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LIQUID CREAM SHAMPOO
It's new! It’s different! It’s not just a liquid . . . not just a cream. It's a combination of the best of both. That’s Wildroot Liquid Cream Shampoo.
A deep-down cleanser
Wildroot is a soapless shampoo , a deep cleanser that floods away loose dandruff, cuts grease and grime without drying up precious natural oils.
Leaves hair gleaming bright
Wildroot Liquid Cream Shampoo leaves hair so clean, so springy, so manageable that a set seems to fall into place. Lathers in hardest water. Needs no special rinse.
It's right for your hair
Whether your hair is dry or oily, baby soft or wiry, blond or brunette, try Wildroot Liquid Cream Shampoo just once, and you'll agree it’s right for your hair . . . good for your hair. Remember, it contains soothing lanolin.
Soapless Sudsy • • • Lanolin Lovely!
THREE SIZES:
29 c 59 c 98c
(plus tax)
P. S. To keep hair neat between shampoos use Lady II ildroot Cream Hair Dressing.
to keep her feet firmly on the ground. And now, when she has everything, she hasn't forgotten what it means to have so little. If she should ever forget, Geary will be there to remind her.
“I didn’t know Jane when she was a little girl,” he says, "but I do know how hard she worked doing things for other people. I know, too, how little she had. I think that’s one reason she is so sweet and considerate. She is also very sensible, naturally. And should she ever get cocky, I’ll be there to take her down right quick.”
Geary’s indispensable to Jane and she knows it. So much so that at first she was miserable when he left her. The first year of their marriage, therefore, had its little ups and downs. But the world never heard about their quarrels because they never occurred in night clubs, and Jane never went heme to Mama.
JANE isn’t perfect, you can take both her and Geary's word for it. And neither is he. He likes to play tennis. So Jane is often a tennis widow. At first it irked her.
"Janie is understanding about it now,” Geary says, “and doesn’t fume about my going out for a few sets of tennis with the fellows. She did at first. I’d tell her to come along, if she wanted, but I knew she didn’t. She’d want to know what time I’d be home, and I’d say, "Oh, around two o’clock,’ going out about ten in the morning. Well, you can t tell about those things so maybe I wouldn't get in until four o’clock. Then she would be mad. But I soon made her see that recreation was important to me, and that no marriage would last if a man turned namby-pamby. Now, when I play tennis, she is busy about the house and with the baby and I don’t think she even misses me.”
Also Jane loves to cook. And Geary likes to eat. So this is another important contribution to their marriage. Like all good cooks, she likes to experiment with wines and sauces — and like most American husbands, Geary often fails to appreciate the mystery of the cuisine. It hurts, but he tells her. And she files that dish among her souvenirs. When he does enjoy a dish, which is more often the case, he tells her too. And you should hear him brag about her souffles when she isn’t around!
There were numerous other difficulties to iron out that first year. Jane is sensitive, a hangover from childhood, and sometimes feels a slight when Geary is sure none is intended. Once she came home highly critical of a fellow worker and, pouring out her accusations to Geary, she waited for the words of sympathy that she felt sure would follow
Instead, Geary told her quietly, “You never knew this person before. That’s probably just his way of talking. You don t like it. Well, there may be something about you that he doesn’t like. Let’s have this guy for dinner and play a game of looking for his good traits.”
Today, this man is one of their good friends. Together, they’ve worked out a system of finding something pleasant in the seemingly most objectionable people. And a couple who practice looking for good in others must apply the same method at home — and so avoid that road which leads to divorce courts.
By this time everyone knows that the happiest reason of all for Jane and Geary’s happy marriage is little Geary Steffan the third, who will be one year old in July. Jane sings him lullabies and she tells him about the four more little Steffans who she and his daddy hope will share his nursery within the next few years.
Always when Jane talks about the family she wants, a wistful note creeps into her voice. “I was so lonely,” she says. “I remember begging my parents for a sister