~ "flsticaied taste in style m. 2742. It is ., _T7ie New Antique to collect has been ageing the col-i jvlectors of the antique. They have to ;rurcnmuorfifiowwrgn@n AN- ‘i-TULY 22. 197‘) ..-> -r‘--.--a—i _- 5 _ -:- Social and Personal -:-§ Fashions §:- Literature .Wo“ii“ian ’s Realm w... ._..._.,.,.- _. ..- . _., 5"“ mum! Wm‘ blwk "u" ll"! (Z) A lovely afternoon frock of geor- b ‘ u) 5 beifilllllnl Clothe 0! natural model from the house of Jaqueilne. in different red tones is on g mauve oluiht with a. strass brooch. Black gotta crepe worn by Mlle. Edith Mera by Edith liiera. (3) A charming red satin folds tri th n m e crown of this of the Palais Royal. The design is straw cloche, bound and banded withilvlanugl 0111,15,, P011 felt and showing feather trim-j nilng in the same tune from Blanche ‘ Robert-Photographs are by Henri ackground. This costume was "was"; “Edi” Dorothy Dis: ‘ “f? Why Advise Girls to Cultivate Snobbery When They are Born That Way, Anyhow, and When That is the One Trait That Has Done More Than Anything Else to Prevent Their Progress '! Prof. Rogers, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in his part- e students, urged them to be snail, and told them that it was pher. Now his wife ing advice to th _ just as easy tomarry ths bass‘ daught er as the stenogra tells girls that it is Just as important for them to be high-hat and snobbish as it is for their brothers. which is. o! course, the truth. Also, it is equally disastrous in both cases, for there is no other one thing on earth that so thoroughly handicaps a youngster of either sex as snobbery in a. dcmoc atic country where everybody thinks he is not only as good as anybody else but a little better, and where ths crowning insult that you can ofler any one is to pat- ronize mm. H/hat the Fashionable Are Wearing Illustrated Dressmfiaking Lesson Furnished With Lvery Pattern belle Worthington fashioned of cotton voile the (popular daytime fabric with the chic Parisienne , By Anne ity. The slenderness through the hips - emphasizes the slight blousing of the l bodice, A becoming cascading paboti line with ornamental buckles. ‘ This attractive dress is designed‘. in sizes l6,‘ l8 years. 36. 38 and 40 and 42 inches bust. A dressmaking chart tells you how to make it. It shows in Pictures exactly how the three piece straight flounce with fironti Edges overlapping is stitched to ihlped yolk and then stitched to separate slip .at waistline for which is included) bloused eflect. (pattcrnI to create 1 printed georgette crepe, navy blue‘ item are attractive. i to fill in size of pattern. l; Pattern Department. The New F ‘ cents when ordered with a pattern. I 1 ‘No. 2742. Size. . . . i i "nuns"... . . . . . . . . "H..."- Name .....| l I l l scour-on: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. The soft prettiness of the rippling street Address . wdthered flounce of wrap-around . “skirt will immediately appeal to soph- ...-.......-...--.....----. - . . . . . “.- City State that has been found moulding in an To find something new that is old, y the latest. the very latest, among the oldest antiques. Collectors who don't jump into fringes right away 1 . find something fresh ‘or a market iFringes are not an original idea with that has gone stale on copies of thc , Old Masters, beds of queens, pew-l ‘ fer-pots of emperors, Egyptian‘, _ lthat hasnt yct been oversold. Any- monumenis, door-knobs. and all the lone Wm‘ mm H m I d . a l rnge, or a raye iilurniture fakeries. These have been “rm m worn too threadbare for any seli- ‘ 8e at ‘mce “up” 8pm"! mrse‘ respecting person starting in with Ill. u‘ har, pile to rummage in the antiques to see any social prestige in possessing them. Yet one must u"! "HM-hills in the apartment 1 lliuivui. _ luiivnis iiiiiiiii I BiiiEFiiEii the activity of Europe awaited. The biggest professionaicol- lectors are understood to have their agents out hunting fringes for oil millionaires from Texas. They have been twins to pry an old lady in the "film townships away from hei- friars: but she is holding on to it for more money tum m” u", u" ‘l’ u“'"“" i’! “l! fflflle craae. Hers l" ' Fmllhlly antique trims. 1r, h“ "mm i!" “was mu- We "m!" Mn w» equal ou- aida of m. Rockies. s _ I f mo! arm: oavanoisn ‘ro wso mi. nan! aurmou (Special u The Guardian) IDNDON. July ll-The orig";- ment of the prettiest debutante of the 102'! season in London has just been announced. lbs is Lady Anne Uflllldllh. N. ths youngest daught- er of the Duke and Duchess of Dev- onahire, who spent ilvo happy years in Ottawa whils her father was gov- crnorgmcrai. lboilinmarryur. l-ienry Runloka. only son of Major su- Phliip Ilimloke. Oromu-ln-wait- '- -- "- Rivw. and the distinguish- - i I I 7 Q A Momrng Smile Etzquette ' By Roberta Leo 1i SMILE on TWO ,__. .____, going to a convention in a Flori icitv. They had argued about t irespectve size and virtues of their states all during the trip, tion city, their bedswere adjoining. i a Californian were! Q‘. Is it correct to talk to neighbors d,‘ at the table Whether you have been he introduced or not? A. Yes. All those who nieot in a , friend's house are supposed to be in- ‘troduced, regardless of the mere ‘l formality. A Floridan and When they arrived at the conven- The Floridan obtained a large turtle and placed it in his neighbor's bed. because f't. 1 o l s supp eness and practical 4 when the Caluomiaxfs ‘out touched‘ it he leaped out of bed shouting. “What in the world is that?" Q. How long should one stay when culling on a hostesses "at home" , day? A. From thirty minutes to an "111 i8 Caught at shoulder and waist- s fully again. yawned and said: Printed crepe de chine in vivid red Maurice Lane-Nor 511d white. purple asicr silk crepe, Mail. ‘aevrsetie. Isiah 1n green and white tee," tones yellow and white printed sheer: makes me nervous. linen; shell-pink batiste and printed walk to fiimlty in orchid and white dot pat- . there?" l Pattern price l5 cents. Be surelwlfe. Address know I slian't ash-‘ from this tee. Oh. bother! It's fall-i ion Magazine is l5 cents, but only 101 en of‘! now!" “Only one of our Florida bcdbug aid the Florida man. iaconically- ‘l The Californian squinted at it care- s»; hour. ' l Q. What does ‘a la carte" mean? A. It means, according to the “Little son-of-a-gun. ain't he?" ‘mam?- Does My Wife Play Golf? "My wife tees the ball up," writes gott in The Daily Household Hints By mum Leo | GILT FRAMES "1 do hate starting from the first 11 the gilt frames, chandeliers, says my wile. "It alivnyf and such articles, are rubbed oc- Cflllldffi We . casionaly with a soft cloth dampened d and b98111‘: in onion water. flies will not soil ltiiem. the secon "Well. I can't help it." sflyfi my "It does make me nervous. _I hit ‘it. I nevcr do BROTHS Use the water in which green vege- tables are cooked for broths for in- My wife tees her ball up. ‘(ll\’lf.ll1i‘ilil_ Beat up an egg in it for Personally." says my wife, “I 1 bouillon. ThLs gives the body 5B1! i105- don‘t believe I'm holding my ciubmssium, and nourishment, properly‘. \‘Vhich hand ought t0 be at the top-—the left or the right?" “It feels very uncomfortable this way," says my wife. "I think I'd A tablespoonful of ammonia added efier try a practice swing first." ‘jto the dish water will take the place "Well" says my wife. "Was itioi soflpas ECW111501 right? It wasn't too stifif was t’). You're positive? DISH WATER ‘talk?’ Then I'll try itlofl again! I do wish you wouldn't However, to advise girls to cultivate snobbery is a ivvrk of supcrerrogaton. 1t is gliding the lily and painting the rose. for most women are born snobs at heart and they take lust as naturally to high- , llatting as a duck does to water. Look around you in any city and you will ' see that the most exclusive matron and the one who is moat determined to keep all climbers out of the sacred inner circle of society is a lady who has just Jimmied her way in with a golden crowbar. 1T0 princess of the blood royal lays such stress on blood as the yoman who couldn't have told you the name of her grandfather until she hired a genealogist m manufacture her a. a family tree. No mere duchess can condesccnd to you as does the wife o! a successful bootlegger. When a couple prosper and rise in ths world it is the wife. not the hus- band. who insists on leaving the old neighborhood and going to live where they will get to know people who don't want to know then-i and who lend! the children oil to fashionable schools and forgets the vary names of ths old neighbors and friends who helped them nurse their sick and laid out their dead and split their last $5 with them when the rent was overdue and there was no money to pay it. ' You often hear a self-made man brag o! his humble beginning and tell worked his way up, but you never hear a woman admit thlt Ihl is 0 I011- made woman and boast of how she used to wash and scrub and pinch pen- nies. The most she will ever concede is that aha was an impoverlshtd aris- tocrat who had been robbed oi her fortune by nefarious villains. I-Icncc, it seems gratuitous advice to urge girls to be snobs, and, as a matter of fact, snobbery has been women's bans and is the one thing that has done more than anything else to prevent their progress, because it has filled ziie entire sex with the idea that they are too good to do plain, honest work and that if they work at all it must be at some higbfsluiin‘ employment that has a romantic or literary or artistic halo about it. It is what makes a million girls aspire to be movie actresses or dancers or poets to one who is willing to be a good cook. ' It is only in the last few years that women have divested themselves of their snobbery enough to be willing to admit that they work for money cid to take a. pride in their Jobs. Up to then ths boarding housekeeper took a few paying guests for company; the steriographer went into an oflics because she was so bored with society and tired of dragging around to‘ Iflwport and Palm Beach. and the salesglrls only reason for standing behind a countlr was because it gave her such an opportunity to study human nature. to go to market and buy good food and see it properly cooked. And the atone’- ofiice insteadof turning out efficient work. stockings at $150 a pair instead of $0.00 of being ragged and half-starved and of the miserable jobs ~by which he- And the boarding-housekeeper fal iled becaues she felt herself too grand fgrapher failed bectause her employer wanfed some one who knows how to spell to write his letters instead of some one who aflectad to believe that she was attending a. pink tea and that her mission was to ornament the And the aaleswoman failed because customers wouldn't stand for a languid grand lady who condasoendod to wait upon them and who smiled supercillousiy at themwhen they wanted Milady Beautiful Filfili BEAU‘?! QUESTION! ANlWlII-ID Wand Uoiffure; Clothes: Measurements DEAR M158 LEEDS-m.) X nave dark- almost black hair with a little natural curl in it. How can I comb it? I am almost l0 years old. ii feat 0 inches tall. and weigh 150 pounds. My measurements are; bust 85; waist. 28; hips, 40', calf. 14%; ankles. i0; shoe. bis-D. I have blue eyes and a fairly smallface. (2) What colors an becomiu: to me? Is it in c9011. taste to wear hat, dress, coat and‘ stacking! of the lain: color? <3) My; fingernails are flat. How can I trim them to make a nice appearance? AURARA V. M. Answer-fl) You mght try‘ a fin- gar-waved colffure with a center part. Avoid bangs and waves that come too far forward around your face. B! they will maks your face seem too‘ gmall In proportion’ to your body- You are twenty pounds above the aversge weight for your age and height. Your overweight seems to be from your hips down. Your shoe size is small for a girl of your height and weight. (2) You forgot to describe your skia tints, which are important in choosing becoming colors. If your complexion is medium you may wear flesh. dull rose. peach, dull orchid. pink-violet, warm taupe, blue-greens, dark. medium and bright shades of i blue, dull yellow. the sun-tan shades,‘ black with light trimming. red with‘ a. bluish tinge as trimming. A cos-l, tume planned in n. single color is ei-i fective, but it is smarter to use two or more colors, usually a neutral shade (like sand. beige or fig) with the accessories in bright color. Ssv- sral tones of the same color are good also. (3) Use a long steel filo and shape ths corners of the nails in a grace- ful oval. Gently massage the tips of your flags to make them more pointed. LOIS LEEDS T. ublcsoms Pimples Dear Miss Ieeds-(li I am 14 years old and have been using face powder fm three or four years. Since my blackheads and pimples became regularly. How can I clear my skin? (2) I weigh 110 pounds and my meas- HA merits are: bust, 32; hips, 33; waist. I6: thigh, 20; calf, 13%; ankle. . your skin really clean. so bad I have stopped using powder ‘ E IQIIRJ S _y -EZ w‘! lg! IAIC: IOOII B Bwrln . Limiudmopc. B . s .Pa .. t." was. wow...“ “We and brittle, and then it becomes quip oily. What can I do for it? (0 What is the henna rinse and what is it used for? Answer-ii) No wonder you have skin troubles. my dear, since you started using make-up so early! Give it up entirely now and try to get The black- heads are dirt mixed with the natural oily secretions in ths pores; when they are not thoroughly cleanmg they become infected and form the pus-filled pimples that you norm, Plmples also coma from wrong diet and. constipation. You must keep your body clean both inside and out. Take a warm. cleansing bath every night and wash your face with plenty‘ of warm wager and soap. Rinse your face and bathe it in hot borlc acid solution made of one heaping teaspoonful of boric scld in a pint of boiling water. Let it cool a bit before using. Alter the hot application, press out the black. heads, prick the ripe pimples with a sterilized needle and pres; out m; pus. Bathe again in fresh boric acid solution. When it has dried pat on a lotion made of equal parts of mu); of sulphur, water and witch-haul, 11 there ls much irritation apply g hm. coated oxide of zinc ointment. (2) You forgot to stats your height. If you are from 6 feet 4 to 5 feet 7 your weight and meausrements ars 800d. i3) P0551515’ you are not using the risht shampoo methods. Uss sli- qilid pure castile soap and lather and rinse your hair three or four seps- raie times before the final rinse. Massage the scalp vigorously as you work up ths soap later. Massage your scalp for ten minutes a day and brush your hair well. (i) This rinse is used to give. s reddish tinge to auburn or chestnut hair. It is made of pure Egyptian henna, which can be bought at l drug store. LLOIB L&8 Tomorrow-Keeping Pit Efforts m revive old-fashioned dances in London this season have failed. 0%. Ara these good? (l) For a few days after I wash iny hair it is dry in fringes as the last resort to find an antique hair upholstery. is recommended to conceal it in a safety vault. The of- fer that will be made when New York is down with the fringe fever can be <‘ like that." "Just look at my ball," says my ‘wife, "and tcll me if you don't think ‘I've propped it too high. Well, I'm _ it's too high. I'm going to pat it “m-i“ Bu‘ "ha" Win89‘! The“ i" ‘ down a little. There! It's fallen of‘! i . sure l i again! What a nuisancei". My wife tees her ball up. all shaking now. this Wflilmn- It is merely reporting ‘do much better from the second ice. l "Well. I think it's very selfish oi you," says my wife. "You know smply loathe being watched. what I'm doing. Oh, not on the are looking out of the window. bedroom window‘! didn't and it rains the curtains w ‘I do wish you'd let me start at will find tile market against them. the geqgnd gee," sgyg my vcife, “I'm I know I shouldl makes me so nervous I don't know veg- on the tee again. andah, perhaps. Still, I'm sure they! "And that reminds me." says m wife. "Did you remember to shut the V Because i! you ‘ My wife tccs her ball up. "llud I better aim at the flag," says my wife, "or shall I try and hit it to the left? I see. I'll ‘lNow isn't that too aggravating for wordsl A man's just come out of Women have only begun to succeed in business since they have learned to scrap their snobbery and to be honest about why they work and ‘proud that they have enough intelligence and grit to hold down a pob inltaad of being ashamed of it. It is not the g commissions fatten their pay envelope. Miss Smith or Miss Jones that customers ask for. to make her own living no advice could be more fatal than to tell her to bl the club house?" i “Well. I don't care how long he stands ilicrc staring," says my wife. "I'm not going to do a thing until liu's».----Oh, he's gone nowi" Without warning, my wife makes 1iim intricate, dangerous movement niwitn hcr club. When she has finish- ed I pick up her ball and place it "I knew it was only a. waste of time starting from this tee," says y says my wife. "It makes me so ner- ous, I always miss it." Then she picks her ball up and hurries quickly away to'tho second tee. By the time we get there we ill a snob. Noi- will any girl ever reach the i Disdain was a hit, according to old- ents’ time. but she would be a. flop with the modem youth. Ks isn't going to d his time and his money taking out a. girl who acts as if she was a mil- SDQII seat play was o has but that one date. makes her pretend that she is only simple ways of life. and say: "Oh- this is a cheap little lionaireas and considered him a cheap skate. who, when a. boy takes her to the movies. discourses about how nae a 07-i- r who, when a boy takes her out in his flivver. turns up N! noseabout it and talks about ths Rolls Royce that It is good-night for her when may port. iii And many a girl does herself out Girls who make Mexico city now has four broad- casting stations. irls who high-hat their customers whole It is the friendly, human. interested Bototbelinwhohu Hy altar by high~hatting men. Dear Lady fashioned novels in our great-grandpa- The girl who tries this and some other boy has IVE of a good husband by the snobbery that sdtnriobu andiusurya-ndloolnatbl their own clothes at night will mile importation that I [Qt for U140." ill French be ruined." "Oh, all right," says my wife. "Only it Just occurred to me, that's all. I didn't want you to have to run back after we had started." "I! you're going to be disagree- able," says my wife. "I'm not going in play. It's quite bad enough with- out you being cross. Oh. yes. you are. You're iust as irritable as you can be.” "You wouldn't behave like this i! it were Dolly Matthews," says my wife. "If she had wanted to start at "N “WM m M's have sud-u lmikl- Wen. up you would. You'd hlV0-—Qll. bother itl It's dropped are late for luncheon. plays golf, is she Justified in sayiri "Yes"? ‘Picnic Lunches tm-iv m liliil Ii 1.. ..|.. o...“ ed hslmsman of the King's yacht ' “Iiitsnllil? The (I00!!! 1100b ll on the Stock llchlnle. Tip nuns or bar sister Wll 1153M with fill Pllnfl 01 Wlifl. ‘ Bolivia has a boom in automobiles. .___._._.._..__._ Band's liaison for cough l Celli- Now, what I want to know is this: When people ask my wife if she or "I picked this hat up at s. bargain. It only cut 000." their inability io cook and say that nothing on to go into a kitchen. and ths poor young man who the ladder of success figures out th snobbish lady with chiffon lingerie, and so he decides that she isn't ths kind of wifa ha wank. and iMMs on. poor one. that is equally b in this land of opportunity the orrow, and so the man of today ths millionaire of torn tuna aha is middle-aged. money very often doesn't even have that by tho Bdtskingitallinalllthinktliat snobs is misleading. Far batinrio isli them to be simple cm to themselves ind in cultivats hum!!!” 0f spirit lflltflfi 0f illflilifl- 001011191 \ ‘l%r7hsCmfi Or they boast of earth would aver induce tbm is lust balinninl to climb at his entire sail?! wouldn't provide tbll to say nothing o! caviar and champagne. As for advising a. girl to pick out a rich man for a husband lashed of‘; ad oounsod, oven from a financial standpoint, foe wheel of fortune turns so rapidly that the nab man of today is very likely who the poor man of tomorrow and ths pod giriwhoinaririoafsr cardamom-scrimma- lllfeatand sh Nanci lflslidoanesurgeiisuse. masiogpaacscfaiiad. Ne ya Supareiss 75c. IAIADDIIIIIIG' Iosaiseuaifiirrabis . “ivflwbaodoriau uziaislrylnfiimwmiqaiq“ gicnic Service and Assured Comfort The bnltbfid method of dealing witb , an intimate feminine problem ‘ Waco mu know the hygienic aqviea Santa; N . iii-elscvstharmaysoeasily oliowtryingdays. Deo- Kvu; ;‘ mrlrwww" .1. I ‘i722 Whfl‘b‘\l!y.l£. Jan say Iona: sate: Res"! I a: also Directions in "winder- IIADIINQNADA QKOT€ X‘ “M! New"?