EVENING LEDOER-PHrLADELPHIA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10,101G SIMPLE REMEDIES TO BEAUTIFY COMPLEXION By LUCREZIA DORI rrlm Donn of lh Metropolian Optra l'ompnr -. hmM umhUvIaii !. tiali -nnA concern thsn inr olhtr feature of fcMuty. Thru-fourths of the letter I re. !iva request remedies that will remo rlL KUmiha Blackheads, enlarged pores, PKffl m bl.lv. l-lll,.ri. Btl.l .ssllowness of color rob many women of bcxmI looks, while others nre troubled with freckles, moth patches, moles nnd arlous other Kkln dlscoloratlons. Since It Is Impossible to an wer each of thcso let ters "individually 1 take this opportunity to suggest a treatment to remedy skin blemishes Freckles nre the most coymor. of skin dlscoloratlons. Despite all precautions taken to present the little brown spots from arpearlng on the white surface. It Is Impossible to keep some fncce from freckling. Usually those whoso skin Is the moi delicate are thoso who freckle most easily when exposed to the wind and ,0"' TO BANISH KltECKMM If the freckles are not deep they will Uld to the application of lemon Juice or leroxlde of hydrogen, flood results nre btalned by first applying tho lemon Juice, and when It has dried cont tho surface with peroxide, This lotion will also proo efficacious niid or tine , ... -.. rnw i v w bUcmasiA Bom ublodld or oiimuin pirin K Hram IS drnms IS, drams nlvrrrln At night, before retiring, spread the piisto pon the freckles. In tho morning remove what remains with powdered borax mixed with almond oil. Constant use of buttermilk ns a wash Is 'also recommended for freckle. It Is nortcn tnr and bleaching. Fresh horseradish, grated, adds potency to the implication A. ublespoonful of the root Is put Into a half pint of the milk. Tho mixture Is then covered and allowed to stand for te)e !,ou" Tn" It ' atralned and the lotion npplled to the skin A simple bleach which haa ghen suc cessful results in many Instances la made of the following ingredients: iiKUji;rM a "" Uljwrln . ,1 nunc Apply (his mernlng and night and sev eral times during the day If oonenlrht. Allow It to dry Into the skin Should It seem to Irritate the skin apply a coating of cold cream afterward. Moth patches can be removed by the nppllcation of colorless tincture of Iodine. This remed la also Rood for freckles The trouble In removing these disfigurements Is due to the fact that the coloring matter Is deposited, not In the superficial lajer of the skin but deeper M5MOVINO MOTH PATCIIRS In order to hae the application success ful the outer layer must be penetrated The skin Is reddened by this, but moth patches nnd freckles will not disappear until this Is done Care should be taken, however, not to Irrltnte the skin too much with the applications. It Is batter to wait a while before renewing them It tho akin shows Blgns of Irritation. The removal of moles Is a more serious matter They can be taken away by means of the elcctrlo needle or they can be cut out In any case, no matter what the blem ish on the face may be, do not allow any ono to treat It who Is not skilled In such matters Always bear In mind when trying to remove Imperfections about the eyes or the upper part of tho cheeks that the skin Is exceedingly tender and sensitive Acids of different kinds are used to re move moles nnd mbth patches, but you should be moSt careful In their applica tion I do not recommend the use of these acids by ono unaccustomed to them Disastrous results have often followed when unskilled hands have attempted to remove skin disfigurements You cannot bo ton careful In such matters. 1 advise you to consult a skin specialist, particularly j when the blemishes nppcar on tho face. liopyrigni.i SPRY MRS. HUGHES COMES UP SMILING ON POLITICAL ORDEAL Shows Little Trace of Weariness' After 20,000-Mile Tour of Country as Husband's Aid PROVES STERN MA'STER HOUSEHOLD -HELPS CORNMEAL. Is so rich In starch nnd (at that It makes an ideal cold weather dish, and, Incidentally, It Is ono of tho Cheapen of cereals. It Is worth while waking a special effort to vary dornmeal Vlshes frequently so that tho family doesn't tire of It The best method of preparing cornmcnl Is first to dissolve' It In cold water beforo adding boiling water. This method prevents lumpiness If the cornmcnl Is to bo used for fried mush It is better to use very llttlo water In cooking. Also uso small mold In stead of large ones, as siloes cut from the latter often break and are thercforo not as uniform nnd appetizing as the smaller slices If the cornmeaUs to be used for munina r for corn cake, scald It with boiling water and then allow It to stand for a few minutes before tho other Ingredients are added. The finer the cornmcal Is ground the better Is the quality, but the whitest cornmeal Is not necessarily tho best. In fact, the yellow cornmeal has a great deal Bore flavor than the white varieties. GOLDEN CORN CAKK Three-quarters cupful of cornmeal, on? and one-quarter cupfuU of flour, five teu tpoonfuls of baking powder, one-half tea spoonful of salt, one-quarter cupful of ugar, one egg, one cupful of milk, two tabletpoonfuls of melted butter. Sift the dry ingredients together. Then beat the egg thoroughly, add It to the milk and butter and then mix with dry lngre- Some Cornmeal Recipes iIlentH, four Into a buttered pan and bake twenty minutes In a hot oven Cornmcnl mush may be fried In either of these wih The cornmcal should be cooked In very llttlo water, then poured Into n squaro bread mold and allowed to beconio cold h'llce In thick sections, dip In flour, beaten egg and bread crumbs and fry In deep fnt Or tho hot cornmeal can bo poured Into small ttiuflltt molds and al lowed to glow cold, after which each little lornmcal mullln can bo removed individu ally, dipped in tho flout, egg nnd bread crumbs and fried. svi:irr cornmeal muffins Two cupfuls of comment, one ctfpful of flour, one tcnpoonful of salt, Ave tea spoonfuls of baking powder one-half cup ful of currants, ono and one-half cupfuls of milk, one-half cup butter, three-quarters cupful of sugar, three eggs. Cream tho butter, add the augar slowly, then the beaten eggs and milk. Sift together all the dry Ingredients nnd slowly add the raisins at the last. Butter gem tins and pour In tho mixture. COKNMKAL (lniDDLi: CAKES One-half cupful of cornmeal, two cupfuls of flour, one nnd one-half teaspoonfuls of salt, one and one-half tent,poonfuls of bak ing powder, one-third cupful of sugar, one nnd one-half cupfuls of boiling water, one and one-punrter cupfuls of milk, one egg, two tablcspoonfuls of melted butter. The meal Is boiled lo minutes, turned Into a bowl and milk Is added. Mix to gether the dry Ingredients and sift In, then add a beaten egg and melted butter and cook -on griddle pan. (Copyright? Dy M'LISS A very spry woman came to Philadel phia last night, so spry that unless you hadn't been reading about It In tho papers for the last few weeks jou would never believe that she Is on the final lap of n Journey that would have sapped the vitality of the most dycd-ln-the-wool campaigner. Mrs. Charles Kvans Hughes optimists are already calling her the next "first lady" of the land did not show the slightest trace of the fatigue that might have been expected of her after her SO.OOO-mlle tour of the country. She has bucked the democ racy of the solid and not always courteous South, as was demonstrated by a Nash ville audience who forgot themselves and cheered Democrats doctrines while her husband was expounding Republican ones. She .has kept pace with her husband's trail over the alkali plains of the South west and the mountain passes of the Rock ies She has donned a miner's suit In order to descend by his side Into the bowels of the earth. She has met thousands of peo ple all along the lines; haa shaken enough hands to call ua her own! has been awak ened morn after morn before the sun was up by Importunate enthusiasts who could not wait until a respectable hour In order to express their pleasure at her coming And through It all, she has Come up smiling "It Is not because t am tired that I refuse Interviews," -she" told me, gracious even In her refusal, "it Is merely be cause I cannot bear, and never will be able to, to see myself quoted In print." There Is a certain sprlngness about Antoinette Hughes an air of inexhaustible outh that some fortunate persons have which belles the fact that she is old enough to be a grandmother, and Is one, In fact. As she walked down the tralnshed last night, her arm linked companlonably through that of the Major's wife, there was the athletic buoyancy In her tread of a college girl's The easy poise and fine upright carriage made you think Instantly of ono who has lived out a great deal, and this Is right. She Is nn enthusiastic pedes trian nnd an expert mountain climber. Her generous mouth has crinkly, humor ous little lines at the corners and sho smiles nt you In n way that sas, "I have never heard an) thing so Interesting as that which jou are now telling me." Urown even which focus on you Intensely as you address her enhance the Impression. Her hair, 'very dark brown. In which time has left a few traces, Is drawn back with a severity which few women could stand, but somehow the patrician quality of her fea tures In Intensified by this uncompromising collTure. Next to the regal nttlro of Mrs. Stole, bur', who wore a long pearl gray cloak and a black picture hat with graceful paradise feathers encircling Its crown, Mrs. Hughes seemed almost puritanically gowned. Her dark clvet toque, with Its touch of fur and tiny flower, was merely a smart traveling hat that any one of us might have worn without being conspicuous. The dark-blue taffeta suit, wfth a bit of dull gold embroidery nt the belt, set off the slenderness of her figure to good ndvantage, and the high, boned collar of her net blouse was entirely In keeping with her costume. Somehow I cannot picture this very digni fied, reticent woman In a low-necked blouse. Mrs. Hughes la noted for her ,levo tlon to her children and her fireside. Her 1 campaign tour, as well as her suffrage Inclinations, prove conclusively that she MRS. STATE SUNDAY SCHOOLS OPEN SESSION AT YORK Heinz Presides at Start of Con vention in Tabernacle" Many Cities Represented Yoniv, Oct. 10. Officers of the Pcnnsl. vanla State Sabbath Sehool Association, with many delegates, are coming Into York today for the annual convention, which will open tomorrow. H J Ileitis, of 1'itUburgh. wilt preside over the sessions Some of the most noted Sunday school workers In the country nre on the program, Sessions will be held In the Illcdrrwolf tabernacle, which has been allowed to stand ever since last )iar's cvnn gfllstlc campaign This cents 5000 A conference for older boys nhd girls, with ft program arranged particular!) for their ages, will open this afternoon and wilt continue until tomorrow night. Sessions of the convention proper will not begin until tomorrow. For the older folk tonight, a local choir of 1000 voices organized for the occnslon will render a concert of special numbers. ,m v xv . m k. V I I ll !! . Ji. I MISS MILDRED COGHLAN This iliolr also will appear at sessions of the convention Tho music for the convention wilt bo In the hands of Phlladelphlana Robert M. Clark as director, llentlcy I). Ackley as pianist, and F. Nevln Wlcst, cornctlst. LovfcaAiismiRs SHE WILL WED TOD , i Miss Mildred G. CoghUn to como Bride of 3. CUratvta Arnold, of Clcarfleld, Pa. Cupid haa made a raid upon that : nurses at me I'oiycnnio HoiprtM. His most recent victim for thbi.ta' no means his tint Mtdt to thai MMholtoJ -m mips itiuurcu u. vvRiiimrit am) an ' nounced with rtratllng auddennwaa tha. she Is to Im married today to J, CMtrene . Arnold, of Clearfield, I'a. Mls Coghlan, who was graduate) from tho hospital' training school, I rvfkrded an one of the most export members t her profession In Philadelphia Her personal Ity had endeared her to patient nnd oi leagues. Hence the feeling prevelant at th hospital this morning that tho Inrtttutloi haa suffered a loss through CtpM'a latest prank. Miss Coghlan lives nt 634 North Forty eighth street, Her fiance la a buehMM man The wedding will tako place at Our MoMmj of sorrows enmone cnurcn, Korty-etghti street nnd Ijincaster avenue, the Rv,'Fath er Kane odlclntlng Mr nnd Mrs. Arnoki will reside In Clearfield CHARLES E. HUGHES does not believe woman's place to be the home at alt times, but her actions on tour, those who have observed them declare, fur nish Indisputable proof of tho fact that she can make a homo of almost any place, even an Itinerant Pullman car Her husband Is campaigning for nn election. Perhnps she Is, too. Indirectly. Rut directly she has been campaigning for him. His comfort has been her chief plan. H was she who put the ban on out door speech-making when Mr, Hughes's voice gave signs of weakening. It was she who commanded absoluto rest on Sun days, so thnt the work of the week could be more effectively performed That men In public life owe to otmra as well as to themselves not to become mental and ph)s!cnl wrecks from overstrnln Is ono of her beliefs. The excellent physical con dition of the Republican nominee testifies to her ability to put her beliefs In prac tice, Thoso who havo crltlclxed Mrs Hughes for her aloofness; for her unwillingness to give the publla a peep Into tho Intimacies of her home life need only to havo seen the light of Joy hi her eye thnt I saw last night, to havo sympathized with her desire to keep what Is m dear to her sacred from the publto gaze. Philadelphia la tho nearest spot to home that she haa set foot onvslnco starting forth on what must have been for a woman a grueling experience. Her chil dren nre at the end of tho Journey Helen, the eldest daugHcr, who Is a graduate of Vnsiiar: Catherine, the second daughter, who expects to matriculate at Wellesley, her mother's alma mater; Elizabeth) the youngest, a student at the Cathedral School for Girls In Washington; tc say nothing of Charles, Jr., and his young wife and tho wee grandson. And It Is a safe bet to muko that nil the political triumphs, all tho honors that have boen heaped upon her will not give her the same sense of Joy as reunion with these Mrs. Hughes Is like that. t e " ' SB a -j ooai imsaketi fine Over the stumbling Hocks in one jump Heretofore typewriting speed has been blocked by machine limitations. By a simple invention the SELF STARTING REMINGTON TYPEWRITER Grand Prist Panama-Paufic Expttititn .gives kn automatic speed gain of 15 to 25 per cent. 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