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PAGE SEVEN omaii vs HooselioldV Children llfe CoofcinKgg) Fashion Pi French Importations Show Two New Colors For Autumn "Beaver," a Soft Brown Shade, and "Jade," a Bright Green I' j IF THE ARIZONA- REPUBLICAN, THURSDAY jvi ORNIN 6 AUGU ST 19 ,1920 T . t ... 1 :s fi i f; V If'.:: r IK I r 1 t 1 it : i '. v- f t. ' .j'-'SS.-i: i SL x. v ' till . Sports corset for sports skirt . BY CORA. MOORE New York's Fashion Authority NEW YORK Here are five of the latest French importations in the way of frocks, suits and wraps for early Fall wear. They emphasi'ze the straights-lined silhouette, which Amer ican women seem to find more practi cal than the bouffant effect. ; New Sports Corset A , charming sports skirt of acccr-dian-plaited silk was fitted over a new Paris corset designed especially for wear with separate skirt and blouse costumes. The skirt is blue and white, with a foot-band of white worsted embroid ery. The accordion-plaited section is attached to a yoke that is gathered sparsely to the belt, nevertheless smoth-fating about the hips. The corset referred to being made ' with cord Instead of bones, does not inter fere with the trig effect as is so fre quently the fault with the sports skirt THE BOOK OF ANN My Bobbed Hair Idea Startles Bob and It Looks Like He's Boss Following up my plan to startle my husband at least once in every twenty four hours, I made an announcement, Make Your Own Complexion Treatment If you would have a beautiful com plexion, one which will make you ex ceedingly attractive, just try this recipe: Go to any grocery store and get ten cents worth of ordinary oat meal and from any drug store a bottle of derwillo. use tne oatmeai as qi rected in every package of derwillo,' then lo! and behold the marvelous change. One application will .astonish you. Be sure to read the announce ment soon to appear in this paper, en titled "How to make your Own Com plexion Treatment at Home." It gives full details for using the recipe. WHY DO YOU TRY TO HIDE THOSE LITTLE PIMPLES Or 1 Cover a Dark, Sallow, Muddy Complexion With Face Powder and Rouge tt .harrassini it is for one to Siave pimples appear on face, neck, arms or hands. One little pimple is bad enough mars the attractiveness of a pretty face. You can quickly remove pimples and other skin blemishes by touching the "potior applying Black and White Ointment to the part affected This wimole but effective home beauty Tratment removes, not only pimples but clears a dark, sallow, muddy com plexion, and leaves the skin soft, white ""AlfvhtThave used Black and White Ointment are delighted with the re ,iiti and keep a box always on their dressing table" Black ind White Soap -hould also be used and will be found I delightful aid to the Ointment Both Black and White Ointment and Soao can be found at all good drug stores and toilet counters 25c each a nackage, or the manufacturers will ' nd postpaid on receipt of 50c. a sample, literature and Black and -iVTiite Birthday and Dream Book will yl sent you free if you will clip and mail this aaverusriiicui i. III U? I r . V ' -r ' 5v C" K' ' "'S3 - V y?1 rift?. JITJ 'J1 I. If il STIIVTE Box 913. Memphis, I enn. 1 Combine colors and cloth not properly corseted, or so Paris claims. The skirt has a "loop" pocket over either hi"p and no belt. Two New Colors Beaver and Jade, two of the season's new and attractive colors, are as sembled In this little Parisian suit of crepe and pussy-willow silk. OveV a straight and comfortably wide skirt is dropped a straight tunic that fastens at the side. The coat, which, like the skirt, is of the beaver colored crepe and fastens at the side, is quite straight and box-like, with sleeves that flare towards the end of theiT three-quarter length. An odd square collar that rolls up in itself "and leaves the square-cut neck unadorned in front is a distinctive touch. ' . The motifs that adorns the costume are cut from jade silk, appliqued to the crepe with a buttonhole and a silk covered button in the center of each. ' They are very youthful, these box- at dinner, the evening after we girls had planned the political rally. With my demurest smile, I said. "Bob, I am going to bob my hair!" My husband collapsed in his chair in a spasm of dismay which was quite genuine. He regarded me steadfastly as if he were studying one who had suddenly gone insane. Finally he asked, in a distressed tone: "What put that freak idea into your hed, Jane Lorimer? "If I'm going to dance in the 'ballet of ballots' I'll simply have to have my hair cropped. Bob. All the other girls have short hair. I'l spoil the effect entirely with any kind of a coiffure " "Make it Greek," suggested my hus- Uj mm YOUR HAIR. TURNS GRAY Outwit the passing years I Let Co-Lo restore , the youth ful beauty natural , color, life and luster to your hair in a. manner nature approves. Co-Lo Hair Restorer a scien tific process perfected by Prof. John H. Austin, over 40 years a bacteriologist, hair and scalp spe cialist. TiiT If ft il ' a act t-T Via Hair j. U Restorer fA TfLVt? Ten Co-Lo Secrets Co-Lo is a wonderful liquid. Clear, odorless, greaseless. Without lead or sulphur. Hasn't a particle of sediment. Will not wash or rub oft. Will not injure hair or scalp. Pleasing and simple to apply. Cannot be detected like the or- dinary'hair tints and dyes. . Will not cause the hair to split or break off. Co-Lo can be had for every ! natural shade of hair. A6 for Black and all Dark Shades of Brown. A-7 Extra Strong, for Jet Black Hair only. AS for all Medium Brown Shades. A3 for all Very Light Brown, Drab and Auburn Shades. CO-LO HAIR RESTORER Co-Lo Hair Restorer at Central Pharmacy. Owl Druq Store, Busy Drug Store, A. L. Boehmer Dru3 Store. 1 . 1 ' t !? ' - ' I fi r:j Blocks and stripes still good coat suits, and our American women as well as young girls will look exceeding ly well in them. Blocks and Stripes Striking stripes and block patterns seem to have taken a firm hold, both here and in Paris, and certainly neith er stri'pes nor checks were ever so ar tistically made up as they are this sea son. Here is a Paris dress of flame color and blue, a beautiful iridescent block weave and built quite on military lines, with the bodice buttoned up one side, the skirt straight, sleeves that are long, close fitting, and buttoned at the wrist. As for the neck treatment, Paris is suddenly running to prudish-looking necks that either hide the throat com pletely or barely sHow a few inches either in front or back. Two New Silks A new material, "made in America," is making a great hit in Paris. It is band. "Bind it up with a blue rib bon " ' "Can't! Too much of it!" Then Bob sat up very stiffly and opened his stern lips to say sharply: "Then don't dance!" "Of course, being a-married woman, I can't comb my own hair to suit my self." I waited. "I thought you said you never, never intended to rule me in any way again, Bob Lorimer.' - "Don't weep, Jane. : i'ou know I won't have my wife look.ng like a show girl. Or like a writer of verse libre. Moreover, it's a man's responsibility to keep his wife from doing silly things. I'm only doing my duty, my girl. You'd be awfully sorry within a week after you had lost your lovely long locks. Ycu know you would." The next morning I went over to the Lorimer park to resign from the ballot-ballet. The girls were practising there it was to be a dance in the open and they raised such a tornado of objections that finally I had to confess that one of the disadvantages of matrimony was the husband's right to enforce his own opinion as to the proper length of a wife's tresses. Chrys regarded me supercilously. 1 "You mean to say you're going to obey Bob?" she asked. "It it looks so," I stammered. "But all 'the debs' are doing it." protested Deborah Burns, who had spent the month of June at a smart summer colony. Her own hair had been cropped when she went abroad as a welfare worker. "And some of the most conservative society matrons are wearing bobbed wigs," she added. "But that is secret, my dears." "Bobbing has even affected the mil linery business," Midget put in. "A letter from my designer, whom I am to see in New York, asks whether or not I have had my, hair cropped. He You don't have to talk, your husband into paying the price of Schilling Coffee. Just give him a cup for tomorrow's breakfast and tell him you can get your money back from your grocer. What'll he say ? "Don't you do it! That coffee is worth a lot more than the money." A Schillt72g & Company San Francisco 3 'iff! (Si irt" n Accordion plaits and a "Tarn" called "whip-poor-will" and here is a frock of it, combined with another new siljc. known as kumsi-kumsa. The model was designed especially for one of the "Greenwich Village Follies"' girls, Betty Lina, and it speaks the very latest word in line and color from the French capital. Orange kumis-kumsa, accordion plaited, forms an apron tunic with a low-swung girdle over a straight, short, narrow skiTt. that has a panel of the whip-poor-will down either side. A blouse of the whip-poor-will with half-length sleeves of the kumsi kumsa fastens straight up to the chin with ball buttons and tiny braid loops, setting quite smoothly across the shoulders, the fulness 'softly gathered in by the girdle at the waist. With this Miss Lina wears a jaunty Scotch tam o'shanter of black satin embroidered in blue and gold. It is a perfect costume for cool days now or for early fall, v i 1 ADVEMTURE-S Of- -THE- TWINS h Qlivt Koberfcx Barton. MR. TINGALING GETS MAD "Well," said Tingaling sternly to Scramble Squirrel who was stuck fast in his house. "This is a pretty kettle of fish." "Don't you mean?' corrected Scramble sadly, "this is a pretty holeful of squirrel." ' "I mean what I mean,'! insisted the fairyman landlord. "But it look as though someone else was stuck besides yourself, for if you're stuck in your house, I'm stuck for the rent, begging your pardon for strong language, Mrs Squirrel." "Where is the rent money?" the fairyman went on. "I must have it right away." ' y "In my pocket," said Scramble still sadly. v 'Traises be!' cried Tingaling happily. ''Such luck! Just hand it right out, Mr. Squirrel, and I'll mark you paid in my big rent-book." y ' But Scramble only looked more sad than ever, sheepish, too. : "I I'm so fat and my clothes are so tight, I can't get my hand into my pocket," he confessed. Iff v mm ' w; ..mmt. !' lw-lm i i. How does your suit feel since I Wyfp Oliver. "Well, I d be ashamed," declared Tingaling hotly, snapping his book shut with a bang, while Nick and Nancy closed up the big pocket-book which they had opened to put the squirrels money into. "I am!" said Scramble meekly. Just then a voice overheard called, "Hello, folks," Tingaling recognized the voice at once as Oliver Oriole's, the tailor, and. blushed furiously. "How does your suit feel since I let it out for you, Mr. Tingaling?" called Oliver. "You'll have to stop eating so much, for if you get any fatter I can t put in any more gussets for you." And he flew away laughing. Oliver wasn't the only one who was laughing now. Nancy and Nick and Mrs. Squirrel and Scramble, too, were shaking their sides. The joke was on poor Tingaling, who looked cross enough to eat somebody. Without another word he stuck his pencil behind his ear and slid down the tree. knows it will take about ten years from her e.ge, but she hesitates, because she says a woman witn a reputation as a 'vamp' musn t look too kltteni-sn off the stage." "Luck was with me," announced Willy Van Eyck. "I had to have ray hair boobod after I had the flu last winter. Otherwise I know my motner never would have consented." "It's awfully convenient for a swira- mer, fast. you know,- said Midget, "uries after a dip. even without the aid of an electric fan. Bobbed hair is one of the distinctive features of beach fjishinns. this year." would have to plan for a smaller crown size, you t-oe." Even C orinne Caryl is considering hair trimmed in the latest having he: -styh .aid. Ann. "She fays she I summed up all of the rea.ons the his contributed, for bobbing m.v locks bloc. I intended to present them, en to mv husband. I didn't dare to shot'k him as C'hrs suggested: "Get it done, anyway. Jane. You'll look perfectly lovely with a halo, mj dear." . I r M mmm : l i Jenny wrap of brocade Kimono-like Wrap " Jenny, who makes the smartest wraps in Paris, has Just sent over one in blue and gold brocade and pussy willow. It is not nearly so complicated as it appears. In fact, I think it might quite easily be copied by the home dressmaker. The top part is cut ki mono fashion with the regulation ki mono cleeves. Then, preserving the straight lines, a skirt section is gath ered to this with a cord, the front with a heading two inches deep. And the whote turned up at the foot in a Turk ish hem. The great "squash" collar ia of the pussy-willow silk and fs fash ioned of a straight piece just long enough to. meet in front around tn shoulders, then gathered to fit the neck at the top. The collar is lined, as is the whole coat in. this model, with the same pussy-willow as is used on the outsi'de. uw ' ""J mrj, let it out for you, Mr. Tingaling?' called ''It's all right for you to give me the advice, Chrys," I replied. "You're Bob's twin sister and you've grown up de fying him. But I'm only his wife." "Keep on practicing with the crowd," the girls insisted. "We'll go in a body and call on Bob, if you say so, Jane." (To Be Continued) Appear At Your Best Instantly If you receive a sudden caller or an unexpected in vitation you can feel con fident of always appearing at your best. In but a few moments it renders to your skin a wonderfully pure, . r, . 1 s iCv CF & keyor" comparison. 2x In the kitchen of her own home Sister Mary cooks daily for a family of four adults. Shf brgught to her kitchen an understanding of the chemistry of cooking, gained from study of domestic science in a state univer sity. Consequently the advice she offers is a happy com bination of theory and practice. Every recipe she gives is her own, first tried out and served at her family table When the glass stopper of the vinegar or oil cruet; sticks, don't hit The most careful tapping has beeil known to crack the neck of the bottle. J ; Pour water over the outside of the cruet, gradually in creasing the temperatures The heat causes an almost in finitesimal amount of expansion of the glass holding the" stopper but enough to allow its easy removal. r This will not break even cut glass. The slowly in creasing heat tempers the glass, so there is no sudden change of temperature. Menu for Tomorrow i Breakfast Fresh pears, creamed dried beef, baking powder biscuits, coffee. V Luncheon Tomatoes stuffed and baked, bread and butter, pear conserve. tea. Dinner Salisbury steak, .nrencn friend potatoes, caluiflower in cream maple mousse, coffee. My Own Recipes If the steak is carefully prepared and attractively served,, the dinner will be worthy a "dressy" dessert such as maple mousse. The idea that foods must be in keeping with each other is not to be sneered at. Corned beef and cabbage would not be compatible with ice cream. But in this day of lost values, round steak sometimes has to be served to guests and the dessert relied upon to make a company dinner. Tomatoes Stuffed and Baked 4 large tomatoes. 2 ears of corn. 1 egg. x cup dried bread crumbs. Vi cup chopped cooked ham. , Pepper. Advice is the one thing that hasn't gone up in price it's still free. ready-to-eat and con taining its own sugar. A Popular Cereal That Saves You Money served with milk or cream, fresh fruit or berries, makes a delightful dish for home 1 folks or guests. This health-building food gains its wholesome. nut-like flavor from the twenty-hour baking of wheat and malt ed barley. All Grocers Sell GrapeNuts "Made by Postum Cereal Ca,Inc,Battle Creek, Mich. I'l T iJ.!Mk..l.,UWU1Wi.l.l,WMl.H. XL-it- -.-$Y'.i ' .- ' I I i vv M Yesrand its flavor is just y VV; as appealing as its aroma fef y Some Day-Every Day-Order Today - T?''SrS sad Say BEN H'JR Coffee S - - - Ss'"r' l tlSS JOANXKS BROS. CO. of toe Astfelea lti t 4?pZ&. BEN-1IIH Qclity Products t -lfc. Cut the top from tomatoes. Scoop1.- out inside pulp. Drain and use the to-'I hato juice to moisten stuffing, discard- ing seeds. Cut tops from kernels of corn and scrape out the milk. Mix. corn, tomato juice, bread crumbs and ham. Add well beaten yolk of eg,; Season with pepper "only if the ham ia salty. Fold in white of egg beataik -. stiff and dry. Fill tomatoes with mty -ture. Put a bit of butter on each io-, . mato and bake in ramekins. ' Pear Conserve 4 pounds pears. ' ' ' 3 pounds sugar. ;i 1 pound raisins. 2 lemons. 3 oranges. 1 cup English walnuts. " ""' Peel and core pears. Cut In emig i; pieces.. Peel oranges and lemons and t chop the peel. Cut the fruit into small "t pieces the same size as the pears. Put Jj ingredients into a preserving kettle and I boil till thick and the pears are trans--fj i when cold. " : . 1. 0 i. i ai -,i t.-,l -ll-..-.,' I'l. . .-.vW n