The Banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1923-1933, June 11, 1923, Image 5

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THB BANNER-HUKAEP. ATHENS, GEOKBIX MISS MAROARET CJI.UOAN TRE PARIN'Q A PERMANENT WAVS. frills Abound on Children’s Frocks from Paris care can. Straight hair, and bald h<ad« naturally follow and make Nialceta for us." Just Practicin’ ■ plain, «trlp«a lid dnekid fabric, for play drlMm. „ < t y- Th* children!. frock* that come from Parle are frllllor than they have been far eotne oeaion* paat. uelnl rotra of valenclennce lace, nifRe* and rlhbona for trimming,. Many of them depart 'from the straight lino rule and aro hlouaed on low walatllne* with very foil ahlrroif iklrta or made with baanued hioueea; Taffetas nnd organdie are used for dreaa-yp frocka and a variety of • .. LEATH in 'suit, irr&fi Ha leather Jacket ban atready achieved a notable anoceaa In .the world of fashion, nut now cornea Um entire leather Bolt of htoWil eat, on straight lines, trimmed only wit* buttons and straps. With It fa worn a .tan, leathgr ha»-clpc!io. of cooraj. A hoot*iack stop a fira plug In Un- m Square, Sew York, practicing on *s month organ for the competition nst Win send the hrsf harmonica , >■" In th* city to Philadelphia May • nbys from many cities will deride the national barmoh- * championahlp. atnvnAT, JUNE 11, 1923. r-jr- ' ■" Home Influence vs. Automobile lt*9 Battle Of Good Against Evil For Youth’s Future, Says j > - ! 8 Student on Children ;. I MTJSKOOEB, Okla.—Bring bgfk the old-faahioned living room-table. Hr 1 nff bark the front porch swing an 1. If you -want real, romantic joy gram, take out the one-horse shay. Thus will the home return to its form*r glory, nssorta Mrs. V. Janet jf-ckman, teacher nnd mother of Helen Heckman, “Oklahoma's tVon- <!<*r flirt." And, to assure the devel opment .of character nnd fineness In pur youth, she adds, beware of fall ing a victim to the automobile. Mrs, Heckman has written nrtj- (•:,>* and books on children and their development; and from h<r studies 1 has concluded -this age of automo- 1 h:I«s and petting parties has bem ruinous fo our youth. Auto to Blame. •The automobile, one of the great est and most useful of our modern Invcaftsiftrarst highly destructive to our youthv ha* robbed the'home of Sts former charm nnd interest for the tdilM Slid, In many Instances, for the pfwebts as well," she says. "It has led them Into places of amuirment unthought or unheard of lifef , or*m and divided the Interests of tho family. •The ; patting of the living-room table iln '?<* many of our modern homes It the reason for so many de linquencies In the boy and girl of today. With Its passing, the fineness; of our youth has suffered, their! character undeveloped. j “So longer do we have the home-} NUo picture of the father on one! side of the table, the mother or! the other, with their sons an | •laughters grouped .about reading from constructive books of an «ve-| hlng. discussing, exchanging and washing thoughts ’ and. passing 1 judgment upon their values. . Generalship Needed. . "With parents r.o longer like gen-J erals. drlillrg and training their■ roam* r;emits, the homo Is losing Ita fou'idattoa for strength and fall* U the purpose for which It was In tended. • “After a'l, the modern boy and Klrl rre really a reflection of the horn \ For !s this not nn ago of parental lrr< spoupIbltUy? Has rot tho parents’ Indifference, ns a rule, cau>cd tli* Ir children to* drift from their Influence Into the modern maelstrom of pleasure? "With tho rc-establishment of the substantial rending, table In the horn?, filth broadening literature tot the child upon It, the parent and tho child growing In constructive thought together and with tho in* troductlon of the study aqd practice of good rnurlc, w<> will heir less of Juvenile delinquencies." 9 — .-.I./* Blame Falling Hair on Mother IT’S CAUSED BY DAILY WASHING IN INFANCY, SAYS CHAMPION MARCEL WAVER By MARIAN HALE. NRW, .TroUIC.—Would you, dear mother, clean your scalp In soap nnd water, every.day la tho work, woe!: In aul week out? of course, you wouldn't! Just third: what would become of your! hair If you did. It would become j •lry and thin, and eventually fall! Yet. If your casa 4s rot txcfp-j tlonal; you nr-i hampering tin-1 growth nnd lifo of your child** hair ’ by exactly this .sort of treatment. This statement Is made n* Ing to American mothfra, fr York’s champion' waver, Til garit OHIIgan, who recently prlzr* of fl.ADO from the American Mister Hairdressers’ Association Many a dny Miss flll’lgnn transformed 13 stMight - hatred women Into Mary Pick fords, and 3,w)rt heads a year I* a fairly con servative rtf! mate. she hollevcs. She Knows Hair. TIhp ( Ofrfgan has delved Into nil the secrets of the hair. She knows Its Inner life nnd fractions. Sh* he- Hfves tho Cnucnsinn race should naturally have wavy and curly hair Baldness .and idrnlsht hair, sh" *>JS are directly traceablo to* bad care of tho sca’p In Infancy. "We do something to babies’ heidV- aha:told me, "Which no sen- *Uilo adult would do to* hrr own hair. Imagine washlm; your scalp In soap and water ones or twice a •by! Yet that frequently happens to t o baby. "Human %*Jr Jttetf Is A wsste . product nnd grows potter If’It Is only t'aror.ah^ elinnsed than when it !« washed outf, Hair consists of two sul *tance#f?y»e. Is tho actual atrue- tu.e, horny and stiff, the other la ’he fat which fills up the structure, mating it soft and pliable. • . Fat Essential. •This fat alfo permeates the r'ands nnd upper layers of the * f alp.|It is this fnt which warm '•.'itef and soap dissolve both from the hair atid the scalp. As wash ings remove It from the structure. th> scalp shrinks, the hair becomes finer In diameter and finally grows f •hiatured And straight Instead of-* true and curly." "Why does the Hair curl at aU.” I-nrkrd. ‘ "Humidity,” she replied. "Toil »•*.• how Curly the hair becomes on a hot rainy day: The humidity of tho human body should be sufficient to curl normal hair, but It will curl only if in a condition to absorb hu midity^ rj “W£W»ih-tha baby's Jreed dilly N Where Cqp “We” Buy a Home Buy a lot and build V Rent a home Rent an apartment Place a loan v Get Board , City Suburb Country Rent a Room City Suburb Country Read Banner-Herald Want Ads f ’Twas Cowper who penned these memorable lines j “ "This fond attachment to the well-known place “Where first we started into life’s long race, “Maintains its hold with such unhung sway “We feel it e’en in age, and at our latest day.” \ T HE making of a home is your next obligation and opportunity. What an adventure is ahead of you in this seeking of a site for your “love nest” I And how happy you will be when that goal is reached ! But where to go and what to do are problems quite easy of solution these days. . There is a unique clearing house of ideas ana suggestions to which you should turn—to which thousands have al- rcady turned and to their advantage—the Beal Estate advertisements . in the Classified Section, both dsily and Sunday, W HAT interesting experiences you will have as you read the advertisements under the headings “For Sale” cr “For Rent” in The Banner-Herald 1 How eagerly you.will make notes about this house and that, its location in the. city, In the suburbs, in the country or at the “shore”! How you will picture yourself in all of these places that will be shown to you by the real estate men whose names appear in The Banner-Herald, P ERHAPS you want to build .and are wondering how to finance your home; how you might pay for it os others are doing, by making monthly deposits as your mother and father are perhaps paying rent. Read the advertisements under “Money to Loan.” T HESE advertisers will'arrange to get the funds and finance your house, through .first and second mortgages. H ERE you will learn the names of thoso who will give you all the necessary informatics about the purchase of a homo. Hun dreds of thousands of homes are bought on simple systems of installment mortgages. Get al) the facts by learning from those whe advertise in The -Banner-Herald — the progressive men In the real estate business who>have tho means to finance you and can afford to finance you at the smallest possible cost. R EAD all of the advertisements on tho Real Estate Pages of The Herald. Note the headings or classifications and you’ll find any number of interesting .announcements for those who are just about to undertake the starting of a home In the city, or the country. You’ll be surprised how many things will be made easier and cheaper for you if you consult thoso who use The Herald to explain what they can do and are doing for those who are looking for a home. A PARTMENTS—You will find advertisements every day in the Apartments For Rent column. The best places that are For Rent in the city. In many cases it is possible ‘to buy a two- family apartment. You can live In one and rent the other. The one rented will bring you In enough rermue to reduce your rent to a very small amount. .»•- I / B OARDING houses t That’s where you can depend, upon The - Herald if you contemplate hoarding until you will go into a home of your own la.tcr. One must bo very careful in the selec tion of a room, and you run no risk if you follow these advertisements in this newspaper. Y,ou cannot afford to take any chances, and you do not have to take any chances. T URN to the Classified Section right now and read the real estate advertisements carefully. ' Make notes and call today or go to see the advertiser, or write at once for the information you re quire. It will pay you to read these interesting and informative ad vertisements regularly, and they will prove helpful, ■> » x# Athens’ Want Ad Director#^ Classified Advertising Dept: / Telephohe 75. i “Phone Your Ad” /