PAGE FOTTT?
irEDFOTCD MAIL TRIBUTE. TkfEDFORD. OREOON. THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1937.
BIG OUT BEAUTY
BY
ADVICE TO UN
Makeup Chief Says No
Woman Homely Unless
She Makes Self That Way
Right Methods Simple
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
United Press Hollywood Corre
spondent. (Copyright, 1937, by United Preaa)
HOLLYWOOD. Aug. 19. (UP)
Robert Stephanoff, who la responsible
iot the startling beauty on the screen
of dozens of Hollywood stars, report
ed today that no woman It homely
unless she personally makes herself
that way.
"So all we do here Is undo what
they have done and then accentuate
their own natural beauty, with re
sults which frequently are amazing.'
he added. "Our methods are sim
ple. Any woman can follow them."
Castor Oil Cleaner.
Stephanoff, who Is makeup chief
tain at the studios of Samuel Gold-
wyn, urged that as foundation for
all facial beauty, women use castor
oil at night as a cleansing cream.
"It la the finest cleanser there Is,"
he said. "It doesn't smell good, but
It works. It causes some skins to
sting; in that case olive oil makes
a god substitute."
Once the face Is clean actually
clean the business of beautifying It,
solely by optical illusions, Is In order.
"And real beauty treatments are
all optical Illusions." Stephanoff said.
"Say a woman Is thin and has hollow
checks. All she has to do Is pat
the hollows themselves with powder
four shades lighter than usual. Ten
she should powder the rest of her
face four shades darker than normal
and carefully blend the spots where
the two shades match.
Won't Know Self.
If she docs that properly, she hard
ly will know herself when she looks
In the mirror."
One of his best tricks, Stephanoff
said, Is the removal of double ohlns,
without diets, knives or anything but
some special rouge, which ordinarily
is difficult to get.
"It Is a rouge with a distinct brown
color," he added. "This should be
applied lightly to the baggy chin,
creating a shadow and causing It,
under normal lighting conditions, to
vanish. Insofar as spectators are con
cerned." He said he puts less rouge on
cheekbones which are too prominent;
more rouge on neck hollows, and
even finds it necessary to apply rouge
judiciously to many a feminine nose.
Too many women attempt to make
their mouths look smaller by applying
too little rouge, Instead of too much,
he continued, explaining:
How to Change Mouth.
"You can't change the alee of your
mouth, but you definitely can make
It look smaller by applying two dots
of lipstick, one at each end of the
mouth. This automatically makes
the mouth look smaller and inci
dentally, it makes the woman whose
mouth It Is, seem years younger." ,
There Is nothing a woman can do
about her eyes, he said, except
change the "frames."
"Wo consider the eye a picture and
the la Rhea and skin around it, the
frame," he snid. "You can change
the size and the shape of the frame
easily with a pencil and the effect
this has on the eye is surprising."
Stephanoff Is responsible now for
the makeup of such players as Mir
iam Hopkins, Helen Jepson, Merle
Oberon and Virginia Verrlll. He also
supervises the features of such mas
culine players as Oary Cooper, Joel
McCrea, Walter Brennan and many
another.
To Mmlt Garters
BERLIN (AP) Minimum measure
ments for suspenders, garters and
armbands are to be laid down by
the economic subcommittee which
Is coordinating the German sus
pender Industry with four-year plan
requirements.
School Bride Cuts Cake N. Y. MAYOR CHAIR
SECOND GREATEST
PRIZE IN POLITICS
Till, 17-yrar-old bride, Evelyn Steel. Is shown cutting her wedding rake
after the wed Tccumieh, Olka . htore clerk, Herele Cook (left). The
bride was granted her freedom from the Oklahoma Industrial School
for Girls following the ceremony.
Homesickness Hits CCC
Hardest in First Week
By Eddy Gllmore
WASHINGTON, Aug. 19. (AP)
The civilian conservation corps has
turned Its attention to that age-
old problem of youth homesickness
and what can be done about it.
American boys, It appears, pine for
home because of three big reasons;
1. Mother and dad.
2. The girl friend.
3. The pup.
Letter of Instruction number 6,
sent to all state directors who select
enrollees, indicates a lot can be done
about It.
The home folks can be encouraged
to write happy letters rather than
the kind which say:
"I saw Sally with the Jones boy
today and she never even asked about
you."
Or:
"Poor old Rover, he sleeps beside
your bed every night. He sure does
miss you."
Homesickness reared Its head in
the CCO camps about July 1, when
the corps started Its new policy of
enrolling youths between the ages
of 17 and 23. Last year the enroll
ment had a more adult tone 17 to
28. 1
Experience has proved that If the
camp officers can fight off home
sickness the first week, odds are that
the enrolle won't be stricken.
The corps Is waging Buch a relent
less battle against homesickness that
the camp officers have been given
a new title:
"D.O.H." Doctor of Homesick
ness."
There Is also a name for what
happens to violent cases "they go
over the hill" which means they up
and run for home.
K.F.
HELD IN SHOOTING
KLAMATH FALLS, Aug. 19. (AP)
Allen Session, 37, keeper of the
city dump, was In custody today as
a suspect In the shooting of Vernon
Hayes, 41, at Hayes home last Sun
day. The shooting was first reported as
"accidental." Hayes, however, now
recovering In a local hospital, yes
terday told Deputy District Attor
ney Orth Slsemore that there was
an argument between himself Session
and Mrs. Session and that as he
started to walk Into another room,
he looked back and saw a .38 caliber
rifle In Session's hands.
Mrs. Session was held as a material
witness.
A piece of Hayes' spine was chipped
off by the gunshot.
4
High Olver Lucky
UNION CITY, Ind. (AP) John
Snyder fell 40 feet from an eleva
tor into a wheat bin and got off
with a sprained foot.
Mure ArtmclarMlk
ROMS (AP) Production of arti
ficial silk In Italy this year Is ex
pected to be six times that of 1930.
4
Use Mail Prion ne want ads.
L
SALT LAKE, Aug. 19. (AP)
Jeremiah D. Stokes, attorney for the
United Prosperity Plan, Inc., said to
day that Iflom Lamb has been re
placed as president of the pension or
ganization he started less than a year
ago.
Lamb, who lost winter inaugurated
a test spending experiment at Chelan,
Wash., where aged persons were given
S200 a month to spend, Is succeeded
by his brother, J. D. Lamb, formerly
national supervisor and cashier,
Stokwi said.
Isom Lamb Is in California, assert
edly organizing other units of the
plan which was spread throughout
Utah and Idaho.
"Differences reached a point where
the board felt It was to the Interest
of the corporation and to the experi
mental test it is now conducting that
the president retire, subject to fur
ther action of the board," said Stokes.
The smallest parcel of real estate
In the world la a two-foot long
triangle on a New York sidewalk.
4
Closing time for Too Late to CI as
stfy Ads Is 1 :30 p. m.
Rules Richest City ir, World,
More Public Employes
Than Any State Coming
Election National Hint
By Roger D. Greene
NEW YORK. Aug. 19. (AP) One
of the nation's greatest political
prizes sometimes considered second
only to the presidency will go to
the winner of New York's mayoralty
election on November 2, with pos
sible country-wide significance hing
ing on the outcome.
The man who sits In City hall,
In the heart of the lower Manhattan
"melting pot" fringed by Chinatown
and the Ghetto, carries more power
then most governors.
He rules:
The richest city In the world, with
an sssessed reslty value of 16,599,
696,194 and a 1937 administrative
budget of $562,998,917.
Biggest population (7,601,570) next
to greater London's 6,202,818.
World's biggest port with fl78
miles of shoreline within the city
limit.
Greatest Employer
And more public employes (178,
468) than any state in the union.
Prom a national standpoint, the
election may well serve as a pol
itical weather vane. The paramount
Issue is the new deal.
Leading the assault Is the gentle
voiced, Joke-cracking Senator Dr.
Royal S. "Health Hints" Copeland,
who likes to Bit on front porches
snd talk over political ailments in
the manner of the old-fashioned
country doctor.
A Democrat, Senator Copeland has
entered both the Republican and
Democratic primaries, hoping to ral
ly enough. antl-Roosevelt votes to
conquer his two chief rivals the
incumbent Mayor Florello "Little
Flower" H. LaQuardla and former
Supreme Court Justice Jeremiah
Titus Mahoney, both new dealers.
Contrasting Personalities
A quick glance at the trio reveals
sharply contrasting personalities.
LA OUARDIA Short, five, feet,
two Inches, chunky, hot-tempered, a
human dynamo, La Cmardla was
christened Florello Enrico but later
Americanized his middle name to
Henry.
Famed as a Nazi -baiter, he re
cently called Hitler "that brown-
shlrted maniac" and wanted to put
wax Image of the reichsfuehrer
In a "chamber of horrors" at the
9 world's fair an Incident which
caused headaches In the state de
partment at Washington but failed
to silence . the volatile "Little
Flower."
La Guardla won seven successive
elections as a Republican in sup
posedly Impregnable Democratic con
gressional districts six times to
congress, in the house of represen
tatives, and once as president of
the board of aldermen. He came In
as fusion mayor In 1933 to "clean
house" after the debacle of Jimmy
Walker's regime.
His phobias: bankers, lawyers,
Wall street, public utility corpora
tions, rackets, red tape, slums.
Staunch for New Deal
He's a staunch advocate of the
new deal.
MAHONEY Mahoney rose from
the son of a poor Irish immigrant
to a $150.000-a-year income In pri
vate law practice.
He's a Tammany man but out
spoken foe of the present leoderr
ship.
Like La Guardla, he is Intensely
anti-Hitler and resigned as presi
dent of the American Athletic Un
ion when It refused to take a stand
against American participation In
the 1936 Olympic Games In Berlin.
Mnhoney Is one of the few men
who ever had hand-to-hnnd scuf
fle with Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
In 1920 when both were New York
delOKates to the democratic national
convention in San Francisco, Ma
honey was guarding the New York
state standard and objected when a
group of other delegates, heeded by
Roosevelt, tried to seize the standard
to Join in a demonstration for Wood
row Wilson. Roosevelt got the stand
ard but only after a hot struggle.
COPELAND Copeland spent the
first 13 years of bis working life
teaching medicine at the University
of Michigan. Entered politics almost
unintentionally, through sheer pop
ularity, when elected mayor of Ann
Arbor, Mich.; thence came to New
York, In 1918, when Mayor John F.
Hylan appointed him health com
missioner. The Tammany party machine sent
him to congress. There, during his
two terms in the senate, he has ad
vocated the soldiers' bonus and
sharply criticized the new deal.
Dr. Copeland In the present cam
paign would rather talk about health
than the new deal. He refused to
accept the new deal as the main
Issue, declaring:
"My purpose is to moke New York
easier to live in, healthier and safer
for its thousands of under-privileged
citizens."
"Whoever loved that loved not at
first sight" is a line from Christo
pher Marlowe's poem "Hero and
Leander."
E
( Editor', note. The following let
ter wu received from Jack Thomp
son, who with Jerry Vawter and Bud
Thlerolf, Is attending the world
Jamboree of Boy Scouts In Vogelen
zong. Holland).
"We got up at 7:30 a. m. July 29
and left our London hotel at 8 a.
m. for the train that will take us
to the boat. We left the underground
railroad for the Liverpool street sta
tion and boarded the train which
took us right up to the gang-plank
and we boarded the boat after go
ing through the Immigration rou
tine. We had a three-hour boat ride
to Flushing, Holland. From Flushing,
we boarded another train for Vogel-
enzang. We had to go through the
customs house at Flushing, and we
had very quick Inspection. We ar
rived In Vogelenzang at 10 p. m. and
set up our tents.
"July 30. We spent most of the
day getting our camp cleaned up
and fixing our tenU better.
"July 81. In the momlng'we went
to the market place which Is very
Interesting because there you meet
a boy from every nation. It la quite
Interesting to talk to these boys. In
the afternoon we had a review par
ade In front of Lord Baxden-Powell
and the Queen of Holland. Then at
night we had a campflre where a
group of scouts from all different
nation did some entertaining. On
Sunday we have a general church
service and spend most of the time
at the market place trading with
scouts."
Lost Gold Hunted
BELFAST (AP) The steamer At
tendant haa gone to Swllly, County
Donegal, In an attempt to recover
1250.000 In bar gold from the liner
Laurentlc, sunk during the World
war.
Phone 343 We'll nam away your
refuse City Sanitary Service.
BOY WILL ENTER
COLLEGE AT 12
AUSTIN. Tex. (AP) A mathemat
ics professor's son plana to enter
college a year from September at
the age of 12.
The boy. Martin Ettllnger. began
bis studies In private elementary
school when he was four and com
pleted the grades In two years. Then
be sprinted through Junior high
school In a year.
Hla parents decided to put him
on a half-day schedule In high
school so he wouldn't be graduated
too young. He could have qualified
for college entrance last year but
hrnadenerf his studies to Include
many elective subjects.
Educators neneve ms bijwuj
demlc advancement Is due to hla
ability to read rapidly and remem
ber what he reads. Three years ago
they discovered he could read back
wards equally well.
DOUBIE
PT.M TiP' pupil i - v.-.
, twill 1
AGING WINTER AND SUMMER FOR
2 WHOLE YEARS BRINGS YOU THIS
WHISKEY WITH "NO ROUGH EDGES"
Get the low-down on TEN HIGH, thewhiskej
wilh "no rough edges". Formerly, whike
matured more slowly in winter than in sum
mer, but in Hiram Walker's modern weather
controlled rackhouses, summer temperature it
maintained every minute ot even
month. That's why TEN HIGH
is the whiskey with "no rougl'
edges." Try TEN HIGH tonight '
Mm
cwr-
00 PROOF Hiram Walker Bona, Peoria. Illlmils; Walkertllle,
Ontario' 01aKw, S tut land
THIS vVHISKEY IS NOW 2 TEARS OLD
a
ri f ii
fJriP winuF rig sPFr.iAi s
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
EPARTMENTSToREi
argain Basement Close-Out
ONLY EIGHT
MORE DAYS
Only EIGHT more shopping days until we move into our New
Main Street Location. The Bargain Basement has hundreds of
Bargains left for the closing days of this complete close out sale.
Below are a Few of the Many Bargains Waiting for You
Ladies' House
yk noccccc
110 liaaies nouse ui eases, uew
styles, every dress fast color, Values
to $1.19.
Friday and Saturday
Choice 69c
RAYON GOWNS
Ladies' Rayon Gowns, regular 98c
values
69c ea.
Boys' Corduroy Pants
A regular $1.49 value. Friday and Saturday
m
M
km
ml
U
A
Knee Length
HOSE
35 dozen pure silk Knee Length
Hose. All the best Summer
shades. Klngless. Lastex top.
Pr. 25c
Limit Four Pair to a customer.
Terry Cloth Robes
Attractive plaid terry cloth robes, Regular
98c values for 69c
$1.00 pair
Children's Shoes
Get Ready
For School
Here are wonderful values in
shoes. Choice of entire Basement
stock of children's shoes
ilk
pair $1.00
Ladies' Rayon Slips
Flesh or white. All s
each 48c
Lace trimmed. Flesh or white. All sizes. An excep
tional value at
Boys' School Shirts
Blue or Grey Shirts. Sizes 12yi to 14J
Limit four to a customer
each 29c
Fruit Packers Gloves All You Want Pair 6c
Men's Dress Sox
No man ever had enough sox you can afford
to at this price
2 pairs 15c
Men's Work Shirts
Values to 58c -
Removal
Sale Price
39c
11
Great Values in Shoes
Men, you can't beat t'.iese values in shoes.
Choice of any man's shoe in the Basement
work or dress ; values to $3.95
pair $1.98
Boys' Dress Shoes
Dress Oxfords or heavy school shoes.
Values to $3.45. Removal sale
pair $1.98
Hundreds of Other Specials Throughout The Basement
. rVl. DEPARTMENT STORE
Chas. S. Adair
Manager
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