4 so. ~ ' "? -a»fr-‘ “‘~.1-}7!,!r~.n;_='~ -,.._.; ~33 .4 rm s/éuia ‘u! v YOUR BEAUTY IN SUMMER Acquiring a Coat of Tan “How may I enquire a coat'of tanl", As s. beauty expert I have always? found this beauty qumtion prominent among my readers‘ early summer. ceautty problems. This year the query is more widespread than ever, for: no one is in the mode at all unless‘ she wears a complexion of sun tan; hue. whether it is acquired naturaiiyt or by the use oi‘ cosmetics. ' This business of acquiring a 1183-: ural coat of heavy tan is one ln-i deed which requires skill and finesse» For who hasn't worked for a beauti-g ful healthy tan and been rewarded| I- with nothing but a painful bdrn or‘ an unsightly redness, with constant :eellng and scaling of the skin? lhere is no doubt that the sun's rays are wonderfully beneficial, but, Rome was not built in one day andi neither can a good coat of tan be acquired in that length of time. Those who are too eager to hasten the process will be sure to acquire! burns, Naturally, after the promo-i, tion given it during the winterl months, the skin Ls somewhat deli- caic and so, rather than subject] oneself to hours of baking in the gunl it is far wiser to begin the proc-i ear gradually. Spend but a few. minutes in the sun each day and; then as the skin acquires a delicate coat of tan increase the length of time. Within a comparatively short period you may spend hours on the‘ beach acquiring that coveted coat oi; tan and along with it you will bet benefited in ileum. i Before taking a sun bath, especially those first ones when the skin is very sensitive, the face, neck, arms and shoulders shouldtbe protectted by a_ good cream and powder. This will not hinder the benefit derived from the sun, but it will do much toward preventing painful sunburn. Afttr it has been exposed, the skin should be cleansed with oil and asoothing skin lotion applied. This will pre- vent s. harsh, dry skin, which is not only uncomfortable but also most unsightly. The application of any oily cream I to the skin before exposure to the , sun will aid greatly in preventing} sunburn and will also help in de- veloping that beautiful, glossy tan? which is the desire of every girl and‘ woman during ths season oi lun- tan. Many of the girls who winter-ed at Palm Beach will tell how they even carried sticks of cocoa. butterl with them on the beach and appliedi this to arms and legs frequently dur-' lng the process of taking a sun batik; They were rewarded with a wonder-i fully healthy coat of tan. but with! askin as soft. and lovely as one wvbich had nover been exposed to the d H!‘ 0i Old B01. ' . 3'“! "in"? la cnioyi such sum- m" 59°"! ll golf 0r be is. she is . will!!! more comic m..- if her eyas and face ara shaded. A sunshade hat. which u lust in mm “q wall vontilaicd is a good gun‘ m Wlr- A heavy. class-sitting tat u . not "only too warm 'to be colqrtnhlg air and sunshine. _Iuringtliesimbathrubi.baakinwitliooocaliattaa- “l” able sun lamps and sun machines of various kinds have proved marvel- ous in their benefits, These should. be used however, under medical di- rection, for again it may be ompha- ' sized that it is very easy to overdo a good thing. As sun machines will ai- so burn and toughen the skin they, too, must be used in moderation and proper precaution taken to prevent any painful results. It is well that a. coat of tan is considered quite the thing for this season, for surely there is no better way for mlady to build up her health than by taking advantage of the health-giving rays of the sun. Sound health is the surest foundation on which to build beauty. If the akin should become burned and red in spite of precautions. apply a. little lime water and almond oil, This will soothe the irritated skin and though one may learn through bit- ter experience that it is best to “make haste slowly" in acquiring tan. this soothing lotion will giva courage to go on with the good work of capturng some of the sun's rays for one's own benefit. LIGHT COMPLEXIONS The following will be found an ad- mirable cooling application for the skin sitter returning from an outing in the sun: Ten drops simple tinc- ture-of benzoin; one ounce Cologne water;_two ounces milk of almonds; eight ounces of rosewater. Shake well. Apply with a clean piece of ab- sorbent cotwn and allow it to dry on the skin. One of the great annoyances oi having a light complexion is that. if I you are fond of outdoor sports you ‘are sure to get a painful sunburn. EOne or two good doses of sunburn a will spoil half the pleasure of a sum- ‘ mer less some special precautions are taken. . ‘ To prevent a paniful case of sun- lburn the skin should be protected I and the face shaded as much as pos- Isible by a broad-brimmed hat or a sunshade, It is a good plan to rub some lanolin, oil, cream or cocoa but- ter into the skin and dust the pow- der before gouig out in the hot sun. Sunburn varies greatly from more redness with some degree of smart- ing. to the formation of severe blis- ters. In severer forms tho face be- comes very red. painful and perhaps swollen. There is an unpleasant itcn- lng and tingling. and a few days after it has been burned the __skin peels off, sometimes several times. Many persons are so sensitive to this affliction that they are obliged to forago swimming. fisldng, boating. golfing. tennis and every other form of outdoor racreaton which would take them out into this hot sun, Peo- ple who have dark or olive akin can hardly understand what painful sun- burn moans This typo of akin ba- comes tanned to a deeper colorina. which acts as a protective from the heat of the sun the longer they are exposed to its rays. The lattor m» of akin look! hvllthy and ouidooriah and ia eagerly willht altar during the summer lea.- but also prevents the hair. and scalp “h” H" from deriving benefit from the fresh aux‘; lgngualxnm, w blwmadti. husband cracked. 1111a ‘ life trying to make i:*- I i Dorothy Letter Box Shall a Girl Marry for Love or Financial Security? -— How to Treat the Boys-To Be Happy, Must a Wife Be Younger Than Husband ? Doar Miss Dix-I am a girl earning my own iivins- I have a. hard time making both ends meet. but I feel that I could apcnd the balance of my the ends meet if I could only have the man I love, but my fathermnd mother insist that I should marry a rich man and let suth things as love and companion- ship go by. I have two suitors. one with an assured future who can givo me anything I ask. Tho other mm 1,5 the one I love. Ho mikes an excellent aaiary for a Young man, but life will be forever aim living within the limits of a. salary. . You may think it foolish for me to let my fam- ily influence me. but they nig ma from morning until night, and if I defy them and marry the man I love ind something terrible should happen their "I told - ' YOiI so" would be a bitter pill to swallow. I realize that position and safety mean something, but does it outweigh love? C. K. Answer: No. No. A thousand times no. Ilove is the greatest thing in the world. It is the ONLY thing that should influence you in selecting your mate, and when it is a choice between position and safety and love, choose love every time. If you marry a man you do not love, and especially if you marry one man while you lova another, nothing that your husband can give you, even though he was as rich as Henry Ford, would give you a. moment's pleasure, because money would not buy the one thing your heart craved. Suppose he could give you a palace to live in. It would be no home because there was no love in it. Suppose he took you to travel in far places. You could not go fs.r enough away to leave your memory of another man's kisses. Suppose he lavished jewels and fine clothes upon you. How little you could care for them if they did not make you_ beautiful for the eyes of the man you loved. Suppose your husband bestowed tenderness and caresses upon you. You would only turn in repulsion from them. But if you marry the man you love you can make happiness out of nothing. The simplest meal is a banquet if it is eaten by kissing lips. The humblest home becomes a. paradise if it is inhabited by lovers. They need no other society, no other amusement if they can Just be together. and living o a limited income and counting the ponies is not a hardship, it is a gay ad- venture. t The material things you can always get. rfouses and clothes and auto- mobiles will alwaya be for sale over the counter, and five. ten, twenty years from now you can buy them if you have the price. but love belongs to youth. and if you pass it by now it is gone from you forever. ‘EUXQFITN ’ ._ -.Social and Personal -:- Fashions -‘:- Literaturef ofIO screen stars use it to keep their skin soft and smooth .-@OQ~ Jeanette Lofi, churning Pathé star, says: "No matter what climate my pictures take me to. or how hard the water, I have found that Luz Toilet Soap keeps my skin caviably " ‘f "I am utterly enthusiastic about Lu: Toilet Soap," aaya pretty Mary Nolan, Universal atar. “Even the most expensive French aoapa have not kept my akin a0 beautifully smooth." EALLY eiiciuisite-ekin-doce win" hearts-Hollywood knows ho surely it wins them! . i‘ “If a girl wants popularity she must have a lovely smooth skin," says William K. Howard, Pathé director. “Without rare beauty of skin a screen star can never hope to ' win her public, no matteijwlsatelse _ she may have.” " - Nine out of tan screen stars use L; Toilet Soap. You have only to look at ‘Jeannette Lori's skin, or Mary Nolan's, or Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto. ' < "~11 Nancy Carroll's, to see bow exquisite this delicately fragrant white soap keeps the skin. Small wonder that every one of the great film studios has made Lux Toilet Soap the officlal soap in all dressing rooms! You'll love it: yourself —- its generous lather is so caressing, and leaves your akin so velvety. Use it in your bath. too-and for the shampoo, as the screen stars do. _ Luxury such ll IIIQIQI- < l. t 90.. you have found only in French _ _ _ aoapa at 50c and $1.00 Ma cake-now m9 “<0. ._..__; ancy Carroll, Paramount -—- 10¢ A little money is necessary to finance marriage and make a ‘lore of it. Enough to provide a decent shelter and simple food and clothes. but that is all that any young couple needs to marry on. l would not advise agirl to marry a man who did not have a good 10b and who had not. shown that he had energy and industry and the ability to get along, not only because 8 man should be able to provide for his family but because no woman can" res- pect her husband if he is a lazy loafer or Just shiftless and incompetent. Nor do I like to advise a girl to defy her parents and marry the man of her choice instead of the husband they have picked out for her, but when they oppose her marrying a fine young man who has alrcady proved his abil- ity to make a living and urge her to marry a man Just because he is rich. they are clearly in the wrong and she should not be the victim of their cupidity. There is something very pathetic, as well as cruel, in the way fathers and mothers often badger girls into giving up the men they love in order to marry men who are better off. The parents are poor. They havo had a hard life of struggle and self-denial. Their own romance has been dead so long that not a memory of it survives ,and so they think they are doing their daughter a kindness when they try to make her marry a man who can give her ease and comfort. Love, they- argue, lasts but for a. little while any- way. Romance soon wears out, ‘but comfort and luxury are things that endure. But in this they are often mistaken. Time and again we have all seen some pretty. fresh, young girl nagged by her parents into giving up her p001‘ young lover and handed over to some rich man twice her age, and then we have seen the rich man lose his money and the poor young man go on fortune. - So parents’ pick of a. husband is not always a wise one, even from the financial point of view. and in this country of opportunity a girl is safe in gambling her life on the future of the fine, clean, young chap she loves and who loves her. even if his salary isn't much more than a shoestring. You. not your parents, have‘ to live with the man you marry. 0- K- 5° pick out your own‘ husband and marry him and be haPPY. even if you do have to spend a few years trying to make the ends meet. DOROTHY DIX. Dear Dorothy Dix-When I am with some fellows and I pet and neck with them they call ma a. flop and don't date ma again. Then I think maybe boys like girls who do not pet and neck. So the next time I go out with a fellow I won't pet and neck, and they call me a flop, too. Now, Just how should I act? I am crazy about a fellow and I want. him to like mo real wall, but I am afraid to go out with him because I don't know what in d0- I feel that if I kiss him he will think that I kiss all the boys, but if I don't kiss him he will think I am a fiat tira and probably I will never sea him again. What shall 1 do? - FLAP?"- Answer: You will have to vary your technique and change it to suit tho individual boy. Not every fish rises to the same sort of bait, you know, and if you da- sira to be a successful fisher of man you will have to find out what particular As people are beginning to realist u“, m.“ m. 5°”. ma“ u." m‘ more and more the health-giving “In “om "my" w “Wm it h“ power of the suns rays, means of w "n. ‘fern-git lubricated. This is an ancient custom Tim‘. Dick and Harry. On the 800K811!‘ 8118C IIII (f0!!! "I "‘!" ‘QUE? Childgenfiy . éizfimzi. MSTORIA AIAIYIIIIIIY .*:'.".'...%'u.'.i..°°$..°'d artificial aourcaa have also become vary popu- . lar. When real sunshine la not avail- uaadby indiumilinduaandpaopla wlsoapondagntodaaioftiiaaouh of-doos-aintbabotavin.’ " ‘rhapraaont vogue of suntan maka-upiaulad toonablotbcaawho donotdsairctoupcaathcakinof thafaemnoohanaaandlaptctba hot aimjccraato and iliuaionoina- turaltan. summer complexion with the summer sportaandoutfita. Inthadetmlyoflnadoltinml- land, woolen votcta outnumber the D08 h] H.000. i tidbit each craves. Evidently thara are a largo number of boys of affectionate natures who libs cuddly girls who are whoiaaala kissors and whose lips are free to every other hand, there are fastidious men who an disgusted by the methods of tha patina and the aackm and who prefer diamond and named gins. » “"“*WMWWWQMI:=MI1.mna-ovntaimiambar- lfiWwiwflfleivllwii-tlehwtao ia-aboiandwrappedintia- mw-bortbatyoaminlmflaitvlbw- wiiieiiaaoamaaprafaraiaa mamroftoata. Itstyfllnovar hlviiflllflln assassination-mas. ‘onus Inlilflollflfldwa. Andaottgoaa. Andsotnaouiytipfoanlihyou mqnasdadaptymiriinctoiiim. , . / flNllIIU-oullinathaamabas-ahitwitbadsammydou, qmgtqmmgmquuunnnymmgbaadinuobtmmdabmtwaatbaendanamaoma toalirl. lomameaiihaebattarboosa. an. mauiibaairlawboarauit-ubl- loidsomamaairia. otnszmusioataotliaullntaasiaaiilaabtam ‘aw-abbreviation Iutdctvtyoutbioaboyawouidsahtt. you more if you didn't neck and pet but were Just a nice. sweet, ladyliko girl? DOROTHY DIX. O O I I Dear Miss Dlx-What chance for a happy married life should a woman in her 30s expect if she married a. man eight years har Junior?‘ Would a. woman so many years older be able to give the man the companionship he would need for proper development? 'I‘he woman seems younger physically than her age and the man older mentally than his or. rather. he is of a vary serious tum oi mind. A READER. O I Answer: No reason in the world why such a couple should not marry. The dif- ference in calendar age is no bar to their union in this one because the woman is young for her age and the man old for his. Besides, an older woman is often a far more stimulating and. helpful companion to a man than n younger one. ‘ When we are very young age countsfona. great deal, but when we at! older the amounts to very little. A boy of 19 or 20. for instance. should not marry a woman eight years older than himself because he is unformcd and doe snot know what he wants in a wife, but a man of 2B is mature, his taatcl are settled and he is safe in marrying a. woman eight years older than him- self if he so desires. DOROTHY DIX. most to lack of physical fitness is constipation. Fortunately the remedy for itla notfutosoaklalaocon- dltion is- exercise nim- in its recalls than in the treatment of this com- mon disorder. Of oourso there are cases in which other remedies are preferable, but the average case will respond quickly to exercise. Why docs oxorcisc help so rna- terialiy_ in the cure of one of beauty! worst enemies? First. because it stimulates the circulation, Second, because it increases the peristaltic action of the intestines. ‘thirdly, it causes deeper breathing. thus causing the diaphragm to massage the diges- tive organs. Fourthly, exercise stim- ulates the flow of secretions of pan- creas. liver and intestines. Two ad- ditional reasons why one should ra- aort to exercise rather than the use of catharticsqara because strengthens the muscular tons and Milady Beautiful llylnialaafl KEEPING FIT Every one these days seems to be looking _for short cuts and quick results. Girls write to me asking tion by stimulation of the nerves. I-lere are some special exercises for those whose beauty problems grow out of constipation‘. They are given in detail with severalothers in Lil- lian Drew's useful book on “Individ- ual Gymnastics." First. Lie on your back. Clasp hands on abdomen. Draw up the right leg to tho chest, causing pres- sure on the abdomen. Straighten right log and draw up loft. Repeat alternately tan times. Second. Sit on a chair with feet on a footstool that is placed about eighteen inches in front of the chair. Clasp hands over abdomen and bend forward as far as you can, making pressure on abdomen. Third. Sit erect on chair, hands on hips. Twist the trunk to the right, than to the loft. Band alternately from right to loft. utocuta a circling movement with the trunk. Tomorrow — Beauty Questions Answered. A Morning/Smile LETTING IT OUT "Did the postman leave any lot- tcra, Mary?" the mistress asked on returning from a visit, "Nothing but a postcard. mahm." "Whom is it from, Mary?" "And do you think I'd read it, mflam?" asked the girl with an in- Juréd air. “Perhaps not. But any one who sands me a message on a postcard ia either stupid or importinent. "You'll excuse m,a malam," ra- turncd the girl loftily, "but that's a nice way to be talking about your 2 how they make their shorn fresscs beau“ ‘Y.'"""°»"" u“ mum”! “- Household Hints minimal.» U!!! mother l " Plants To get the best out of plants the! should be cultivated frequently. Kl! an old fork near the plants and ill it to loosen the earth. This givtl tin roots a. chance to force their Ill through the earth. and alsofurliislil air. Skirt. Bands When skirt bands stretch ans nil over at the top, sew a. piece of 010' tic, one half inch in width. alonsi-N top. Odois Anything with an odor should ll placed at tho top of the icebox. ‘N! is because odbrs have a fondant!“ rise. and if such dishes are placed t! the lower shelves the odor is lllbb" permeate the other foods. Etiquette i ii Q. When attending a church Id‘ ding is it. courteous to leave W church before the members of W immediate families leave? A. Never. The members 0! '3 families should be allowed i0 l" first. Q. Is it ever proper to mail! l social call in tho mornins? A. In the city, only a l-erv 11”‘ mate friend has this privile8°~ Q. Should tho dinner tab" h‘ square or, round? A. Either is correct. ' grow out in a few weeks. Others want to know how to gain or lose‘ weight immediately and how to, develop or reduce certain parts of the‘ body by a particular data. Btili oth- ora expect a magic remedy for clear- ing up in a few days shin troublcsl that have been developing for years. The main reason why beauty prob- iama oftentimes respond slowly to W; / obvious cause (such as mistaken: all“!!! alumina methods or wrong choice of a modelling. food 0t’ sedentary hlbltl) theta is ' often an underlying factor. namely. a adnarai lack of phylloll fltnfls. ‘Die aain and hair may be raeaiving the 0890., but if thd E v diriafib Amowrootlhcaita, railed. $.".’2‘52.'.."'.i."°.'.‘.°1?;.'3°°2..“2.°."J22 @--i-»~-l=»»=-~~-»~ ‘ ‘ ‘ttla iaasnmnodadby cause. Besides their mom or lass '“'l' “F53 uaaidaaibasyfaale-cmaad //-//,, I. / / 22. In lb m» or on lb Qbonl. shiny a5. for Chalk‘: llscall: — lb: Stanley! of Quality than l I53.