Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MAGAZINE PAGE. Conquering Contract By P. HAL SIM$—— Mr. Sims is universally acclaimed the greatest living contract and auction player. He was captain of the renowned “Four Horsemen” team and has won 24 mational championships since 1924. ° Refraining From Bidding a Five- Card Suit in Responding to No Trumps. N yesterday's article I said that I would not mention a five-card I mincr suit if the hand as a whole contained a little cver two tricks spread over three suits, even with a singleton, The first reason I gave was my reluctance to give any information to the opponent who will have to make the opening lead. “2. The second point embraces the same reason from another angle. I do not wish to in- duce my partner to d on the second rcund, a concealed Tong suit, and thereby reveal it unnecessarily to our opponents. Or, rather, I wish to make it clear at once that I con- sign sthe hand to P. Hal Sims, three no trumps and so make it unnecessary for him to show a concealed suit, if he has one. If its existence is not proclaimed 4n the bidding the enemy is likely to mis- play the defense not so much in making a bad cpening lead, but in switching to that suit when they see its weakness In dummy and in failing to get an early count cr picture of declarer’s hand, The following hand came up in a ;Pcelnl pair championship: North was ealer, Sp—A 10 x x x Hts—J 10 x Di Z10 x Koz x ClL—A D X x LTI 8 X' x s—a S Hesox? < DiQyx K TN xx The old-fashioned folks bid the hand in the old-fashicned way. One heart, two clubs, three hearts, three no trumps: UNCLE RAY’S CORNER 0ld-Time Indians. Bows and Arrows. ANY a farmer, peacefully plow- ing his field, finds that his plow has turned up one or more arrowheads. Such a dis- H covery may make him think back to the time when the field now 1§ed for grain was th> scene of a forest, or the home of grazing buffalo. $What stories lie behind the arrow- heads? Battles between tribes, some- thmes: but we may feel sure that an agrowhead more often points to a shot a$ an animal than to a shot at a man. SFrom tales we hear, we might gather that Indian warriors of long ago did 1fftle except fight against one another; = - o —or cne_ heart, two no trumps, three ! hearts, three no trumps. Scme also played it in four hearts to tie for the bottom score. From either side diamcnds was the natural opening after the club take-out. The defenders duly cashed in their three aces—quickly against the four hearts declarers. Four odd in hearts or| RO _trumps. | With the Sims players it went dif- ferently. One no trump by north, two no trumps, three no trumps. Some got a club lead, others were allowed to win a diamond lead with the king and | then went after the clubs. In either event west, when in the lead, could not ! resist dummy's weak doubleton in‘ hearts. Having still two aces in his| hand, hearts never having been bid, | he led the jack. Declarer won with the ace and reasoned thet the oppcnent| hclding the ace of spades might hold | off once if the king were led. He was| right. Where diamonds had not been | led, he made the same play with the king of diamonds and it held. Now | the party was over. He ran the rest cf the hearts and Clubs, making six | 0dd Gn onc case only five odd, as west became suspicicus as the second king was led aiter a club opening). Th were magnificent results in match-point scering and they were ob- tained without any risk whatcver of ! losing anything by tidding these hc ings in this way. This particular hand is a somewhat extrcme example, but the | principle is right* and it wins man points in overtricks and extra trick | | points, in addition to the doubtful | 8ames it brings off thrcugh opponents | | misjudging the hcldings and misplay- | | Ing the defense where the bidding has | | not been fatuously transparent. | Mr. Sims will answer ell inquiries on | | contract that are addressed to this news- ( | Paper with self-addressed stamped envelope. | . s | | For the Hostess. [ Saute half a green chopped pepper and_one-fourth pound of mushrooms, | or one can, in lwo tablespoonfuls of butter. Blend five tablespoonfuls of | flour with three tablespoonfuls of but- | |ter in a 2-quart saucepan. Add three | | cupfuls of milk and cook until thick- | cned. Add one can of lobster, one can | of peas draired and seasoned, half a | teaspoonful of table sauce, and one tablespoonful of lemon juice. Season ! | with salt and pepper and serve in in- | | dividual tart cases, or pie crust baked ' cn the back of muffin pans. Garnish | cach tartlet with a little paprika and | 2 sprig of parsley. |as a usual thing; but some were oval. The spurs of wild tu s and the pein.s | of decr horns were employed by certain | | tribes for arrow tips. Along the Pacific Coast, bows made | from the wood of cedar and yew trees | were common. Long straight bows of willow or birch were widely used in Central Canada. Amcong the favorite | woods used for bows by tribes of the | | Mississippi Valley were ash, oak, wal- nut_and hickory. | (For “History” section of your scrap- book.) Several thousand more copies of the “surprise leaflet” will be maiied without | charge to readers 'who send me a| | stamped, return envelope. This leaflet |is one of the most popular I have of- |fered. It contains riddles. and tells UNCLE RAY. (Copyright, 1933.) THE EVENING STAR, WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. nzaes HOW*ED' BYRNES ANO | RIOE YO ‘When Harry Parks, Washington's fa- vorite bicyclist, was a big attraction at the Old Academy Theater? NATURE’S CHILDREN COX ATHEY. Blue Bells of Scotland. Campanula Rotundefolia. BY LILLIAN ANGING her dainty head to protect her nectar and pollen, | not only from the rain but also | from toa inquisitive insects, the | blue bell knows how to outwit | poachers. She also knows, in some way, that blue is a rare and favorite color. Thus she advertises her wares. It is on> of the wonderful rewards| you receive when you are taken into some of the secrets of nature’s children, | how many of them deliberately perfect schemes to furtrer their development. Take the bonny blue bells. If they| did not chose the most inaccessible home | sites, the family would soon be only a| memory. So they are to be found in | the crevices of rocks. above the dash- ing streams, along ledges, and they are sprayed by foaming and dashing wuters 2nd on wind-swept hills. On slender but.sturdy stems, they sway In the strong winds. The stout “BLUE BELLS OF SCOTLAND- little bells, 7raceful and exquisite, defy their godmother and call to the bees. Other guests are the butterflies and insects that do not mind hanging up- side down as they sip their drink. In order to hold to the bell they must the WASHINGTON, D. C., How to Live Peaceably With Your Says Acting as Guest Promotes Harmony {DorothyDix| In-Laws WOMAN said to me the oiner day: “I am in my late $0s, not strong and healthy enough or clever enough or young enough to strike out.for myself ajong new lines in efficient m A I have been just a housewife and am not trained to any gainful occupation by which I could earn my living. My husband has recently died, leaving me without any money and I am compelled to go and live with my merried daughter since I cannot support myself and she 1s not able to provide for me outside of her own home. “My daughter is a good daughter and loves me dearly. Her husband is a fine man and has extended me a cordial invitation to make my home with them. But I know that in his heart he does not want me. He is peculiarly devoted to his wife, wrapped uE in her, as the old phrase goes, and he would like to monopolize her, her interests and attentions without having to share them with any stranger. He is also very domestic and fond of his home and he would find it happier if no third party were thrust into it. It would be far, far better for all concerned if I could have stayed on in my own little house, or could go to some boarding house or hotel to live, but since this cannot be, how can I handle the situation in which we find ourselves so as to avoid friction as much as possible and get the most peace and happiness out of it?” “« ELL,” I repled, “it has always seemed to me that when a mother goes to live with her married children the proper role for her to assume is that of guest and to demean herself accordingly. She should follow the rules laid down for the conduct of guests as religiously as she does the Ten Commandments, and, if she will do this, she will generally find out that from having been looked on as a pest who was wished on them, she has become the star boarder. “Now, the very first requisite in a successful guest is to maintain an attitude of p\elserg admiration of everything her hosts have and do. When you go to visit the A.'s you do not make sour comments on their home, their manner of living and their personal habits. You do not tell them that you do not like their house, and observe that why they picked out such an inconvenient spot you can’t conceive, or remark that their garden is a mess and they should have planted roses. Nor do you com- ment that the pie is soggy and the coffee tastes like dish water and that anybody can see that the cook is throwing half of the food into the garbage can. UON the contrary, if you ever expect to be invited back again, you find the house picturesque and the view adorable and the garden quaint and you rave over the baby and swallow the poisons the cook has brewed and reach for a dyspepsia tablet. Still less would you be guilty of such a breach of etiquette as criticizing your hosts to each other. You would reflect that since they were married and had to live together, the blinder they were to each other's faults. the better for them. 3 honed that he had to stay downtown for & confer- ence ns!gduwmafi'tt;e‘ephmne to dinner you wouldn't dream of suggesting to Mrs. A. that he was taking that platinum blond stencgrapher of his out to a night club. Nor would you suggest to Mr. A. that Mrs. A. spent tco much money and played too much bridge and that she had Dbetter be at home looking after her children instead of gadding She streets. Far from it. You press-agent the A’s to each other until you make each feel that he or she has drawn the matrimonial prize package. key- G’THE next rule for being a successful guest is not to throw a monl T rench into the domestic machinery. Hands off. Keep your fin- gers out of the ples. Let them rua their own houses and their wives and husbands and children the way they want to without any advice or com- ment from you. “If you were visiting the B.'s. you wouldn't feel it your sacred duty to reorganize their whole household or to suvervise their morals or man- ners. No mre is it your business to meddle in your children’s affairs. They have a right to live their own lives in their own way in peace, and the fact that thev have extended vou their hospitality is no reason for them to give up all their pleasant little habits just because you have 1850 standards of conduct in 1933. HALF of the time when children dread having mother come to live with them it is because they know they can never plav another game of bridge or poker or smoke a cigarette or drink a cocktail without having a row with her. or having to do it on the sly and that she and the children will be in perpetual conflict because girls and boys didn't tear around in automobiles when she was ycung. MNext, remember that a guest pays for her board and keep by her soclety and make vourself a pleasant and agreeable companion. And. Jastly, bear in mind that a_wise guest does not give her hosts so much of her soclety that thev get fed up on her. She is not always in evidence. She spends much of her time in her own room. She isn't always under vi ts and amusements and friends.” foot. She cultivates her own interest St s (Copyright. 19 A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. ARVEL MILLS LOGAN, the big, |ington and teaches a class with a mem- bership of more than 100. MONDAY, MAY 8, | C 19 SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Housecleanin’ was fun, but_livin’ up | to a’ clean house is hard. I've ’'bout | weared my shoes to a fragile, scrapin’ ‘em already. OUR CHILDREN BY ANGELO PATRI. The Power Instinct. HILDREN are born with the de- sire to exercise power over people and things about them. If there were no such drive, | the child would not develop | into a self-sustaining human being. As | it is, he struggles for this trait of human | character with might and main. We who ought to be anxious to help him get it, usually get in his way and thwart | him by every means in our power. “Put that de 2 “No, I won' | “What's that? How dare you say ‘I won't’ to your mother. I'll teach you right here and now. Maybe a spanking will help you remember that I am here to tell you what to do and you are here to obey.” So? Is that really why he is here, or why you are ‘here? I believe he is here to grow into a self-respecting. self-sus- | taining citizen and that your duty is to help him to do just that. Making him feel subordinate to your will is not going to teach him to exert and there- fore to grow his own power. Just re- member that ‘I will' and ‘I won't’ are symbols of power expressions. The child | wants you to understand that he is giv- ing your request his attention, turning it cver in his mind, and those words are the symbols of his mind's action. | He needs direction, stimulation and help, but he does not need arbitrary suppression Sometimes you are busy and in a hurry. The little child wants to have a hand in the work and says, “ let me.” Perhaps you s: can't. You're only in my ! this. Go long with you out of my way and don't come back here again until I get through.” Maybe he wants to tie his own shoes, button his own eeat, feed himself, help himself in his own clumsy fashion. You let him or you say: “Goodness me, 1 haven't time for this. What's the use of your trying to do what you know you can't? Here, give that to me. I'll do it. I can't stop to let you mess things up‘lnd then do them over again my- | self.” The steps to power are unsteady and ing. WOMEN’S FEATURES EVERYDAY PSYCHOLOGY BY DR. JESSE The Old Ball Game. ‘There must be a lot ¢f psychology in a ball game. Otherwise there wouldn’t be so much activity.- On the part of the players much of this activity is habit reduced to per- fect mechanism. Ball players are always practicing. This means that they are always strengthening the hook-ups of eye, ear and muscle. All these -ups are formed in tive nerve tissue. The perfect player is in the first place a perfect machine. Of course, this machinee must be olled frequently. That's why they have —————— My Neighbor Say: Oucumber peel has been found to be very efficacious in ridding the house of cockroaches. It should be scattered round the kitchen in the evening, particu- larly into the corners of the room. ‘Thé insects soon discover the peel, which to them acts as a poison. Roquefort cheese dressing is made by crumbling or creaming one-third cup of cheese and blend- ing it with one-half cup of French dressing. This dressing is most acceptable served on head lettuce, vegetable or fruit salads. Scorch stains on white silk can be removed with bicarbonate of soda, mixed to a paste with cold water. (Copyright, 1933.) W. SPROWLS, ‘he “warm-ups” before the game. Have you not noticed frequently that pinch- | hitters are sadly disappointing? Per- | haps they haven't had sufficient re- cent warming-up. I have often won- dered why some provision was not | made for a pinch-hitter to warm up | just before he werit to bat. There | might be a batting “bull pen.” Tka first club owner to provide this woua | be writing another chapter in the his- tory of the game. On the part of the fans, the action is going on just the same. The fan tends to hit every strike—in his mind; lets every ball go by—in his mind. The fans who work the hardest along these lines are the ones who correct the umpire and advise the manager. (Copyright, 193 Hapfiy Wife Keeps Youth Brushes Away Gray Hair Now you can really look years younger. With an_ordinary small brush you Jjust unt those streaks or palches of gray back to your natural shade—whether blonde. brown or black. It is 50 easy 1o do—at nhcme—with Brownatone. Over b s' success. Guaranteed harmless. Active coloring agent is purely vegetable Defies detection, No_tell-tale. “dved” look. Cannot affect waving of hair. No need to guess. First cut a lock of hair from your head and apply a little of his ys tint. If Brown: not give your gray, streaked. d hair jts natural color. youth an your morey back. Only 50e. ®ists.—Advertisement. Dear Frank: I am taking this means of getting in touch with you because it's high time vou learned the truth. A cannot afford to negle man in your position ct his appearance. Yet day after day, you wear shirts to work that look as though they have been slept in. False economy, old 1 reasons you never get cases. Ask yvour wife woman with your clo laundry. And start d nan. And one of the sent out on important to stop playing wash- thes. Pick out a good ressing the part of an up-and-coming business man. P.S—Try my the phone number is laundh A FRIEND. v—>Manhattan— Decatur 1120, ‘how to perform magic tricks. i clasp the pistil. In doing this fun-loving Senator from Kentucky, rst year | the path is crooked at the be; Recently he completed his | [ sebsmaasinna POISED. | t to think that would be a mistake. | jost Indian tribes were of peaceful na- ture. The greatest work of the war- | @rs was to supply food for the tribe. | uaws and children did the work of ising crops—corn, peas. squashes and | on: but meat was the leading item of diet, and to obtain meat the men wWent forth on hunting pa | ~Now and then, to bz sure, there were ttles between tribes. The chief cause such warfare was dispute over hunt- igg grounds. After the coming of the | ites, the Indians struggled to keep their old hunting grounds from being t§ken away by the settlers. It was a lesing struggle, as you know. “In the Lake Superior region, Indians rdade use of copper which they found o8 or close to the surface of the ound, and natives of olden Mexico, | 'ntral America and Peru were well ac- | ainted with the use of metal. In| jneral, however, we may say that In- | dlans were living in the Stone Age be- | e the arrival of people from Europe; | t they used tools and weapons of | sgone. | aMost arrowheads which we pick up are made of flint, but some are com- | 3««1 of “obsidian.” Obsidian is & kind glass. usually black in colpr, which | s formed by fast-cooling lava of vol- | c@noes which once were active on this | centinent. Arrowheeds made of this | Hack substance are found most com- monly in the Rocky Mountain region. | =Arrowheads were of triangle shape "URON INDIAN WITH ARROW M MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Canned Apricots. Oatmeal With Cream. Omelet. Bran Bread Toast. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Cheese Souffle. Caramel Sweet Potatoes. Clover Rolls. Banbury Tarts. Tea. DINNER. Cream of Potato Soup. Hamburg Steak, Brown Gravy. Delmonico Potatoes. Dandelion Greens. Vegetable Salad. French Dressing. Apple Tapioca Cream. Coffee. OMELET. Four eggs, bcaten separately, season yolks and add to them one-fourth cup hot milk, then add the whites, beaten sliff, and mix thoroughly, - Have ready an iron spider, hot and well buttered, also a cover to fit, buttered. Cover and let cool until it rises, lifting S0 you can cut through the crust at middle and fold over. Serve at once on hot platter. The heat must be great encugh to cook and brown it and yet not burn. It takes from 10 to 15 minutes to cook and requires undivided attention. SWEET POTATOES. Slice boiled sweet potatoes, dip them into melted butter and then into granulated sugar. Place ih a hot oven until the coating of brown caramel is formed. VEGETABLE SALAD. Mix together 1 cup peas, 1 cup shredded string beans, 1 small cu- cumber, peeled and cut into dice, and 6 sliced radishes. Ohill, marinate in French dressing for one hour. then place in nests of lettuce leaves and garnish with radish roses, slices of hard-boiled egg and sprigs of watercress. Serve mayonnaise or boiled dress- .ing in separate dish. College Humor Man (after being cleaned in the| pinochle game) — Well, anyhow, I won't have to tell my wife about this. Eager chorus—What'll you do? | of the style. body becomes dusted with pollen from the surrounding anthers. .The flower, | in order to benefit from a visiting in- sect, must be well developed. The buds hold _their immature pollen grains | within ~ their walls by means of a| blanket of fine hair on the upper part By the time all of the pollen has| Man—Nothing. I ain’t married. An old lady who had been reading the health officer’s weekly reports thought that “Total” must be an | awfully malignant disease, as many | dying of it as all the rest put together, Big Brawney Footballman—S-s-say | f-f-fr-freshman, wh-wh-what t-time is it? Silence. | B. F. M—I-I-1 s-said Wh-wh- | what t-time is it? More silence. B. B. F. M. gets dis- | gusted and leaves. | Bystander—Why didn't you answer | that man, freshman? | Freshman — D-d-di-did y-you th-think I w-wanted to g-g-get m-my h-h-head knocked off >—Malteaser. “Does he talk like a college man?” “No, there wasn't a bit of intoxication in his’ voice.” Headwaiter at the Commons—Hey, what are you doing with those spoons in your pocket? Stude—Well, you see, it's like this. ‘The Doc over at Billings gave me some | medicine and told me to take two tea- | spoons before every meal.”—Phoenix. Headline—“Husband Leaves Wife's Bridge Party; Disappears.” Just a fugitive from a chin gang. “My friend just died of drink. What kind of a tablet should mark his grave?” “An aspirin tablet.”—Phoenix. ‘Wives don't mind taking orders from | their husbands if they are money orders. “I'd invite you to stay for supper, but cooking’s all Greek to me.” “That's all right. I like Greek cook- ing.”—Phoenix. A modern ship with stabilizers is Just like the rest of us—it's lost its roll. “So_Rose is going to get married at last? Who's the lucky man?” “Her father, dodo, her father.” Radio comedians now work on the tennis trophy system. After they use a gag three times, it become their per- manent possession.—Phoenix. 4 NO. 1221 THREE DIFFERENT STYLE | DRESSES It costs only 15¢ See this and dozens of others in the Simplicity Magazine on sale at your fa- vorite dress goods counter. 10¢ (Copyright, 1933.) SIMPLICITY PATTERN CO. 44 W. 10th 51, New York-City | inch long. [|I” Besides perfect safety, this Proctor | been carted away by the insect guests| the stamens that matured early have | withered and the pistil is now so long | that it looks just like a well bell clapper. | The flowers are bright blue, bell- shaped and about three-fourths of an ! They hang from hairlike stems and have five-pointed calyx, while | five slender stamens, alternating with the tip of a calyx tube. There is one | pistil with three stigmas when the | flower is fully developed. These dainty flowers will grow in damp, cool places in a garden. They come early and are, indeed, welcome flower children. (Copyright, 1933.) The Old Gardener Says: | Coating seed corn with coal tar | to give the seed an offensive odor | | and thereby repel crows has been recommended for many years. Experience has now shown that this same plan will protect the corn from pheasants, which have been domg considerable damage in some sections of the country. The coal tar dries quickly, is not sticky, and works well in a planter where a large amount of seed corn is being used. It is well, however, to wet the grain with a little warm water before it is stirred into the tar. A tea- cupful of coal tar has been found sufficient for coating a peck of corn, because a thick coating is not necessary. After the mixing has bezn completed, the seed corn should be dried before it is plant- ed. Other materials, like crude petroleum, kerosene and fish oil have been used, but seem to in- terfere witH the germinating power of he grain, (Copyright, 1933.) IN IRONING IT’S IMPORTANT TO HAVE THE RIGHT HEAT | FOR EACH KIND OF FABRIC, But a New Automatic Iron Over- | comes Dangers of Wrong Heats Scientific research has esubluhedl the degrees of heat correct for iron- | ing linen, cotton, wcol, silk, artificial | The heat right for linen un[ ruin silk; the rayon-like fabrics require the low- || est heat of all. You don't | have to-actually scorch rayon to seriously dam- age its delicate fibres, for even a little t-o much | heat can mar the beauty and shorten the life of the rayon garment. There is a new electric iron with which you easily can avoid the dan- | gers of wrong heats. It is called the i Proctor Automatic Speed Iron. On it is a wonderful dial marked with the names of different fabrics. Place the | pointer on the name cf the fabric to | be ironed, and the heat is regulated | | automatically to exactly suit that | | particular fabric. No guesswork . . . || no overheating . ..no costly mistakes. | Ircn offers many advantages. There’s | { an off-switch right on the ircn itself, | where it is handiest when ironing is| finished or interrupted. The cord is||| | built on. This eliminates the trouble- || | | some piug connection, maintains a || | constant temperature, and saves re-} | 2ge makes this iron capable of great- | er intake of heat units to replace im- | | mediately and continucusly the heat | | used up in ironing. ) | | The Proctor Automatic Speed Iron | |is sold locally by stores where qual- | ity electric appliances are featured. —Advertisement., ; has a way of his own of escaping the cares and worries of the Senate. A first-termer, he found the Senate rather disappoint- ing when he came up at the begin- | ning of the last Congress in 1931. Back in Kentucky he had been th chief justice of the highest court in the State. and the quiet and dignity of the bench ap- pealed to him After he had sat in the Senate for | the lobes of the corolla, are borne on | short while, he began to grow a bit restless. Once he was caught shooting paper wads at Senator Connally of Texas in playful fashion while a_weighty debate was going on on the floor. “I didn't want to come here in the first place.” he once told a session of the Senate. “And now that I am here, 1 am not particularly interested in staying.” During the past year, however, Sena- tor Logan has found a job very much to his liking. Every Sunday morning he attends a Sunday school in Wash- as teacher of this class and admits| that his chi<f enjovment in Washington | has come from it | | He has opportunity to express him- | self there. perhaps, as he does not have in the Senate. And what he tells the men in the class is indicative of the man and his attitude. “The religious values of life are far more important,” he advised them re-| | cently, “than anything that can be | | accomplished by legislation.” | Perhaps his_disappointment in_the Senate might be found in this state- | ment: | |, “The life of meditation rather than | | the life of acquisition is the road to ‘happlness. Happiness is the chicf end | | of government. It is what we are all | seeking.” | The Senator is frequently a guest | speaker in various pulpits. | | Logan is not the only Senator who | | finds enjoyment in this way. Down in Vienna, Ga., there's a Sunday school class of young women who welcome the | adjournment of each session of Con-| gress. For it means their teacher— | Senator George—will b2 back again. | One of the best known religious teachers on Capitcl Hill, however, is an |old, gray-haired colored man in the | Senate barber shop named Sims. He is the self-styled pastor of the Uni- versal Church of Holiness in the Capi- tal. Many Senators, whose faces are | snavca daly by Sims, visit his church on Sundays to hear him preach. but there has to be a beginning if there is to be an end. Try to give the child a chance to grow under his own power. Every time he succeeds in doing some- thing well he gains and those gains pro- gress with the speed. of a rolling snow ball. Be a little patient and long suf- | fering in the beginning and you will rejoice later on. Sometimes a child tries to gain power in the wrong way. He wants to domin- ate people. He wants to have his way first and always. He uses his weakness, his babyhood, his winning way, dis ill- ,ness, his temper, whatever comes to his mind to force people and circum- stances to his way. There is no need for second thought when this happens. You at once set about redirecting his impulse to power |and keep training him to find right ways of expressing it until the wrong ones fade out of his memory. Quick Trick takes “Next washda! 1 use my regular tablespoons or $0 © soap and washday—an NOTE: Use oaly ons. Ld'xmv I"Y(o 5 Lux —no ot y—try this new id ‘wasl f Lux. W doing d the results are amazing® ther 5 fabrics sho! Delicatt ox cake-soap i h ea! For my fa’“gyafi - hing method, an c’re‘a\% doing it to speed up —for silks, 03P uld never rubbing. this NEMO-WEEK ONDERLIFT SPECIAL A Have Whiter Cleaner Teeth Use Toothpaste that Gets Results THERE GOES SALLY. SMART CLOTHES— PLENTY OF IT —BUT SHE DOESN'T IT'SHER DINGY |E TEETH. NO MAN LIKES SEE SALLY TODAY? SHE'S IM- PROVING. HER TEETH ARE MUCH WHITER. BOY, HAVE ¥ 17 I'VE GOT QUICKEST WAY l.i To WHITE" TEET“ 1 vou'v:ov:co-. TART brushing your teeth with GEOUSTEETHI'VEEVER SEEN. S Kolynos. In just a few days DON'T EVER STOP SM they’ll look whiter—shades whiter. S They’ll fle(ellmul:hdelne‘:" %nhe reason: Kolynos does what ordinary g toothpastes can’t do. Asitcleansup F , uglystainand tarnish—it foams into every tiny crevice and kills millions of germs that are the known cause of most tooth and gum troubles. ‘Thus Kolynos gives RESULTS YOU CAN SEE. Cleaner, whiter teeth. Healthier looking gums. Give up incompetent ways of brushing and start using the Kolynos technique —a half-inch of this remarkable dental cream on a dry brush twice a day. It’s the better, quicker way to cleaner, whiter teeth—try it. KOLYNOS CREAM DENTAL Regular $7.50 Copyright, 1933, by Kops Bros., Inc. GIVES YOU FASHION'S POSTURE DURING THIS SALE ONLY The FAMOUS WONDERLIFT— moclqmized in STYLE-WEAR- MATERIAL-VALUE! NLY twice a year can you buy a special value WONDERLIFT for $5.00—only twice a year this opportunity to fill your corsetry quirements for the next six months at 13 off the regular price. And only WONDERLIFT can bring you FASHION’S POSTURE — and healthful support. In a lighter,sturdier, handsomer garment than you’ve ever seen fore. Sold at the better stores every- where. NEMO $100 CASH PRIZE To celebrate the sale of the millionth Wonderlift we wil give $100 to purchaser of Nemo-Week Special Wonder- lift who sends us the best slogan featuring this Won- derlift. Winner of this slogan contest wilj receive $100and a new Wonderlift upon return of garment purc .1t winning slogan is submitted by more than one ) each contestant submitting it will receive $100. Slogans must be written on serial number card attached to each garment. All slogans must be postmarked not later than June 1, 1933. An- nouncement of wigner June 15—through your local store. -FLEX re- be- KOPS BROS,, INC. 385 Fifth Ave., New York Chicego San Francisco Toronto London