Give your face | ttccu I Erase telltale age lines, wrinkles and crows-feet this easy, sure scientific way Kathryn Murray Home Facial treat- ments stren gthen facial muscles through simple facial exercises, produce amaz- ing results. Have helped 40,000 women look years younger. Send today for free booklet Free Booklet Tells How No obligation. No salesman will call. Act I now. Give your face a new and younger look. I — 'Keit&'upc Htcwcatf, ^tcc. — J 206 S. Michigan Ave., Suite 713, Chicago 4, III. C0l0R[NG PHOTOS atHami' Fascinating hobby and voca- tion learned at home by av- erage man or woman who is artistically inclined. Work full or spare time. Modern method brings out natural, life-like colors. Many have earned while learning. FREE BOOKLET tells how to get started doing this delightful home work for photographers, stores, individuals, and friends. Send today for your copy. No obligation. NATIONAL PHOTO COLORING SCHOOL 1315 S. Michigan Ave., Dept. 260B, Chicago 5, III. EXPORT PAYS BIG World Trade firm offers men and /1 women quick preparation for big pay yf J positions or unlimited-profit busi- /J nesses of their own. Mail order World-wide without capital, frorn^^ home; or travel abroad. Represent manu- . ...... facturers. Past experience not needed. WriteX, ////// today for FREE BOOK. State if veteran. Airmail reaches us over night. Mellinger Co.4 1422-F W Westwood Blvd.. Los Angeles 24, California. July years, that Father talked to his guests more than he ever allowed them to talk to him, came from an uncon- scious habit formed when he realized he could not make an excuse and leave people because he was seden- tary; and it was, therefore, his re- sponsibility to give them as good a time as possible while they were with him. There is no doubt but that his en- forced physical inactivity sharpened his personal interest in people and gave him time to study their lives, their hopes and their troubles. His natural great energy was actually in- creased by enforced physical inac-' tivity. So it was no wonder to me when I went with him to Warm Springs, Georgia, in the spring of 1925, to see him throw himself en- tirely into the problem he was sud- denly faced with there. Father had been at Warm Springs for only a few days in 1924. Several stories had been printed in the news- papers about that visit, and more stories resulted from his arrival there in 1925. The result was that within a couple of days young people with polio began to arrive. There were no adequate living accommodations for them, no medical care available, and most of them had almost no money. Yet I don’t remember that any of them were ever turned away. And it wasn’t long before there was a doctor and make-shift accommoda- tions. This was before Father em- barked on the big project of building Warm Springs into an institution