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Judge, 1933-03 · page 25 of 40

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Fashion Notes From the Nudist Colony Iss DINWIDDIE, this column's choice for Miss Nudist Colony in the coming Beauty Contest, was seen this morning in the pink of con- dition. Pink is a most becoming color for Miss Dinwiddie’s delicate blonde loveliness. Dr. Willie Nottenagle, the eminent psychologist, announced his engage- ment to Miss Estelle Fish Tuesday night at a most delightful dinner bridge. Miss Fish was dressed be- comingly in a platinum engagement ring and a bouquet of roses, while Dr. Nottenagle was just himself. The Lookout Beauty Shoppe an- nounces a new vanity secret for the spring season. Deep purple violet leaves for the left ear combined with faint lavender polish for the nails make an irresistable costume for milady’s fading winter wardrobe. The Public Health Committee takes this opportunity to warn honeymooners of the dangerous clump of poison ivy in Lover’s Nook. A new and fashionable note will be added to the Colony’s color scheme this coming summer. It is a shade of sunburn known as Morning Blush, and is most easily acquired by bask- ing for fifteen minutes under the noon sun for three or four consecu- tive days. The New Colony skiing club was the scene of a veritable fashion parade last Friday. Mrs. Honeycomb was seen with a lovely hand bag of ted silk which greatly enhanced her exotic beauty; Miss Millicent Butter- knuckle arrived dressed in a dainty sports handkerchief and green jade ear-rings; and Mr. J. Perry Lippin- cott, the dashing young sportsman from the East, looked most charming in ski boots and monocle. —KATHARINE BEST People Are Leery Of Every New Theory ELL me not in mournful numbers "dust how many have no work; Kings and Swedes and clerks and plumbers, Everything has gone berserk. echnocrats claim they'll remove it, And our lives will be sublime; They've got charts and graphs to prove it; Meanwhile, brother, got a dime? —R. C. O'BRIEN WITHIN THE REACH OF MILLIONS HE most valuable things on earth T=: the commonest things. Gifts of Mother Nature—air, rain, sun- light and colors in the sky, grass under- foot and foliage overhead. Gifts of human nature —love, loyalty, hand- clasps and friendly speech. Then, of material things, some of the most useful are the commonest and cheapest. These we take almost for granted. There is no way to reckon their actual worth. It is a great tribute to the value of the telephone that within a few short generations it has come to be ranked among these common things. Its daily use is a habit of millions of people. It speeds and eases and simplifies liv- ing. It extends the range of your own personality. It offers you gayety, sol- ace, security—a swift messenger in time of need. Daily it saves untold expense and waste, multiplies earning power, sweeps away confusion. Binds together the human fabric. Helps the individual man and woman to triumph over the complexities of a vast world. You cannot reckon fully the worth of so useful and universal a thing as the telephone. You can only know that its value may be infinite. The only hotelinNewY. where you can rent apartments with kitchens by the day, month or year, furnished or unfurnished, with full hotel service of with none at all. Under direction of Wilbur T Emerson Y Coe 12 EAST 86" ST.° + > NEW YORK