Evening Star Newspaper, August 10, 1937, Page 10

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B—-10 WOMEN'S FEATURES. Own Rec THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1937. WOMEN'S FEATURES. Learn To Say No If On Diet Don’t Be a Softie and Give in When Trying to Lose Weight. BY ELSIE PIERCE. THOUGHT I had completed the reducing exercise last week 1 thought I had said my say about exercise and diet being the one sane way to whittle down weight. And it took another ‘“beach scene” to re- mind me that I had neglected to men- tion one very important factor: Un- less one learns to say “No" the full value of the sanest, finest reducing toutine cannot be realized At the above-mentioned beach scene one was complaining, and two were talking to and about her. They were saying W thly good is all your mas- | 4 Wintieartnly g 5 | rolled to the edge of each man's plot | have needed them so much and been so sage, your rolling and your strict diets if you take them in spurts and if you haven't the will and fortitude to say ‘No.' You diet for a week and then go off for a week-end to eat everything at every meal and nibble between meals.” The object of all the unkind thrusts tried to explain that she can't hurt her hostess' feelings by refusing any- thing. To which they answered that, “No, thank you, I'm on a diet” was a twell excuse and covered a multi- tude of refusals . . . one could use it to pass up most any dish, and there wasn't the necessity of so much as tasting a dish one didn't like, let alone ® fatteninz one. It really is inexcusable—this inabil- ity of so many women to say “No, no," very definitely to every dish one knows to disazree or prove fatten- ing. “No" with double emphasis to a nibbling between meals. Fresh fruit now and then or fruit juice drinks are not fattening. But lest partaking of these may help one to form the habit of al including candy, nuts, cake or cookies or al- coholic bever; . Which have a very high caloric value, dispense with the non-fattening mos A famous actress contends that most women see themselves some 20 pounds lighter than really loox to others. And when they finally wake up to the realization that ti to whittle down they little suspe that the rest of the world has been thinking in those terms for some t (and for some 20 poun: to check is just before the is reached, not after. Becal pound doesn’t matter, nor nor the third. but when piing on s thick and fast the o se the first the second 2 | determined to make out of this new, wild country a place to live and believe as they saw fit. Being most inde- |alone with only the bare necessities rather than to ask aid of any one The coast of New England was a stones as well as timber before it was possible to build. The stones were | of land to make a fence surrounding | his property. They also made the | foundations of the houses. The logs 1(mm the trees were split and adzed | for the side walls of the houses. Later | on, when the saw mills started, these | BY MARGARET NOWELL HE early houses of the New England settlements were simple in out- line—using the materials that were found in the land on which they were built. Compact in plan, they utilized every bit of space. They were built to be lived in, and possessed a charm found only in the house that combines simplicity of design with utility. They were constructed by serious people who were dee ply religious and rock wool insulation, there is still pendent, they preferred to struggle on | Nothing finer than the clear sweeping line of the north roof of a New Eng- land farm house. The great charm of most used and to fill a definite need. The women who cared for these chairs, tables and sideboards must overjoyed to have them that they took loving care of them and passed them on to future generations in perfect condition, with a polish that was ac- quired only by years. beeswax, and a strong arm. Though New England | walls were sheathed with pine, and hcuses never gave an impression of floors were laid It was a thrifty, hard-working group | of people who had no time or patience for frills. Theirs was the job of liv- ing independently in a strange land— to succeed by their own hand, and | they were not willing to waste time or ‘enrrv_v on anything but necessities. All through New England are these | h es, “Cape Cod Colonial” Built of weathered shingles or white painted ship-lap boards. they are either perched on top of a hill or on a flat pine paneling is perfect | way to stop them is to cut down on! the diet, and learn to say ' other exercises if § eoftie of the “can't refuse” variety, practice this one: Lock hands tizht behind back. Keeping mouth tight shut, wagz head in negative direction until person offering you a goodie or | €ookie or candy or whatnot has passed well out of sight. Repeat 10 times (or 85 many times) as offer is repeated It's a swell general reducing exer- cise and fine for keeping chin and contour youthful! (Copsright, 1037.) My Neighbor Says: If the upper leaves of your dahlia plants are wilted look for borers. Baked oranges are tasty accom- paniments to serve with wild or domestic fowl for Fall or Winter serving. A strong hot solution of salt in water removes the odor of fish from dishes. To remove it from the hands wash with hot water and salt but without soap until after rinsing off salt (Coprright, 1037.) which architects have called | ease and plenty, thev were famous for the quality of their workmanship and their spotlessness. The lines and proportion of these early houses are so fine that they may be used everywhere. In Washington, where land and building costs are ex- cessive, thev are an excellent invest- ment for the average person because they manage to get so much house under a small roof and they may be built to advantage on a small lot This is the type of house in which One room-— ‘\plct surrounded by | fashioned gardens | fences. lilacs behind or old- picket | little | larger. |roof was long and sloping, coming | down almost to the ground. Snow slid | off this high-pitched roof, and banked | up under the low eaves, as an insula- | tion against the freezing north winds. | Though there is no real need for this |in our day, with central heating and “salt-box" house was ‘When, as is often the case, the hostess has to be the cook and waitress, too, she will gratefully welcome this charming design that can add so much to an everyday apron. Embroider it on a plain one, and you'll have an apron that you'll be proud to wear in any company. The simple floral motifs would go very well on a frock, too. We've included two of the large (7x9 inches) motifs, and four of the small (3x4 inches) ones, so you'll have enough for whatever you wish, ‘The pattern envelope contains genuine hot-iron transfer for two motifs ¥x9 inches and four motifs 3x4 inches; also complete, easy-to-understand llustrated directions, also what material and how much you will need. To obtain this pattern, send for No. 506 and inclose 15 cents in stamps or ooin. Address orders to the Needlework Editor of The Evening Star. (Copyright, 1987 [} In Northern New England this same | made | 3 | g Ty ey e Tt faced south and the nopin | be Overdone very easily, and gives a 2] a hallway or dining room might be sheathed in pine from floor to ceiling, | and another room with a pine dado | that are always crisp, are ideal and trim would use a colorful hand- blocked paper. Wood paneling may shut-in, stifled feeling. The beauty of wood may be set off to excellent advantage by the use of paper or plaster with it. This is the perfect background for rough surfaced cotton and linen fabrics. Plaid ginghams and gay chintzes may be used for upholstery materials. Windows should be treated very simple—starched organdie or dotted swiss; muslin, ruffled curtains Old Guilts, crocheted bedspreads, afghans and paislev shawls belong in this house. Strive for an airy, shining, scrubbed look through the whole place. New England women were good housekeepers. The perfect furniture for this house would be antique pieces in pine, maple or cherry—or mahogany, as long as it is simple in design. Don't make too much of an effort to have everything match; there is nothing that sets off a beautiful old pine desk better than the rosey tone of cherry wood: the deep brown of old mahogany with its surface rubbed to a satin finish is further enhanced by an occasional piece of pine furniture. In case you are not interested in old furniture or are not in the mood to furnish your house a “stick” at a time, as you col- lect and refinish antiques, find that the shops will show you ex- cellent reproductions (and some that are not so excellent). Before you buy a houseful of these, go to the library or the museums—or, best of all, the Library of Congress, and ask to see books with plates of interiors of the best old houses. If you are in New York go to the “American Wing” of the Metropolitan Museum and try to get “the feel” of old furniture. Your mind will very quickly accustom itself to the real thing and you will not have your house filled with mon- strosities that are “too early Amer- ican” to be in good taste. Remem- ber, the first requisites of an early American house are simplicity, utility and wearability. This is the place for hooked rugs and braided rag rugs, for geraniums on the window sill, for wing chairs and an open fire, for old pewter and brass and candlelight, for a steeple clock on the mantel or a grandfather clock in the hall. In this house you should get all that you desire in a home for the smallest investment. From the front entrance to the back garden gate it will give you the most for the money. The furniture and furnishings should be of the simplest and not expensive in their first cost or their upkeep. It is & house that may be enlarged without destroying, in any way, its good proportions. It has a fine hon- esty about it which will lend dignity to your way of living. It is truly American and is as good today in the National Capital with all its modern comfort as it was on the shores of New England 300 years ago when the “long roof” was turned to the north {for protection from Winter storm. It is & home which expresses very truly the ideals of American lving. 4 of the . > v i | harsh one, where the forest ran down | furniture found in these houses was {almost to the edge of the rocky coast.|that it was sturdily built, to be con- | It was necessary to clear the land of | tinuaily you will | | | put off your marriage until you are ord of Childish Emotions Apt to Pages From The Past Often Tumble Us Off Parental _ngal_l-Horse Old-Fashioned Habit of Keeping “Secret Journal” Not Comparable With HE advent of the “great speed leisurely living Jjournal keeping. Among these parable to the elaborate and detailed accounts that were inscribed within the covers of a formidable volume, chris- tened “My Jour- nal"” These were truly labors of self-love, and be- came a running a u tobiography, replete with all the literary flour- ishes possible. The novels of the late Victorian period—and even the books of ad- olescents—were crammed with char- acters who wrote endless letters about their doings, and who kept “secret’ journals which were ruthlessly laid bare to the reader. Through these mediums one was made aware of the inner workings of the hero or heroine’s mind: their emotions and mental com- plexities were painstakingly expressed for the observer's delectation. This same trick is accomplished today by writing the entire book from the van- tage point of a seat within the chief character's gray matter; we emerge Betsy Caswell, constructed in a muck of psychoses with the uneasy feeling that possibly we are just as batty as the fictitious individual with whom our identity has been merged for several hundred | pages. * S A matter of fact, this is not just a Joke—recently I read an un- | pleasant little book. whose heroine had escaped from a “sanitarium” where | she had been placed as a “manic de- | pressive”; although I wasn't at all | sure exactly what a “manic depres- | sive” was, for days I couldn't get the | word out of my mind. and practically Rot the jitters because I couldn't shake off the personality of that char- acter. That was one book I threw | away. It made me feel creepy! And all because the author. with unbeliev- able skill, set his readers right inside of that shadowed mind which he por- trayed, and forced them to look at things from his heroine’s point of view! To get back to the main issue, from which I seem to have wandered con- siderably, the technique of the old days was pleasanter, and did not at- tain such drastic results. The jour- nals and the lengthy letters in the books x % pressing ourselves through the same medium. Copy books. blank books, old account books—anything with ruled pages and sturdy covers, would oe filled with our dull little daily doings. | usually dressed up with the romance of childhood. We wrote savage warn- ings inside the front covers. threaten- ing any snooper who might sequences; when, for a Christmas pres- Dorothy from a modern novel which has been | fired most of us “younger fry” | with a desire to try our hand at ex- | peer | within their pages with horrible con- | Modern Diary. BY BETSY CASWELL. age” rang the death knell for many charming and courteous customs that were founded on the basis of dear departed was the gentle art of The diary, of course, we still have with us—and certain individuals who have found that the pen is very decidedly a more dangerous weapon than the sword, wish to heaven that we did not! But the diary of today, per se, is not com-« S——— | ent, some indulgent relative gave us a leather-bound volume that boasted a lock and key, our bliss new no bounds. I have a lot of mine still—and, in a way, they have been very valuable to me in helping me to understand my children. If some strange phobia attacked my daughter, or an irritat- ing habit developed in my son, I find that by going back to the journal kept by me at the same age, I can often discover that I was going through just ]\he same phases at that point—and considered myself wickedly abused be- cause my mother didn't “‘understand” me. 5 l a little dust-up one day about the possession of a dog. She had been yearning for a dog for ages—finally | she attained one. She didn't know * o ok X | much about taking care of it, and a | good deal of its career seemed to de- | pend on me. Consequently, the dog made me the object of his affections and the green-eyed monster | Daugthter. She turned ugly, snarly and resentful. She accused me of ‘anenmmz the pups affections. said awful things—and so0 did I, for I lost my temper, and felt she had been ungrateful for the trouble I had taken over her pet. Then I chanced to get out the journal I had kept when by first dog came into my life. And to my shame, 1 discovered that the same thing had happened to me—my father had taken charge of the dog. and it had. in reality, become his. although nominally belonging to me. And I saw in the bitter, childish sorrow and re- sentment expressed on those scrawled pages, the duplicate of what my child was suffering at the moment t taughs me a good lesson—I apologized. and let her struggle through with her own dog. body else, now, and she is bliss{ully happy But if it hadn't been for that j OR instance, Daughter and I had | Blouses Made of W bit | She | [ He won't even look at any- | | | | nal, the misunderstanding might have | gone on, and become a really serious matter. Therefore, I am more than ever convinced that our children today should be taught to take time out, and confide their thoughts and react to | the pages of a book. These are not for any other eyes but theirs—but they should keep them until they are grown, and have children of their own—then refer to them as needed. to help them to understand the “growing pains” with which the youngsters are afflicted. We forget all too quickly the fine sensi tiveness of youth—we forget the wa; our feelings stuck out ready to be bumped, as did our knees and elbows But if we can see, in our own black and white, that we have felt once as they do now—then we will tumble off our parental high horse in a hurry! | Stop your children for a few minutes every day. calling them from the rush and clamor of modern life. to put their feelings on paper as & hostage against {the future! Dix Says EAR MISS DIX: I am 20 and have just become en- gaged to a young man of 23 | after a whirlwind courtship of a few weeks. He is a fine boy and I am very fond of him. He loves me, or s0 he thinks, but I am doubtful whether true and lasting love can come in so short a time. I am very ambitious. One day I think I shall be happy as a married woman and the next I long for a career. I like to g0 out and enjoy the company of other | young people and have a good time, but Bob is jealous and reserts my having other friends. I feel that I am too young to be serious and that I am not ready to settle down. Every- body thinks that I would be foolish to break my engagement, as this young man is & good match, but I think I should give him back his ring and | that we should both go with others. | Should I marry him and hope when I am older I will not be so fickle- | minded and changeable as I am now? [ BEWILDERED BETTY. 1 earnestly advise you to Answer: | more certain of your feelings toward | Bob than you are now. Give your | sentiments a chance to jell and, above to spend the remainder of your life. durance test if, when you get to know him, you find out that you haven't one single thought or taste in common. No doubt there is that strange phenomenon that we call love at first sight. There are authenticated cases where & man and woman at the very moment of meeting have recognized each of xer as their predestined mates, but such a thing is a miracle, and it is just about as rare as hens’ teeth. Not two people in ten million ever experience it. All the other foolhardy youths and maidens who rush to the parson after a two-cocktail acquaint- ance find that what the old adage says about marrying in haste and repent- ing at leisure is only too true. * ok k% OU see, my dear, no matter how much you think you know a per- son, you can never really know him or her until after you are married to him or her. Marriage brings out unsus- pected qualities in people, and, al- though you may have made mud pies with Johnny Jones and gone through kindergarten and school and college with him, you will discover, if you marry him, that he is no more like the man you thought he was than he is like the man in the moon. But, for all of that, there are a lot of things you can find out about a man before marriage that are just as important as ascertaining if he has 4 3\ | all, take time to get acquainted with | this man with whom you are proposing | Believe me, it will be a long, long en- | Differentiate Between Infatuation and Love Before Marrying. a fine moral character and a good job on which your happiness will depend just as much as on whether he is a philanderer or a ne'er-do-well. Such as: Is he good natured, or has he a bad temper? Does he like to do the things you like to do? Is he critical of your friends? Is he an interesting companion, or does he bore you? Have you anything to talk about after you quit billing and cooing? Check up on these on the safe side of the altar. It will save you a trip later to Reno. You do not know whether or not you are in Jove. That is easy to determine. If you have any doubts on the subject, you are not. When a girl is really in love, it breaks out on her like the measles, and she knows she has it. So does every one else. 3 Furthermore, a girl really in love can’t see but one man. All the balance are just shadows that she doesn't | bother to glance at. Uninteresting | creatures that she wonders she ever looked at. And she doesn't dread her wedding day. It can't be hurried up too quickly for her. And take my advice on this point: Don't get married until you have had your playtime and until you have had your fill of love-making and flirting around and dancing and parties and gadding and are ready to settle down. Most of the discontented, fretful wives who consider making a home a chore and babies brats, and most of the wives who go haywire at 40 and get them- selves into scandals are girls who mar- ried before they had had their fling and their fill of romance. * ok Kk % DEAR MISS DIX: Is it possible in this day and age for a girl to travel alone? I mean real globe-trot- ting. I am starved for romance, the kind you read about in travel books. For years I have saved and thought of nothing else. But what can a girl with limited means do about it? DOT. Answer: If a girl has common sense and dignity, she can travel to the ends of the earth alone with safety. Nowa- days what we used to call “third class” is cheap and comfortable, and it doesn't require much money to go from place to place. If you can afford it, the best way for a girl traveling alone is to join some tour. In that way she has companion- ship and protection. If you have limited means and a real thirst for travel, the best thing to do is to learn some trade by which you can make your way as you go, and that will enable you to stay long enough in places to really see them. I have known a number of trained nurses, beauticians and stenographers who have traveled the world around. DOROTHY DIX. (Coprright, 1937.) A [ | BY BARBARA BELL. ’ S TRADITIONAL as the little red school house is this frock for first days back at school | With several little blouses 1 | different colors and fabrics, it off | & whole season’s wardrobe. The jump- to make (has only two seams) and is prettily made of plaid or sheer wool or | challis print. The lttle blouses to contrast can be made broadcloth. dimity or washable fabrics that are easily kept | fresh. To add to the many ways in | which this dress can be worn, trv a | patent leather belt or a grosgrain rib- bon sash with a tailored bow Barbara Bell pattern No. is designed for sizes 6, 8, 10, 14 vears. Size 8 years requires 173 | yards of 39-inch material for the ‘ jumper and 1'; vards for the blouse | Bias facing required for neck and | armhole, 2!, yards | Send 15 cents for the Barbara Bell | Fall and Winter Pattern Book. Make | yourself attractive, practical and be- | coming clothes, selecting designs from the Barbara Bell well-planned, ea: to-make patterns. Interesting and e: clusive fashions for little children and the difficult junior age: slender- izing, well-cut patterns for the mature figure: afternoon dresses for the most particular young women and matrons, and other patterns for special occa- sions are all to be found in the Bar- bara Bell Pattern Book 1996-B 12 and Cook’s Corner BY MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE USING SOUR CREAM. | GINGER COOKIES 23 cup fat 13 cup sour 112 cups dark cream brown sugar 1 teaspoon 2 eggs vanilla | 1 cup molasses 1 cup raising, 2 teaspoons optional cinnamon 4 cups flour teaspoon 1 teaspoon soda cloves 1 teaspoon baking 1 teaspoon powder | minger Cream fat and sugar. the ingredients. mixing lightly. Chill the dough one hour or longer. Break | off bits of dough and flatten down 3 inches apart on greased baking sheets. Bake 10 minutes in moderate | oven. 1 SOUR CREAM CAKE. 2 cups flour 1, teaspoon 1 teaspoon soda grated lemon | 25 cup granu- rind lated sugar 2 egrs | 1 teaspoon lemon 23 cup sour extract cream 2 tablespoons fat, melted Mix ingredients and beat 2 min- utes. Pour into loaf pan lined with waxed paper and bake 40 minutes in moderately slow oven. SOUR CREAM CHOCOLATE CAKE. 1, cup fat 1 teaspoon 1! cups granu- vanilla lated sugar 14 teaspoon salt 2 eggs, beaten 21'; cups flour 25 cup sour (pastry) cream 1 teaspoon soda 2 squares choco- 12 teaspoon baking late, melted powder Cream fat and sugar. Add rest of the ingredients and beat 2 minutes. Half-fill two layer-cake pans fitted with waxed papers. Bake 25 minutes in a moderately slow oven. Cool and cover with white icing. SOUR CREAM SALAD DRESSING. (For Vegetable Salads) 15 cup thick sour !4 teaspoon salt cream %, teaspoon 2 tablespoons celery seed granulated teaspoon sugar paprika 2 tablespoons vinegar Mix ingredients with a fork. Beat well and serve poured over two cups of vegetables. K Add rest of | Jumper Style for School ashable Fabrics Are Easy to Keep Clean. 1996-B BARBARA BELL, Washington Star. Inclose 25 cents in coins for | er itself is as easy as a doll's dress | Pattern No. 1996-B. Size . in percale, | gingham— | Name Address . (Wrap coins securely in paper.) TProper Use " Of Names | Or Titles BY EMILY POST. EAR MRS. POST: 1 have the same name as my mother-in-law had. except for the junior, which my husband and I continued to use even | after his father's death years ago. | My mother-in-law is now gone and my husband just died ana I am all alone. I need visiting cards badly and thought perhaps I could use those | left by my mother-in-law if you think it does not matter that her cards do not include “junior.” Answer—Correctly you have name which was formerly that of yvour mother-in-law, therefore, her cards would be suitable for your use. * ok % x ‘DEAR MRS. POST those in his family address a doctor? (a) When speaking to him? (b) When introducing him? (c) When his wife speaks of him? the | to him, and all his intimate friends | when speaking to him, call him by his first name and introduce him as Dr. Brown. In short, at home and so- cially he is spoker to and of as every | other man would be. Professionally | he is always given his title. In other | words, when his wife speaks of him to one of his patients she calls him “doctor.” But if the patient is an intimate friend, who also calls him by his first name, she call: him “John.” The onl difference between another profession is that in the lat- ter case a wife who is talking to ac- quaintances or strangers properly speaks of him as “my husband.” But the wife of a clergyman or a doctor. | more particularly the form-r, speaks | of him as “Mr. Good™” or “Dr. Good" rather than “my husband.” (Copyrigit, 1937.) Care of House Plants. House plants need an occasional bath, especially those with heavy foli- age. Use cold water and a soft, clean cloth for this purpose. Once a month | is usually sufficient to keep pores open. Strain Starch. Strain starch to remove lumps that | might cause ‘“blisters” when the clothes are ironed ‘Sweeten it with Doming’ Refined inUS A How would | Answer—Every one who is related | Prove Valuable to Mothers L3 Allowance Given To Children Start When They Are Tots Teaching the Value of Money. BY ANGELO PATRL | MJOTHERS frequently have trouble """ with children of the younger | group about money. The little ones | discover early that money buys them | pleasant things like sweets, pony rides | in the park, toys that win admiration | |and following on playground, | They beg for money, and as their | demands grow with achieves | ment, the mothers are forced to res | fuse. Then it is that pilfering is | likely to start | Mothers are alw shocked when children help themselves to money from the family purse. They are ce tain that the child knows what | means to steal and to lie. Haven't they been taug and haven't they | said, “Yes, we know better; we know it s a sin and that we must not do it?" Children learn words read | learn the mear of those w slowly, througk and they learn the imp their be= havior in e'en down to old age the every vears of r time, experiences ence to clari In order to teach a child abo money we must allow 1d have experiences concern This we are slow to do, and | one of parents much children | money. As soon as a | for pennies put him on an allowance, Allowance has a grandiloquent sound, | but it can be a sl le matter of a few ce: impressive ceremony. Teach the child | that these few cents are his to dn | with as heglikes and when he spends them thev’ are gone for gond. That is the first experience vou allow him. He gets: he spends: he is without. And make certain he stays without unti] next pay day | You may find it better to give ild his allowance in the reasons trouble with Let endin 1 about his g it Let exper ir work. His allowa | 1s 50 small he cannot do himself much harm in spending and the know edge he gains will repay your control many times over. Don’t ask him to save out of this allowance. Saving comes at a later period, when he is about 8 or so and begins to want more expe | to play w The beg: | 1f he 1 by the time he vears of age he has made a good | start. One point that should he by mothers no matter what th of the children. Let yoi toward money be one of c; | telligent management dren understand that vou know how much money you have, what it is spent for and that consider | carefully all expenditure. t arns that noted aze ide you Do ia":':me of the famil sets the child's at Manners of the | Moment | RUSSHN BANK fought o most. But for some people the family feud o around double Canfield or But the always more about the rules ing double Canfiel years a couple ¥ whether to tu time or three at of course, the one we've one point of Even after it may be that life for you without eements about And if that's these disa the s of the game the case we want to clear our skirts right now. Go ahead and fight for the rest of your lives. You might as well enjoy something. But if you get tired of it all, we'd like to suggest that vou take turns | about playing each other's rules. Wa certainly wouldn't want either of you to give in. That would be hard on somebody’s ezo. (And we must pre- serve the ego, you know. But yon could play one set of rules all the months that have “e” in them, and the other set for the rest of the time. Something like that. Or else get two card tables and play two games of solitaire. JEAN Unmiask Your Beaut} periodic in a doctor, a clergyman and a man of | | Exposure destroys the | of your skin, and | dull and | pearance — lighten your skin anc - | it the bright, fascinating, pearly-white beauty rendered by ORIENTAL CREAM ouraud — It beautifies the skin and complexion, arms, neck, shoulders and legs. The active oxygen bleaches out the dullness and revives the soft, smooth skin texture of youth. Renew your charm to-day— secure a bottle (JG’Y,'"! id’s Oriental Cream at once—Made in White, Flesh, Rachel and Oriental Tan. Send Sc. for Purse Size, State Shade Pord. T. Hopkins & Son, New York S ——— )

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