' JULY 21.11315 THE CHARLUTTFZFOWN GUARDIAN PAGPISEVENY . °°m""' 11"“ "m" WI m» of beauty NEW SUMJWERTHVLE OOIFFUREB Paris is being very generous this reason. She says that mllady may wear her hair either bobbed m- long and be quite in the mode. But oer- tiiin things milady must observe; whatever the length of her hali- it must be arranged in a. truly feminine coiffure. The most chic coiffures of the day have the hair well all’ the face and off the neck with a tendency toward bei rig piled on the head. With these few suggestions and knowing that any length of hair l_-, allowable. milady is ready to study new coif- fures in the hope of finding one ex- actly suited to herself. The firstystep in the selection of a new coiffure is the study of ones fea- tures. for in hairdressing. as in every- thing else in her beauty program. a woman must select something suited to her own type. For instance. be- e229 ‘Pi-l. slender Patricia. with her perfectly oval 186a looks lovely with her full bangs. it is no sign that rhubb’ little sally would eve; attempt this style and thus further accentuate her already round, fa: face. Adapting the Ooiffure As the ideal feminine face is a graceful oval. hair should be dressed in such a way as to make the face appear so. even though it may actu- 8111118111: it in a French twist or turn. ins it up in a flat bun at the back makes a. becoming coiffure for her. The Birl or woman with a high fore- head and round face will find the following way of dressing the hair be_ coming: Part the hair lust to one side of the center. studying the faee were- fully to see on which side the part 596315 '50 be mOSt bGCOming_ Draw the larger section of hair rather sharply from the forehead. giving it just the mere suggestion of a wave across tiie top of the head. but have it' waved deeply at the sideThe smaller section of hair recedes from the lop of the forehead. comes forward in a. wave above the eyebrow, recedes again. showing the temple and comes for. ward in a wave on the eheei; The ends are tucked under and» fastened with a wire clip behind the ears. The back hali- is twisted into a small coil on the back of the neck, Hg. l. The woman with rugged features. ‘large nose and prominent chin should avoid sleek. straight coiffures. For- itunateiy for her the distinctly fem- l'inine types of hairdressing are decide- |ly in the mode. for she will be most attractive with her hair arranged in wide. graceful waves and curls around her face. An attractive style for her ,would be to part the hair on one sidc, {wave it high in the center and draw it over the ears. Fig. 2. The coiffure which shows one or all!‘ be too round. too square. too broad (both ears is having a vogue now, and or too long, In designing a coiffure though this style is very smart. for one one must take into consideration the with a face which is oval or rather D-‘flportions of the face. the height of long. it. is not becoming to large. wide the forehead. length of the nose. shape i faces. Showing thi- eiirs makes the of the chin and the formation of the face seem fuller-hence it is especi- nerk and throat. A girl with a long. ally good for those whose faces are thin neck should not wear a. short long and thin. Fig. 3. bob or any kind of bob. for that mat- Comm-s for Growing Hair tcr. Her hair should be drawn down Hair that is neither long nor short liver her ears and coiled at the nape of is usually the hardest i0 arrange. but Elu- neck. The girl with a short, thick as thcre are so many heads of hair neck may wear a bob if it is molded which are just Ft that stage. many rather close to the sides of the head. lovely coiffures have been planned for if her hair is longshe will find that these. The sculpture curls are a boon Free premium for poker hands with Rosebud pl tobacco. There certainly should be e big increase in the sale of Rosebud mucking tobacco. aa the new! getaabout that genuine “ Westiu - house" electric toasters may be had frea in exchange for poker hands. The wife of n Imminent St. John merchant has iust. received one tbeao electric toasters. in exchange as a premium for siitcen com lete sets o! pokenbands. and quite natural y is teilin her friends all about it—-and these frien s. in turn. are suggesting to their husbands that. as lcng as they are srnnki ii a pipe. they may as well smoke Roach and save the poker hands for iheso valu- able prarmuma. Pipe smokers will find this suggestion a very happy one. for Roscb ud 1B ageiiuinecut plug with a full. rich flavour that is both mild arid very fragrant. Not. only is Rosebud a smoking tobacco oi cur-optionally hi h quality. but the quan- tit in each pac age makes it the biggest v ue on the market today. The large ten cent package contains one poker band, the larger fifteen cent package contains two po er hands. Write for special premium sliect m- Depziriment T.S., Post Office Box 1320. Montreal. Westinghouse Electric ‘Iimster For The Cook BREAD DATE PUDDING WITH JELLY SAUCE cubes or crumbs. 2 eggs. 3 table- spoons meltcd butter. one cup chop- ped dates. 1 teaspoon vanilla, salt. Heat milk. add bread. melted butter and beaten eggs. Stir up well. then add all other ingredients. Put into greased baking dish. and place in a pan of hot water. Bake in moderate oven until set. Serve with Jolly sauce by mixing one glass red Currant jelly with one-half cup boiling water and hot. to these in-between lengths 0f hall'- This type of curl k made like an 01F- dlnary round curl and then flattened and pinned down securely to resemble the curls on the old Greek and Holman statuesi Great latitude L; allowed i-i and then again they are seen on one side only. With the new veil! fr!‘ hali- being piled high (u Lhe head. very chic. Those who have kept the back hair > short while the sides and front are, growing out will find the following coiffure very lovely. Divide the front hair into three sections. Wave the W0 side sections and let the ends turn up in flat curls. Comb the top or middle‘ section over to the left, with a doe?‘ wave over the forehead. Curl all ends of hair and let them fall backward? pin them flat into sculpture curls, If there are short hairs at the beginning’ of the right-hand part. these may b? curled and spread out flat on that, One quart milk. 2 cups bread should wear, your daughter-in-law how she should manage her house and two tablespoons orange Juice. Serve l how hard it is to succeed? l islexion such as hcrs shouldn't wear green? . i Curr l the bungalow of WlliCh they are so proud, and which they are inching and the placing of. the groups G pinching to pay for, do you remark that it is flimsily built and the rooms s°meumes they are set a“ (we? the are too small. and there are no closets and that the plumbing is old-fash- head or at the back oi the head onlY~ i ioncd? You Know What Little Peculiarltics in Others Bore You to Death and Get on Your N erves, But D0 You Ever Consider Whether You Are Guilty of Just the Same Faults? Queries Dorothy Dix Dc you ever check up on yourself and see if you are guilty of any of friends‘! Are you. for instance.. a newspaper scatterer? Do you grab the morning paper before any one else has a chance to look at it and rend it limb from limb so that it would take a miracle-worker and a conjure: to ever get it back together again. and enable those who start to read about a. murder on the front page to find out the glory details that are related on Page 18? Have you the habit of reading aloud passages that interest you. no matter if you interrupt other people rho are absorbed intheir ovm books and conversa- ion? Are you a. living interrogation mark? Do you put every member of your done? Do you ask ivliere are you going? Why are you going? How long are you going to stay? Whom are you going to meet? every time you see any one put on his hat? . Do you inspect every letter" that the postman brings. and scan its post- mark and handwriting. and try to guess who it is from. and why he or she should be writing? Can any member of your family get a telephone call ‘ ivithout your having to be told all about it? Are you an adviser who is always on the job? Can any of your friends or familvmake a move without your telling them just how to do it? Do you tell your husband just what he should eat. your daughters what they bring up her children. your friends w hat doctor they should go to. what dentists and dressmakcrs they should patronize? ‘ Ave you a human ivet blanket? Do you feel it to be your sacred duty to throw cold water on every plan. and take all the starch out of it? If some one proposes an automobile trip do you always prophesy rain and punctures. or dust and a bloivout? If your husband wants to go into a. new business venture do you prophesy disaster and remind him of how many others have failed? If your children have ambitions do you discourage them by telling them Do you never eat lobster salad without won- dering if you will get ptomaine poisoning. or lemon pie without dlscoursing upon acute indigestion? Dc you take the edge off every pleasure by count- mg he cost before you have had the fun? Do you make a habit of puncturing everybodys little red balloon? When Mary shows you her new dress do you finger the material and tell her it isn‘t. all silk. and that slie has been cheated. and that any one with a com- When a young couple show you Do you look at a delicate child and casually remark to its parents that it seems tnbcrcnlar to you? Do you "visit" ovcr the telephone? Because you are idle yourself and i those who can W651‘ @1191!‘ Scillllmre ivant to be amused do you ruthlessly break in upon the time of busy people curls at the crownof the head lvlll be , mid hold endless conversations about nothing at all? Do you stop a woman who is rushing around like mad to get her husband off to work and the children off to school and the baby fed and dressed and the marketing ordered and the breakfast dishes washed up to tell her all about the bridge party you went to yesterday and the gossip you collected over the bridge table? i Do you call business and professional women away from their work. | interrupting them at. the crucial moment when they were about to put over a deal or some thought was just crystalllzing in their minds to chin-chin with you about the state of the weather or the last movie. and do you ignore their frantic efforts to saw you off and go babbling on until you get tired? Do you give letters of introduction? Do you pass the buck on to your friends and make them do your entertaining for you and get jobs and hunt lodging places for people they never saw before and hope to heaven never to see again? You know yourself how murderous you feel toward. the little annoying vlccs that you find so disagreeable in your family and ‘ household through the third degree about everything they do or leave un- ' ~ ~ married ton years, has hands iooeify as a i o l “My secret is Lux in the i Dish pan,” this cbarrzzing wife says "I years, and have done all my yet my hands look as nice as they did on my wedding day, thanks to Lux," writes Mrs. Harold W. Simmonds. Modern younghomemakers discovered this secret of keeping bands delicately white and smooth-femininely appealing. They first noticed how nice their hands looked after washing their fine : then began using things in Lux z c Lux for dishes, too! Of nearly 2,000 young wives in 11' large cities, 96 out of every 100 are keep- ing hands as young and dainty as when HAVE been married more than ten H 2. . . . . . 2 lWOmans Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:-ggg__l_i.w_z_ifg_rature ELECTRIC TUASTER . M, . sTiigfim-(ADY DOmthyDI-xll MRS. H. W. SIMMQNDS f f" 1930 ————> own work, For less than l c a day-band: like ¢ brides.’ Lux for dis/re: marvellously economical beauty care for tbe bands! themselves tbey were married, by using Lug. For dishes and the many other soap and water tasks about the house! wit 505 Famous Beauty Shops have a reed that: “It ls impossible to dis- tin LUS between the bands oftbe woman maids to do all her work and the bands of a woman who uses Lux. Lux gives the hands actual beauty care.” They know ihatordlnary, coarse soaps leave hands recl and rough, while Lu; suds protect: the precious beauty oils of the skin . ; . keeping busy hands smooth, white, adorably young looking. " Lux for all your dishes costs less than lc a day. Lovely, smooth white hands for such a tiny price! Dis/awaalriizg Lezzz/esYour Hands L0 velier- zuit/a LUX- Lava Brothers Limited. Torrmto—Soap-nmkera by appointma-it tn their Ezeellmcies Dressing Girl at "Awkward" Age Is Problem ' The girl in her early ‘teen:- is apt, to have 'a difficult time fin-ding clothes that are becoming as well as She belongs I l i the Governor-General and Viacfluntess \Villu'1udr\n ‘ 1.: l’ i/Vhat the Fashionable Are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished , With Every Pattern . By Annabelle Worthington a...“ _-__...=n ._... "—Mummy dries me with a flufiy towel. ‘That tickles and is a lot of fun-but the powder,--I like that best! Mother always uses THIS powder because it doesvft chafe—- it’: soft and soothing-wt‘: ever so nice." For Delicate Baby Skin Babies are such tiny creatures, and so easil distressed. Since ill-temper in help ess little ones is often caused by an inferior talc, you should choose your baby owder most carefully. Johnson's Ba y Powder 1s made from the finest Italian talc. and can _be depended upon to end all irritation and chafing. Q Baby Powder A Tlli-"Jiiili? CREAM and soap side of the forehead, Fig. 4. those who inflict their acquaintances and proteges on you. but are you guilty appropriate to her age. of the same crime? neither to the "little girl" nor the Waves are Youthful _ "Junior miss" categories. and it is i‘ A pruned Pb Mk e d The mature woman should keep in Do you talk about your health? If you have had a major operation do not. string that e slmizld so often l “qqppgd finer; i?“ treztsgssts m‘ i mind that 1m- her there is nothing you spend the balance of your life in relating every detail of it, and telling look and feel uncomfortably awl-u ' Cmvnd geammr, and Bum,“ more becoming than waves. for these just what the doctor said and what the nurse did and how long you were ward. ‘ M m: hip voke°am decidedly I 50mm my harshness of features andl under other and so on? If you have Just some ordinary. common. or garden When it is necessary: that a i i rliirnuna IEFYTLlS. I lgive an illusion of youth. The ‘waves: complaint, do you hold up every ecquaintance with a minute account of ‘mother should l‘f"‘."t'nlle this diffi- ‘ ‘ ‘.19 lmdlce 52.0w‘; 5mm am ' your symptoms and a category of all the different remedies that you have eultv in hei- efld t; Gian-fend; it . rum Pm tucks mans“ should be wide and loose: ii, will be found that the deep. slightly irregular waves look the most natural and therefore make the most attractive poiffuroa. Hair worn in a long hob is ' e style which belongs to youth. If the older woman's hair is of this length she will find it most becoming if it is waved and the ends are turned under at the back. If a net is worn this coi- ffure will give the appearance of long hair. A becoming bob for the mature woman is to have the hair. A becom- ing bob for the mature woman is to heve the heli- eut rather long in front and at the aides but shingled at tlie 9o that just the lobes of the ears show. r-Q. Finn ioq i \ tried ? Do you press-agent your children? about how wonderful and beautiful and marvelous and clever they are? Do you regalo the company with the baby‘ s witticisms? Do you boast of Johnny's prowess onihe football field? Doyou ing how much admired Maud is and how the boys are all Just crazy about her and how she could marry a millionaire or two if she chose? l-laveyyou the martyr complex? will stand for it and relate the sad. sad story of your life. of how you have never been appreciated. and how hard you have to sacrifice, and how your petticoatsand your children never want to stay at home in the evening? Other people do all these things and you know they bore you and get back. Arrange the_long hair in deepi on your nerves, but. do you ever consider whether you are guilty of Just the. she should never allow he.- daughter to realize that she is a problem or to ' gm an idea that “nothing will look ivell on her anviiniv.“ For this will result in he,- lasing all interest in her appearance for a long time to come or will make her so self- conscious about i; as to prolong her awkward day's unnecessarily. One of the surest ways of avoiding such a situation is to make sure that the child's clothes are so comfortable that her attention is not called to them on that account. Avoid fussy details or tight fits that. restrict her_ free movement and " interfere with ' Wherever you go do you monologue spend hours and hours and hours tell- Do you weep on every shoulder that you have had to work and how much husband drinks or smokes or chases DOROTHY DIX. l wide waves which draw up the ienizth , um‘ may a”? Q. How long should I bride} we‘? ihousewife, “you said that ti’ I gave ding 50w" be? grass androll the lawn for me." A. As long as any other fashion- able eveniug gown. Q. When at a dinner should one ever comment on the food? A. No, ‘unicss it is a few words of 1nd m9 fvlltf- NOW} Why do?" Y0" '1» praise. anfl then it should. be very Bei- On With it?" brief. The man looked up. There was work. his eyes downoast. "Then." said the woman. ‘ J. whet gene of voice i; always genuine regret in his voice as he ana- this for your own goorl. teach you a lesson. Never take any- lskirt. lo body's word.’ wered : the most pleasing? . ‘Lady, I‘d like to, but I am doing A. The low. gentle voice. E . l . yoff." children hate to be different. in I‘! uette M m . . any conspicuous way from their q A o lng Snille play-mates, It is better that a girl of ~ Mum‘ l. ...l,.,..,i.., ___,U_,_._,-.|-E this age should be dre=sed ultra- .-____~____ - “Look here." cried the indignant I¢°fl5@1'\’1i-l\'@ll’ than 80 ffl-‘llwliflibf-l’ as to arouse her mmmcnt or anyone :you a square meal you'd mow the else‘s. ~1 did. lady." admitted the out-of- be taken mo. account. 1r she is tall 5nd thin, lines that. "I've cross-wise and breadth to the effect. shownyou where to find the mower ,while conversely. i; she is short and give her height and sllmness. her playing at anything that shel should undertake. that with all their love of And remember ‘ ‘ShfiiViflg The proportions n: he.- figure must cut the dress tout. long. up-and-rlmm lines will A I've got t'>' ‘iared cliffs of the elbow Itlreves make the arms appear very sleitrlci" l 256i is truthfully smart I '_ me. .' ied in sizes l6. 18 years. 5S, 38. 40. 4-. 4i and 44-3 inches bust. S‘ it: in duwkv-pznk shade i; vary fl?l’l‘.‘.i'"l\'F for spectator sports ‘ an.’ the beach. Flat. crepe silk in light navy blug _l\‘.ll‘i vr-stee and flared cuffs of ecru ’emhro.vlered batlste is very chic for tmvn or travel. (‘hirlnn voile print in polka-dots i| jauntr. Pattern price l5 cents. Be sure a: ‘fill in size of pattern. Address Pat- : tern Department. The Summer Fash- ‘ inn Aiagazine is ready! ft contain; l . . most interestzng styles for adults for town or vacation wear. Also darling styles for the kiddies. lt is l5 cents l copy. but may be obtained for iii ll gill cents if ordered same time as pat- . tern. _ _ - -.--_--._.___._-- I No. 2551- Size ...................... . . . . m...- 256i Nm waistline should be (ie.-.&l}i,”il.}{}.§§ . »..-..................... aulclallill by an esrgerated fitted line and a sire" Address h that. just. Qgivgrg the _ . . . . . ...--.¢-’n_avu_o_|>a_n-- . . . . . “nun nee is a wise comprorm‘ 3W 59a"