1 _~V ~11 ww- \lQ~'llI§>1~~n-<~».-1\_ 4....“ .. IPAGE EIGHT Woman ’s Realm -: THE __CHARLO'I"I‘ETOWN GUARDIAN Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Literature {Q-uu» APRIL}; (n. m’ Tempting Dishes For Jaded Tastes Jucc and add alternately with szfzcd flour and spices to first mix- ture. Add tl1e nuts and raisins, turn into square cake pan lined with 1111x1111 paper. Bake 111 a hot even at 350 degrees F. for about an IlOL-l‘, “NETS APPl-IT ITE Grapefruit Bavarian Cream! Doesn't that make the mouth wa- ter? That was only one of the 1111'- usual (iimilPS on 1.111 ".1 11101111 at the School. Oihers in 1 (led tomato juice cake, marshmallow refrigera- tor cake, eE- s.‘ and vegetable sa- lad. mixed gr ll. a two 111'11111e c110- Oolute cake, and maid. ct l-onor I-‘or the benciit of 1hr»: 1101:511- wlves ivhn found i; 111-p» sible m attend todajfs cli-ses, Mrs Thonlp- sons recfpes are r 11rir1c-1 here. ' VI-TONE FROSTING 1 1-2 cups icing sirxar i.’ 1 l11csp o:1s Vi-Tone 1 1-2 tablespoons butter PlllCil cf salt lW-it the buttcr and mix with \'»To11e anrl icing $ll"fll‘. Stir in two i:1’"l tifl’) 11s of milk. Beat well till smooth. Spread on cal-re when cool. ' CHEESE .-\.‘II) \ L11) 1 l-I tablespoons gelatine 3 tablespoovrficokl “titer TABLE 5A- l-2 cup 111 1 chopped _, BI.»\Rf-1Il‘l.»\LIlO\V REFRIGE- l-2 p"; Kraft e RATOR LOAF 1-4 zc-spcon salt l-‘Z cuo mershmallow, quarter- ed ' l-i cup boiling water l-Z cup Condensed M'lk l-2 cup nut meats, cropped 1-2 cup dates, chopped 2 l-2 cups cracker crumbs. cisuinbr, Cu‘ up n1a1'.~:l1!11:1llo\\'s, place in bowl and pour boilivg water over them Stir. then add ecnclensed milk. chopped n11t meats and dates and blend. Add the cracker cr-"m‘.1=. Form into roll er place in deen mould chill. Serve in slices with or without wh‘pped cream. Leaf will keep moist several days. l-2 cup pr-as 2 t1l11e<powns pimenfo l-Z cup 1111' 111-cits 1-2 cup c 111m 821k tlic cc.t11e In cold water about five n1’1111'cs. and dissolve over hot \\’.\i(’l'. Beat it into the mayonnaise. A111 1h" l-Zrnft cream chrc c. illfll 11111 clv-ppml ivppers, peas, 111111131111) 111.11 chopped nuts. Lastly. fold 111 1 Jpped cream and turn into individual or large mould. Chill 111 l‘1"il'l£!\l'lll(li‘. Serve on bed of letiuc-s. garnished wth inruvon- Tlflfsr GRAPEFRIIIT BAVARIAN ("BEAM 4 tzfilospocni; (".1 111-11111-11 ppflfoxygysg 1 tin grairfruii. 1N0 Q11) 1-2 cup sugar 1-2 cup cold water geggs beaten 1 cup cream or Ffvaporated mill; (st-aided. chilfcrl and whipped) Mzx c0r11=111rrl1 to smooth paste with the c0111 water, and cook in liqu'd drained from the grapefruit. Add sugar. and bring to the boil. Combine coukcd cor rch and FY1111 f1-11't 111119- Civl. P111 in whip- pczl <-1"c.\111 and chill 111 rrfrigerator. MIXED GRILL 1 teaspoon salt 1 txa-poon mustard l c1111 Condensed Milk 3-4 cup vinegar Beat the first four ingredients vigorously for a few minutes, add , tire vinegar, stir well. '1“;"1is dressing will keep for weeks. RHUBARB DIARMALADE Sliced lvt-ice :1 l 1111111 r1111. 5 1b; rhubarb S ‘C '5 1 - ~ 1 pound sifizuia raisins Muse's?" 2 large or 3 small lehions Tm“ ~ If rrubarb is old remove the skin. Cut in pier-es. Wash raisirs. C111 11711-4112.; 11:; for marmalade. 1h‘11 as possible and in small strips. Mea- sure the fr11it and for every pint of fruit add one pint of sugar. com- TOMATO JFIFE CAKE l.‘ tnlih-spctn; Crisci l cup granulated sugar l e111; 1 (‘Fm iflllllli" lllitP hinc and lrt stand over night. In 1 tfflF-Wllfl SW11 the 1111-1111113 hail until a little 1 (‘i117 (irliiiliui fl"lii‘ c‘ pCti on a rid plate is of jelly- l l-2 cups zffierl flnur 1 t/mpoon g-cnnd cinnamon l-2 teaspocn c-routid cloves like consistency. Tizrn into steriliz- ed glasses and seal when cool. Why stay Making Lawns Bf.’ frir til: 611051174 t method of establishing a laun is to sow seedn It is also the most satisfactory. Fruit-m five: give new Iile ‘The only lhlnl thatmakea me mis- erable now ls the thought. that. for herons-n only 111 1111:; there yam I1 stmgghd any Ff)l‘1‘l"‘i nxrr 1111" r ' of tire “'""‘¥'"-'*Y"""1““'" I _ 4 Cfllltilllfifl, when, 11 l1 . l: P1911130 111 . T L v I , . ' -r111 m-ilvcs‘ seed. If; -( “m, o. mixture n" I mm“ m] hwlryuld have been of fine prrinziiient g cs, which zrchtlyfroin Btvdrerfiearlfirliebiiuiigxifilfigliigg w1ll comr- on yen: a er vcnr with Th" "°*'*“Yh="'-‘d""° rrlzifsv-l‘, rplick gm" ‘ ' wh-(h lwovidn 1111-1101- 1" the Iuit-GJIUCI ' ' ' a" drug "w" grassrs the firs‘ 101-.- _1:¢_11-_=_ 3v. 1 _.___. - u‘ .\re "-1 You Dorothy Dix Affection Make Sure You’re in Love With the You’re to Marry, Warns Dorothy Dix — Many a Girl is Enraptured by the Romantic Aura She Herself Has Thrown About a Man Girls are forever asking me for some sign or token whereby they c111. tell whether they are in love or not; whether what they feel for some particular youth is just a. passing fancy or the grand P11551011. They say they are terribly fond of some Tom, Dick or Harry, but they do not thrill and palpltate at his ap- proach, nor pine away in a green and yellow mel- ancholy 1n his absence. And so they are in doubt as to the real state of their affections. It ls a pity that the diagnosis of love should have been made by novelists and poets, who seem to always deal with the highly temperamental type of individual, prone to chills and fever and hys- Palmolive Soap AT Mani lowest price in history Some size . . . some quality Some generous Clive Qil Content ALMOLIVE Soap is now so low in price that every woman can afford to use it. The same size cake same quality...with the same generous olive oil content . . . nothing is altered but the price. Wash with Palmolive tonight and every night. And-at the present low price-you can use Palmolive as an . 111-purpose ‘beauty soap-for the hands, for the hair, for the com- i RUN-DOWN? a profound affection, because their man's love because he still preserved determine whether they are the real i1. spurious imitation. this requires her to be not only a guesscr as well. For, from her cradle up, every magic cloak that she has embroidere speak, when there are two candida absent and the present test to love.’ as she is with 111111. hcr. hcr judgment cease functioning. he docs not belong to her class, that as well as 111s bodyn. real lore. No1- is it love if you are fondest is no test of love. sccm a littlc tin god. range and how much of his society love that is foolproof 11nd will stand man, concentrate p11 his faults and outweigh his virtues to you. iuritics irritate you or not. Could i papers and the comic strip and has If he bores you at times until yo dcrly’ as just amusing traits of inciiv went haywire in the days of courtship. Distrust the lovc that is merely fascination. only love that endures is that which takes in a man's soul and character It’ you only love a man when he is present, it is not ever and over again the balance of your life? take a never-ending heart interest in the grocery trade? How about having 1“5"ru"1°m5' an M them ‘wry cm“ to live with a man who carries his small change 1n a purse with a Yale PHCMKL since a“ kinds 0r dimcul"; the mum“ M the lock 011 it, and who is a little close-flstcd? You like books and symphony “e5 are m“ wit‘ and haw t‘) be. amva Th“ occurs when the eaxur concerts, while he never reads anything but the headlines in the news- 5u1'“‘°"‘-‘t‘~‘d~ The 89119111 PrinciPlc- qllflkfl lakes 111MB DIR!‘ “W aYIW-W‘ teria fi-om which ordinary, practical, commonsense folk are immune. This has given rise to many and grievous er- rors, especlally on the part of women who have refused t0 marry men whom they have respected and admired and for whom they entertained hearts did not do flipflops in their bosoms at the sound of the said mews footsteps, and who have doubted a ' his sanity and his appetite and never Still and all, a girl does well to look into 1111- emotions and try to , genuine, biu1\'ll-l1l-LilC-b0tt1(3 love oi- The first thing, of course, is for hcr to find out whether she is in love with some particular youth, or Just in love, and first-class psyehoanaly-s: but a good girl is on a still-hunt for, her Fairy Prince and so eager is she to find him that only too often she shuts her eyes and grabs the first boy who comes along. Over him she throws the cl with the gold and silver spangles of hcr imagination, and she-ls so enraptured with the result that she doesn‘t know that it is her own handiwork she is adoring and not the thing in it. 'l‘he only thing that saves hcr is when the Fairy Prince ls twins, so to tes for her sentimental disguise and she cannot choose between them. That is a tip that neither one is the rightful claimant to her heart and hand. , two men at a time she loves neither. For as ‘ :1; as :1 girl can love Then, antagonistic though it may seem, u girl should apply" both the Many a man has a physical attrac- tion for a girl that makes her think that she is in love with him as long His touch thrills her. His love-making hypnotlzes her so completely that her mind and In his presence she does not notice that His kisses lay a spell upon he is perhaps highly undesirable as a husband, that they have not. the same interests, nor habits, nor ideals. nothing that will keep love alive after the physical appeal is gone. It doesn't last. 'I’l"1c of a man when he is absent. Absence Any one can localize an absent one and. make him The real test of love is l1o\v a 1112111 looks at close you can stand and still ask for more. If you never weary of a man's company even when he talks about him- self by the hour; if you can play games lcgetlire without quarrcling; if getting on each oihci-‘s nerves, than you may be sure that you have the getting on e111: hothefs nerves, then you may be sure that you have the the wear and tear of matrimony. Then, it you are still in doubt. whether you are in love or not with a magnify them and sec whether they Cousidei" whether his little personal pcc11l- you stand listening to his pet stories Do you feel that you could jazz tastes in music. What about it? u feel like screaming. and if you think that the first thing you will do after you marry him is going to be on the reformation sldc, you don't really love him. “iedfiiiown about of love than to love the faults of a dear one, and to think of them ten- There ls no truer test idualiay because they are his. And the final test of love for a girl is whether she loves some man well enough to give 11p pretty clothes and luxuries for 111m, and whether she would rather go into the kitchen for him, 01" into a. parlor with any other ' “mm with mam and 1,111; bob of 1 man. DOROTHY DIX. land must be levelled carcfi , and raked me? sir-sexual times. 'I'h."n. 011 a (lay when tlrrrr- is no wind sr-Pd is 101111 111th 11-113111-111-"11 and across to 11.51111‘ cvtn dzstribution at.‘ the rate of 0hr- pound for every two hunrlrzd square feet. Cover the! “I want to return these washers. '1‘11@y‘1'e not at all sausfactory," com- plained the new bride. seed rerv 1.211111" by raking one n11)‘ c1113., 11nd 1, 1f i is bossibimi "Bu" they“ the host’ 51cm wash‘ 11o (1',I‘;- 1hr 1 . 111.111: 1 .111 at‘ ‘Tilvtifihfl!’ is the “mum with them?" r011,“ I, n) _ , H , ‘ 1y the hole 1:; too 51111111 to get I _ ' v1 e11 oi 1. k 11d‘ m“ clumps throunhw is available a pountlr-r u-ill mak’: a ' ° ‘ fair sub-PH" Paw-n“ “Wu-n i? ..1 .1 , 1. , .. . g ~_ should start uhcn filo g1‘; s is Pat‘. the mshman‘ placed seven" about no mm“ I‘. “I ‘mm n], anil-sis-pq-nce on the counte» at the ,, ‘ ' village 10st if . P1111.’ will drrlroy- n of the weeds, 1 l o m‘ which may: hare survived the treat. m0"! 50 fill‘. but if weeds tontinuc and the pfflSS (loos not look hcnlthv, "I want a license for rny mother, miss." he said to the postmlstress. She gave 111111 a superior look. "You don't want r1 license for f 1. . ' 1 . - . ., “LS0: 21ft} t 1.11m‘. fertilizer 1s your 1110111121", 1111c replied, . :1 -:.'11' -c grass cannot “That I do," said Pat "l ‘ fight weeda bought a dam» ' 5mg Iorvm-Gould lot Sleep Tired Out All The Tlmo him. George Scribner, Nuuwigowmk, N3, Wrltoll-"I was so very nervous I could no! sleep at night, and felt tired out g1 the 11mg A neighbor told mo about Milbum‘; Ho“; and Nerve Pills, and as she was using them u the time she gave me some to try. I feud 111181111143 Htanri 11E11vi1>111S the last words Mrs. Pelgravc wrote. She was taking hcr morning walk when she slipped 1n the street and brokfl her thigh. she faced the end nurse. She was godmother to one Famous Society “Nannie ” Dies lifrs- Pclgrave. the old "nannie" emliloyers and others who. during the last two years, had eased her burden u-hen, through R. newspap- cr report, they learned she was living on 3s. a week. The fund of G5 pounds they pro- vided for her had almost run out when she passed away, pt the age of 86. though up to the time of her death she had received sums of five and seven shlllngs a week from two readers who read of her plight in the Dally Express. "I am so happy, and I have such 5 1011913’ “We room, into which the sun comes very early,” were Her death was a little tragic. Nurse in Many Well-Known English Families Meets With Accidents cjectment order against her, that of many famous families. died in old M1-s. Pelgraves story became 1 ;n=1_..,,ment_ f‘ 10114011 llflsllilfll TPCPHUY. W111 known. A reporter found her sltt-‘mc necpsgity {or “d3n\pi]]8”_ A; 15 thanks on her lips for her former lng alone in her lodgings reading we“ known when a little box of well-worn texts. As he entered she read aloud the one she had Just d wn from her little‘ box, “God will Pl-ovide all my needs." _ - Next day the offers of help for the old woman flowed into the newspaper offcc and she was ne- ver again in want. Gift From Queen Victoria The fund was administered by Mrs. Hamilton-Wedderburn, whom she brought into the world. but who for years had lost trace of her. Mrs. Pclgrave nursed Lady Churchill when each of her chil- dren was born. Lady (Zhurchillb mother-in-law was lady in waiting plexion and for the bath. Buy 3 cakes of Palmolive today. Find out for yourself how the olive oil in this famous 5011px‘? and keeps your skin smooth . . . fresh . . . desirable. (By Louis A. Fenn. M. 50-. in Nor- thern Mfsenger) Ea tE-quukcs rank with the wea- ther among the few natural hap- penlngs‘ which mcdem knowledge gives us no power to control, and little to predict. It is. however, a goat achievement of the human spirit that in face of these terrible and mysterious manifestations of natural power, mankind no longer slmpTy cowers in terror- We are able to study these dlsturbaiias- l1.‘ wc are sufficiently far away frcm their centres-and our study throws an interesting light on the nature of this globe of earth on which we live. " The siudy of earthquakes is pos- sible because they give rise to waves 1n the solid ground, much as a. stone thrown into a pool causes waves in the water. These earth waves are, of course, so s-nall as to e invsiblc; we do not see them spreading out from the earthquake as we sec waves spread when a stone is thrown into water. It has v been ou‘y ivitliln t-hc last two gen- crntiors ti-a‘. people have realized that such “111-es must exist, and have set out to rec-aid and measure them. The instrument used to detect and measure these waves is called. a scisncgruph, or "earthquake re- corder." Tovre are various forms of however, is simple. 'I‘l1-: scistno- graph consists essentially of a very slow moving pendulum which car- ries a pencil to trace out its move- ments on a sheet of paper. This pendulum 1s carried on a stand mounted on a block of stone or concrete. When earlhwaves arrive at the place where the pendulum ls set up. they move the stand 1 the pendulum gets left bchnd. Thus, the pencil makes a mark whose length is proportional to the movement of the stand. Since the actual movement is small. every scismogri-ph» has a de- vice for magnifying its record, and this is one 01 the Qampiivat-IWB which make, to the unskillel obser- ver, the essential pcnclplc of the Another arises from a pendulum is "disturbed, it swings about for some time before coming to rest. Since earthquake waves keep on arriving, this tendency to keep on swinging has to be diminished as much as possible, since otherwise the free swinging of the pendulum would complicate the record and make it very d'ffic-1lt to interpret This operation of getting rid of the free swinging is called damping, and is carried out 1n several ways. In the most successful instruments both damping and recording are done by electricity. The student 01' earthquakes owes a great deal to the fact that there are two kinds of earth waves. to Queen Victoria, and the Queen they were doing ma so much good I procmgd w'th the courage this white haired two boxes and they proved of wonderful help blue eyed little wcznan had show-n to mo." all through her life. ‘hmafrkllnlfillllflilllflflfi3iilfiflflkblihfillbumflmug. It was one day in 1930, when a magistrate refused to issue an took a great interest in the little- of the babies and sent a. letter 1,0 Mrs- Pelzrave and a five pound note: and "nannlc" was often tale. en 1n a royal carriage for a drlvo with heu- baby in the park. Mm: and it is c. fortunate cir- which give reocrds sufficientlydif- ferent from each other-for skilled obrervrr to pick them out on the trace made by therccordlng appara- tus. One k'nd rf‘ wave travels round the surfac: of the earth, whereas the other passes through 1t; sub. Earthqziiake Lore cumstmce that these waves travel at different speeds. These speeds have been worked ‘ out. and 1t is now possible, by noting the times at whch the different wave X71111 to arrive. to calculate the distance from the selsmog-raph at which the earthquake has like" place. In this way the observer can draw an imaginary circle on the globe, and can say that the scene of the earthquake must be ' some- where on that circle. If there are two observers in different. Positions on the earth's suifucz, each will draw a circle, and since these cir- cles will cut each other at two points. it will be known that the earthquake must have occurred at one or other of these points. In this way the slto of the earthquake may be known even before news of it arrives by cable in the ordinary way. It has even become possible by refinements introduced during the last few years. to deduce from the record of a single station both the distance and the direction of the earthquake, and to say that it must have occurred at one of two definite points on the earths sur- face, wltlrout waiting for the re- cords of o. second station. A very interesting light 1s thrown on the condition of the earth's sur- face by certain difficulties which occur" 111 the ‘interpretation of earthquake records. It 1s found that in certain cases the type o! wave whfch has to pass through earth fails to types of . dcs, so that these waves have t0 pass through the earth at very greet depth at which the earth be- comes incapable of transmitting these waves, and students of earth waves have worked out from their records appwximately what that depth ls. The results are in accord- ance with the theory which is at present gaining ground for this and other reasons, that thc earth has a fquld core-probably of molten tron-about 2.000 miles in diameter. In Europe owing to the rarity of serious earth movements, we read- ily accept the View which contrasts the stable. solid ground with the restless sea. The selsmograph and its records give pause to our light- hearted confidence in the appm- priateness of the’ epithet "terra flrma." They show a surprising v8- riety of earth movcuients, most of them too gentle to be inconvenient. but all of them indicating that the solid earth is much less firm than we have grow-n up to believe. It is now known that the weight of a full tide 111 the sea produces bulges in the neighboring land: that In addit'on to tides in the sen. there are actually distortions of the earth itself produced by the attraction of the sun 11nd moon: and there are tn addition constant tremors pass- ing through the earth, some of them due to human activities like railway trains. but most of them caused by earth movements so tiny that they do not merit the name of earthquakes. Thus. there were in the yrar 1911. according to Mr- G. W. Walker. of the Bskdalemuir Belsmfilolfcal station. as many as two hurdred and thirty‘ five distur- bames reccrded, of which only six- teen meilted the name of earth» qllllw: and most of_ the latter oc- curred at the bottom of the oea1— Grout ‘Thought; v " ‘“ l1‘1il&=.~.ir£F What the Fasllionables are Wearing By Annabelle worn-marl»; The dalntiest of collars and, cuffs are putting in an appearance i in Purl-s. They are especially smart in crisp organelle, in crinkly crepe silk or in pique in white. The delightful group included in today's pattern could be made up in almost any of these new materials. The collar and cuff set in the lower sketch is especially nice in crepe silk or in pique. The collar and cufl’ set in the upper sketch is lovely in crepe silk or organdie. The plaited frllled model you'll like 11-. crepe silk or orgnndle. Style No. 622 is designed in one size only. Price of Pattern l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. Trinkets Treasures ' And Heirlooms Given In Time of Need BRITISH» PEOPLE SACRIFICE PERSONAL POSSESSIONS T0 AID EXCHEQUER: AUC- TION SALE ‘Prinkots, treasures, and little heirlooms given by private people to the chancellor of the British Ex- chequer during the financial crisis of last year came up for auction in London and were sold for the bene- fit of the nation. The sale realized £490. Last year a similar but larger collection brought £786. They were all personal treasures that had been brought out of Jewel cases, top drawers, ‘and drawing room cabinets and given voluntar- ily by their owners when the coun- try needed gold.- Mosg of them had been gifts of sentiment in their tlme—lockets. heart-shaped pendants, bracelets, earrings, combs. and trinkets-the sort o! thing-s one's grandmother kept in a sandalwood and ivory box, with a key. Varied Buyers There was a buyer from an ex- pensive firm in‘ Bond street, bid- ding quietly and paying good pric- es. There was a shrewd little man from Hutton Garden, screwing a round glut into his eye over the diamonds: he complained they were far too dear. A. miniature of a young girl, a locket holding a plaited lock of hair, a love-letter seal engraved “Bo thou faithful unto Death" went in with the tie-pins and hat-pins and’ spectacle cases, and were sold in odd lots. A handful of gold wedding rings brought in a. few pounds for the Emhequer; several heavy cable gold bracelets that were so fashionable when Queen Victoria was married, were sold on their gold value to- gether with gold studs, , ctaclo frames. and a little packet of gold leaf in a. Jam jar. The ‘trinkets '.l‘he grinketa made o courageous little show-far more moving in their way than the more splendid properties that came under the hammer later in the afternoon. They were being given. not sold. The auctioneer and the dealers meant nothing in the transaction, and the people who will buy them cheaply in secondhand shops will never know their meaning. Once they were gifts, given and received a long time n30. 10W WK- ens, birthday presents, cherished treasures. Now they are drops oi gold given by ordinary. anonymous people to the coffers of the nation because they were all they had. and because last you" those coffers looked perilously empty. DON'T Don't any, what con n word do? It takes so little to help a soul. Don't any, it was only a word, It takes so little hurt n. soul. To 1110111: the wugtn going down The hill, to prop t e wagon , Going up. needs .only a pebble. .-o1mr1a Wagner, . _("1'l#l lettu- WQJ’), For The Cook icuoootara cuow Two squares unsweetened choc- olate (large sized bar) 1-3 cup but tcr, 2 eggs, 1 cup granulated sugar 1 cup walnuts, chopped; 115 m‘. spoon baking powder, 1,1.- teaspom. salt, 1i teaspoon vanilla. Method: Melt chocolate. Add but ter. Let cool. Sift flour, baking pow- der and salt. Add to sugar and egg: Add nuts and chocolate. Bake/X buttered pan in moderate oven (o1 twelve to fifteen minutes. OATMEAL CAKE One cup oatmeal, 1A cup butter, 1 cups brown sugar, 2 eggs, '15 cup raisins, l; c11p nuts, 1 teaspoon each of cinnamon and cloves, 1 teaspoon soda sifted with 1 cup pastry flour. Pour 1 cup boiling water over the oatmeal and let stand twenty minu- Les. Own Children Made This Woman Nervous Mrs. Lillian Paync was so run- down her own children made hc1 nervous. Vinol 111-on tonic) made hex sleep and eat and nervousness is gone. Tastes delicious. Hughes Drug 00., Ltd. _ Pompcian Beauty Powder is the glorious result of 30 years of research and experi- ments with l l1 living models. This powder is smoother, it looks natural . . . and it slay: on. Pompcian is pre- ferred by beautiful women in 54 countries. It is the powder you have always wanted. Ono of the five harmonious shades will exactly auityour com- plexion . . . and agree with your skin. The NEW BEAUTY POWDER ruins roxomo new YORK I-QNW" Soles lllfill! Harold F. lltdm I Co- Ud- 10-1l Mfiaul 51-1 Tommi was? 1 y,‘ y» which have been beaten togetlv‘ Q1 Smear/lent’