boys start off on the all-day hike. There are pocket kits that take little room and weigh almost nothing at all. A small boy would like one for a birthday gift, and it would cost so little | that you would never notice the ex- | penditure. It is not wise to teach a child to fear a cutting instrument or tool. Teach ! when not in use, and you will get further with the idea and with the child’s notion of the whole matter. WOMEN'S FEATURES BEDTIME STORIES % Reddy and Mrs. Fox Plan. Most things accomplished are by plan. Disprove this Statement if you 51 Motner Thornton . Burgess. you already have & plan in your head.” “Yes,” confessed Reddy. "It is much the same as the plan we have already tried, only we will vary it a little. We | know that Johnny is living alone. We EDDY FOX is clever. Everybody | know that he spends a good deal of knows this. Mrs. Reddy is just ¢ as clever. Everybody knows this. | gezos too. And Reddy and Mrs. Reddy = know that everybody knows it. | So they have a certain amourit of pride | in having their neighbors think them | smart, and now and then when some one proves himself as smart or smarter than they, their pride suffers. Johnny can Nature. | Chuck had long been the cause of a considerable hurt to that pride. You see, they never had been able to catch aithough they had tried many times. It was a long, long time mow since they had tried to catch Johnny. They simply pretended not to see him and went about their business as if there | were no such person as Johnny Chuck. Apparently, they never gave him so much as & thought. But they did give | him many thoughts. From a dlskantei they often saw him and every time H.‘ made thelr mouths water. You see, they have a liking for Chuck, and Johnny was big and fat. To be sure, he wouldn't be as tender as onc children, but he would be “I KNOW, I KNOW,"” REPLIED REDDY A BIT IMPATIENTLY. tenc enough, and there was the fact that he - had so long defled them. So, though they didn't try to catch him, they did think of him often. This year Johnny was living not far from Farmer Brown's garden and a like distance from the Old Orchard. Never had he been better located. At least, that is the way he felt about it. There was plenty of good grass and sweet clover right near the doorstep. It wasn't too far for safety to that garden, and in that grew many things Chuck likes. A visit to the Old Orchard was even safer, for there was the old stone wall in which to seek safety if necessary. Later there would be sweet | apples in the Old Orchard. Johnny | | had a thought of these when he dug‘ that home. Then, too, Polly Chuck was | 1iving not far away just across the Old | Orchard. Polly had a family and, like | Jimmy Skunk, Johnny had to go nnd' | live by himself for awhile. | Reddy Fox and Mrs. Reddy knew &all | | about these young Chucks. Several | times Reddy had been quite sure that | he was going to catch one when & warn- | | ingwhistle from Johnny Chuck had | | sent the young Chucks tumbling down | the long hall leading to their safe home. | The last time this had happened had | | made Reddy lose his temper as well as | his anticipated dinner, and he decided i that Johnny must be caught. He said | as much to Mrs. Reddy when he got | home. Mrs. Reddy grinned. “I wish you luck,” said she. “I've given up expect- ing ever to catch Johnny Chuck.” “I know, I know.” replied Reddy & bit impatiently. “You can't catch him alone. I can't catch him alcne. But the two of us working together might catch him.” “Have you forgotten that we have m that already?” inquired Mrs. watching Polly Chuck and the | chilarca when they are outside their home. We know that as soon as he sees | either of us he whistles a warning. | Then if we happen to be near he pops down his hole out of sight. But he doesn’t stay down long as a rule, He Jjust has to poke his head out to see where we have gone. So you, my dear, must be hiding where you can jump on him when he pokes his head out to see where I have gone and what I am doing. If I lie down in the grass over by Folly Chuck's house, as if walting | for one of these young ones to come | out, Johnny will be sure to come wholly | out and sit up on his doorstep to watch us. Then you will have him.” Mrs. Reddy scratched a black ear thoughtfully. “It may work, but I doubt it,” said she. (Copyright, 1932.) Sweet Potato Souffle. Use two cupfuls or one pint of cooked and mashed sweet potatoe, or left-over bolled or baked sweet potatoes may be used. Press through a vegetable press or ricer, or mash well. Scald one cupful of milk and dissolve two tablespoonfuls of sugar and half a teaspoontul of salt in it, add two tablespoonfuls of butter and stir until melted. Add this mix- ture to the potatoes, mix and beat until smooth. Separate two eggs and beat the yolks well, then add them to the pota- | to. Add one teaspoonful of nutmeg. | Beat the egg whites stiff, then cut and | fold them lightly into the potato and | pour the mixture into a buttered bak | dish. Quickly arrange some marshmal- | lows half an inch apart on top with one-fourth cupful of raisins arranged in between the marshmallows and one- | fourth cupful of broken nut meats ar- | ranged over these. Place in a mod- distinct loss, it would be a march | (Copyright, 1932.) backward were Mrs. Caraway not e | Size 36 requires 3% yards of 36-inch | erate oven and bake until the souffie is set and the marshmallows are toasted watched from the alleries the little “No.” replied Reddy. “No, I haven't material or lack-gowned fig- ure on the Senate flcor. At times she appeared almost loct in her armchair on the last row of the Democratic side of the cham- ber. between Huey Long of Louisiana and the bulky Bankhead of Alabama. She has not ye Bhocik of her hustand’s death. She UNCLE RAY’S CORNER Adventure of the Sea. PERMISSION TO GO. Story So T The director of a The T gyeat museum bas agreed ‘to pay the ‘cost f 2 voyage which an old sca captain h planned to an island in the Atlantic. Bories on" the island and. the ‘dirsctor Promised a eoodly reward if the journey 2 success. Two sailors have just come OBERTA told the ts to come Tight in. When they approiched the captain one of them said that voyage and we want to tell you that we're willing to help you, sir, any wiay we can. We don't want you th- island “That's mi good of you. boy: d the captair, “but the Museum all expenses, and they will give me a reward if the trip is successful.” “Well, now.,” said the other man # little if we could. I suppose you are going to take Allen along?” The boy was standing nearby and capiain_expects 10 Tich - store of it the captain “We have becn thinking about to pay us wages if you don't locate Te of Natural Hist egreed to pay *I'm glad of that. We wanted to help et like throwing his arms around the #WOULD YOU LIKE TO GO, ALLEN?" g2ilor when the last sentence was spoken. He had been longing to go on the vovage “Fact to tell.” said the captain. turn- tng toward his grandson. “I hadn't planned to do that. It's going to be SCREE BY CAPT. ROSCOE FAWC recovered from the | turned to the Senate.” “The lady from Arkansas” is no novice in politics. While her husband | lived, her chief interest was her home. But national affairs and politics al- ways have intrigued her. She has campaigned before. Back in 1920, when her husband first ran for the Senate, she went out into the !field for him. trip, but still it's vacation time now. Would you like to go, Allen?” | “Would I'" exclaimed the boy. “There’s nothing I'd like better!” “Then I guess well have to take you!” “How about me?” asked Roberta. “Why, you're just a little girl!" “Yes, grandpa, but little girls some- times go on sea trips. You know I've been good when I went on other steam- | er trips. and if you let me go on this |one Il be the best little girl in the | world!” “I guess I'm in for it,” said the cap- tain. “Yes, vou can go.” He spoke these words slowly. as if | they had been forced out of him, but | in his secret heart he was happy that Allen and Roberta would be with him r‘hl‘n he set forth on his Great Adven- ure. (This belongs in “Adventure” section | of your scrapbook.) | UNCLE RAY. '; a long ‘THE FUNMAKER leaflet, con- taining all sorts of magic and fun, is ready and will be sent to all who write to Uncle Rayv and ask for it. Be sure to inclose a stamped return eavelope. (Coprright. 1922.) Orange Doughnuts. Blend two slightly beaten eggs with half a cupful of sugar, half a_cupful of thick cream, two teaspoonfuls of grated orange rind and one-third cup- ful of orange juice. Combine, using 80 strokes, with the flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one-fourth teaspoonful of salt. Drop by teaspoonfuls into hot fat and cook two minutes. Drain and dredge wit confectioner’s sugar, Chicken-Pineapple Salad. The flavor is improved if the com- bined salad is allowed to stand several hours before the meal in three-fourths cupful of salad dressing. Toss together three cupfuls of diced cooked chicken, one ful of shredded almonds browned in butter, one cupful of diced celery or cabbage and one cupful of shredded pineapple. Serve in nests of curly endive. ODDITIES JOHN BARRYMORE'S HOME 1S SO SECLUDED THAT HE ENCLOSES A ROAD MAP WITH FIRST INVITAT TR 8 SKIPWORTH 60-YEAR-OLD CHARACTER ACTRESS, SAT IN A MUD PUDDLE ALMOST ' CONTINUALLY FOR A SCENE (N *MADAME RACKETEER”, IONS . | bartment, Washington, D. C. 3% vards of 39-inch ma- terial and '; yard of 36-inch or 39-inch material for contrast. Simplified illustrated {nstructions for | cutting and sewing are included with | each pattern. They give complete di- rections for making these dresses. To obtain a pattern of this attractive model send 15 cents in coins. Write very plainly on each pattern ordered your name and address and size and mail to The Evening Star Paltern De- Several days are required to fill orders and patterns will be malled as quickly as possible. Fashion Magazine, filled with the latest Paris style news, together with color supplement, can now be had at 10 cents when ordered with a pattern and 15 cents when ordered separately. The Evening Star Pattern Dept. Inclosed is 15 cents for Pattern No. 770. Name (Please Print) Size. . Street and Number. City and State. | fine - quality stone- | | 2. For place plates | the soup plates or | more formal ‘serv- | then 'have plates GOOD TASTE TODAY BY EMILY POST, Famous Authority on Etiquette. ‘ab) i e table appliances are not proper on a Table Appointmenta: formal table, but in a house of limited EAR MRS. POST: All our | service, or none, they are suitable be- furniture is of the Georgian ' cause practical. 6. If you like it, use type. Some pieces are old | i, of course! ones from England, others | / are handmade reproduc- | Copprimnt i) tions. In the dining rdom the chairs| If you would like a leaflet on the Great and"a chest of dravers are old; the | Anirieas Ridepess aid, th Litly Americen table is a two-pedestal adaptation of a Duncan Pfyfe. 1. With our type of fur- nishing, would it be possible to use a [ envelope ‘with your request, to Mrs. care of this paper. Corn Pone. must we porcelain? ware, choose or | meal, one teaspoonful salt, two table- would you use din- ner plates of the same pattern as | butter, two eggs, one teaspoonful baking powder. Scald milk and add graduaily corn meal, salt, sugar and butter. Cool slightly and add eggs, well beaten and , baking powder. Turn into & buttered | earthen dish and bake in a moderate oven (370 degrees Fahrenheit) 35 min- |utes. Cut in pie-shaped pieces for serving. ice' plates? 3. If the place plates match the ~ soup plates, would you for the meat course of the same pat- tern or a different pattern? 4. With large knives, which have steel bludes, may we use small kunlves, which have stainless steel Llades? 5. Is it goud taste to use an electric water kettle on the dining room table for & formal luncheon? 6. Would it be in good taste to use an old brass samovar (Russian) heated by electricity, which I like very much, both for tea in the living room and for supper?” Answers: 1. It depends much more upon the color and design than upon the question of porcelain or pottery. Delft or Meissen or Wedgewood, for ex- ample, would be as suitable as porce- |lain. 2. Place plates should match or | at least look well with the soup plates, | since the latter are set upon the place | plates. Service plates, out of the scale and out of sympathy with the other china to be used, are never in bad taste And, by the way, there is no difference between a “place” plate and a “service” plate. I add this merely be- cause your letter seems Lo indicate & difference. 3. A whole dinner service alike has come back strongly into fashion. Most people use odd dozens of plates, because most people happen to | have them! But there is no rule, ex- cept that of personal preference. 4. In a Georgian house, small knives should have silver-plated blades. 5. Electric Emily Post. Hay Fever Attacks Not Entirely Due to Pollen About 6,000,000 peopie in the United States (or 5 per cent of the entire population) suffer from either hay fever or asthma, or both, according to official estimates, Al- though both diseases are classed as non-fatal, both cause a degree of suffering beyond the imagination of people who have never been afflict- ed with them. For years it has been the com- mon belief that dust and pollen were the underlying causes of Hay Fever. But more recently investi- gators have been asking, “If that is true, why do not all people living in weed-infested areas have Hay Fever?” The belief is growing that dust and pollen are merely ag- gravating factors, and not the true cause. It has also been shown that about 70 per cent of the children born to parents who have both Hay Fever and Asthma, will at some time in life have symptoms of these diseases. This, too, seems to indi- cate that something than pollen must cause Hay Fever, This belief is further borne out by records, made in recent years, of thousands of cases successfully treated for a cause existing within the system of the individual. HAY FEVER CAUSE DISCOVERED Those who suffer from ha bronchial ssthma Wil be learn that at last science b in discovering the basic caus two maiadies. Fortunately for all who suffer from ese diseases & way has also been found ome this basic cause in the in- instead of mersly treating the e Symbloms, a3 has been done in fever or. atified (0 succeeded of these not simply pressed. We Save You Moncy by Saving Your Clothes Full information and an important book- of ihe catize of hay asthma w! be sent ansl to. xtlldesa!zl !v‘l_lhld v'u‘:fllc':tlzg;. Slll‘:mll’. write Dept. 8086, The Fugate Co. Meridian 8t Indianapolis, Ind—advertise. bronchi ng Dept 1 Post, One pint milk, one cupful grated corn | spoonfuls sugar, three tablespoonfuls | = S Rice With Jam. ‘Whip one cupful of whipping cream and to it add one-fourth teaspoonful of vanilla and a pinch of salt. Just | before serving toss the rice lightly into the cream mixture. Add a teaspoonful of raspberry jam to each serving. BY JAMES W. How Does Youngster Stand or Sit? N Great Brilain the orthopedic sur- geons and children's specialists be- the system—food, exercise, heredity—that causes have bone defects or defects in the way they stand or sit, giving them a poor posture or shape of_body. In America the specialists _belleve that it is the poor posture or position, standing or sitting, that causes the air, proper growth and shape of body. We must admit that mothing more important to a nation than the proper growth and development of its children — the fu- ture men and wom- Dr. Barten. en. In the White House Conference | on Child Health it was felt that the relations of body mechanics or posture | (the w the child stands or sits) should be investigated. A committe of which Dr. Robert B. Osgood, Boston, was chairman, has made a most in-| teresting and helpful report. The com- | mittee found positive evidence that lieve that there is some fault in | children to | illness and lack of | = forgotten it. But that was & long time ago that we last tried it. He may have forgotten. Even if he hasn't, that is | no reason why we should not try again. If we plan carefully and then carry out | the plan with equal care, we ought to be able to catch that fat busybody. “I take it,” sald Mrs. Reddy, THAT BODY OF YOURS BARTON, M. D. | two-thirds of the children of the United | States have faulty body mechanics—do not stand or sit properly. Can poor posturé be corrected? The | report shows that where “systematic” | attempts have been made in the schools | to improve faulty body mechanics it | was always assoclated with improve- | ment in health and efciency. | I am a great believer in group games | for children. " They strengthen heart ‘lnd lungs. teach a youngster to take his knocks, teach him also to be un- selflish, as he must work for the good | of the team and not himself; teach | | him to control his temper, and train him in many other ways. However, there is no question in my mind that if a youngster is taught to | stand and sit_correctly, to walk with his head up, his eyes straight ahead, | shoulders back, abdomen drawn in, in addition to improvement in condition |of all his body organs—heart, lun, | stomach, liver, intestines—there is | bound to be an improvement in his mo- rale or courage, his general outlook on fe. Send your youngster to & school or club gymnasium to take the regular body building and “straightening-up" class work. Further, see that your youngster sits well back in his chair, shoulders back. not drooped, and that he stands and walks in the erect poeition. (Copyright, 1932.) delicately. Serve at once. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. I see you got the twins in a clothes basket—you isn't goin’ to put 'em out in the bull-rushes, like Moses, is you? (Copyright._1932) FRANKLIN Cane Sugars for every recipe Dry Cleaning ) Here’s how Manhattar makes soiled Clothes look NEW! Save money on clothes! Manhattan means every word of this amazing guarantee! GUARANTEED not to shrink any garment—regardless of fabric. . GUARANTEED not to fade even the most delicate coloring. GUARANTEED that articles will be free from odors. GUARANTEED that all minor repairs, such as buttons, snaps, linings, etc., will be made without extra charge. GUARANTEED that all garments will be expertly “'shaped” and PHONE DECATUR 1120 "MANHATTA Ozr Dry Cleaning has no equal in Washington. Phone today! You will be surprised at the mod.- erate charge for such high quality work. . . Dry Cleahz'ng Department . . N LAUNDRY