Evening Star Newspaper, March 28, 1921, Page 20

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WOMAN’S PAGE. Matchless Flavor and Strength The Matchless Qualities of 3 > are evidenced in cup. The flavor is unique, and the freshness of the lsaf ensures the most cups to the pound © %end a postal card and your grocer’s name and address for a free sample to Salada Tea Company, Bostom, Mass. SUVERSMITHS 3" Philadelphia, s DiaMoNDS PEARLS - d Jewels of Super-Qualify ayige Beoutitul evamples of Diamond. and Wedding Ri i/lmmabm.MAmmflw Ol Family Jewels may be re-modeled into e i Nitre etioa t The GIFT BOOK i#lustrates Jewele, Silver. Crystol Watches, Clocks and Novelties - failed upor request Wadding lvitalions ang Anneurcements. Amnivertacy, Recé /) tion, Dinner: Dance and Debut Invitations Semplas of Correct Social \Stationery marled upon request Tea Cards and Visiting Cards BOOKISH BOYS The spectacled lad with his burden of books excites parental pride —but alarge brain in a weak body is a liability, not an asset. Fewer books, better food,more out: door play, will make sturdy youngsters out of weaklings. Shredded Wheat Biscuit isthe food for grow ing boys because it supplies ‘all the body-building elements in a digestible form.Most youngsters like its nutty - avor and its crisp goodness, Two Biscuits with hot milk and a little salt make a warm, nourishing meal forafew cents. . a T TR A A A R R R L R R Qs run Brown's boy, talking to himself, be- cause there was no one else to talk to. “That red-coated rascal isn't even {rying to fool Bowser. s enjoying it just as much as Bowser ie, and T know that Bowser ia en.|Made for the nearest tree, and the | need it. i l' l' the large dressmaking establishments here, order from French models, comes the complaint that though many of the new French clothes of the season A SIMPLE FROCK OF WHITE,and look simple, usually they aren’t. They are simple in effect, but not in struc- ture. little drapery of georgette crepe for slight bouffancy on. the side of the skirt of an evéning frock. that hang uneven at the bottom areqin frequency to navy blue or black Farmer Brown’s Boy Goes through the Green Forest. Once in a while he would stop for an instant to listen. He was listening to the voice of |(Fi&htened Bowser. trail of Reddy Fox. THE NEW. FROCKS FROM PARIS. BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. From the workrooms of some of Ways seems like ane easy trimming to handle Of course there are few . insurmountable obstacles professional dressmaker in the way of sending out from her workroom perfect reproductions of the French models. And it still holds good of American-made clothes that there is & better finish about parts that do not show than in the French frocks. Black Shadow Lace. The little frock by Brandt of Paris that is sketched today is a good example of the simpler sort of French productions. Doubtless it would pre- sent some intricacy in construction to make it less simple in the making than the beholding. 1t is made of white crepe de chine draped with black shadow lace, thus falling under the head. as far as color or tone is concerned, of the black and white frocks of the season. And they are legion. Look back at the accounts of French Spring openings of other years and Sec if you do not almost aiways find the statement that “black and white combinations are especially smart” or striking, or something of that sort. If America could not look to Paris to launch black and white she would take to it of her own initiative. But the way the black and white combination is handled this year is different in many ways from that of | s other seasoms. We once spoke of it as the magpie combination, naming it after that bird of European habitat whose feathers of black and white afe in strong and striking contrast. And people knew what the magple com- bination was when applied to clothes who scarcely knew that there was a bird so called. Like Birds' Plumage. We might not have to go so far afleld for a bird name to give to many of our black and white frocks this season. Many of them possess no splash of black against white, but the combination is wrought by fine tracery of black against white or white agdinst black. In the frock sketched it is black lace against the white crepe de chine. An all-over tracery of white embroid- ery on a black backgrdund is seen in other new things. Then black fabric or wooden beads are used on white and white beads on black. 1 Perchance the little native downy woodpecker would be a better bird for whom to name this type of black |2 and white combination.” He shows less eplash of contrast in using black against white and, what is more, he shows a dash of red. And black and white plus red is one df the good things of thg spring. White-Sleeve, Bladk Sleeve., ‘where customers frequently i sil le N Wi m w a a boasts that she has the only effectjve system for “holding a husband.’ An’ system for “holding a husband.” An’ cap so that Charlie’s last glimpse as he leaves me in the morning will be an hard day. Of course, I don't get up for breakfast with him. I peculiarly nervous constitution, and I not one of those that neglect their duty to their husbands and I'm always dainty. The way some women slump after breakfast in gingham dresses their hair done just any way! It's"no know hundreds like her. because he wants to be houri. on the job and keep him in fighting trim. Will a boudoir cap keep him in trim? through a cheerless breakfas lazy squaw of his cuddled but it won’t do in view of the modern gone into the discard. When a yawn- ing boudoir cap has to compete with there's no use wasting your money betting. The dice are loaded. ones, if you wish to hold your job. As the week. LISTEN, WORLD! BY ELSIE ROBINSON. I know a little lady 'who proudly “I always wear a dainty boudoir inspiration all through the long have a mply must sleep until 11. But I am through with marriage! Rushing onder men are unfaithful, dearie!" Yep, just so. And she isn’t alone. 1 Of all the lly theories! A man_ doesn't marry held” by a He takes a wife to help him It will not. And it won't al- viate his feelings while he struggles either. the morning sight of that in_silk, hile he has to go out to work, incite or will him to higher efforts—unless it be urder. * It might have done once when wives ere only excess baggage anyway, ne-up. The harem hunch has new crisp little collar by the office desk You'd better rise early, beauteous lock on hubby's love "a gingham pron beats a boudoir cap any day of To be sure there are some black white combinations . of bold enough effect. Callot shows a frock made pibald fashion witi\ the entire right sleeve of black and a left sleeve of white. One thing that you may have no- ticed: In a meason when the black ) and white combination is supposed 1t looks a simple matter to pose a|to be especially strong, you see prac- tically no black and white checks. {One all but stares nowadays at the jwoman who wears a black and white Skirts | checked suit, though once it was next CREPE DE CHINE TRIMMED ‘WITH BLACK SHADOW LACE. lure to the unwary., Lace, too, al-ifor the spring suit. silent] learned that he who would see the people who live in the G must. himself remain con’as lone as poesible. At last of the great windfall. Up. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS. Be ti kful if Beamioticte gave a little gasp of surprise. Ju: tramped | oUtside that ‘windtall wass o Be but it wasn't Buster Bear! was brown instead of black. Brown's boy could hardty eyes. He knew now Farmer Brown's boy Farmer As he listened he smiled. W"uelve s At the sound of that little gasp the B = 2 *y | moisture. rmer Brown's boy has| ploom withoutthese HOME ECONOMICS. ELIZABETH KENT. BY MRS. the boiled potatoes. Long Eyelashes. Every woman desires to see the beauty of her eyes brought out by a frame of soft and silky eyelashes. The eye s not necessarily without beauty if the lashes are short, but its beauty is certainly increased if they are long and thick. Therefore time that is spent improving their health is certainly time that is well invested. If the hair is not healthy, the eve- lashes are apt to suffer to a certain extent. I have known cases where a woman began to lose her hair and the eyebrows and lashes also began coming out. scalp and hair grew in again, eye- brows and lashes began coming back, but I do not mean to give this as an absolute rule, for there are a great many things that will affect the health and beauty of the eyelashes. A very good way to begin treat ment is to clip back the lashea To When she treated her | WOMAN’S PAGE GOOD SPRING BREAKFASTS away from the eye. Sit c to a mirror, with & good light on the face You do not have to clip them back very far—simply take off a little of the very edge. They will grow in again remarkably fast. Then treat them every night. Rub them with a vegetable oil or some mixture of vegetable oils and fats I have no particular faith in vase- line, because it is a mineral oil and is not taken up by the system. Min- eral oils serve a very useful purpose as a part of any beauty treatment do this use a pair of manicure scis- Lfficient ousek BY Laura. A Kirkman ) Quickly Made Soups. tThe housekeeper who has a gas, electric or oil range in her kitchen may congratulate herself that she does not have to have coal carried up from the cellar and take out ashes— but she must also think rather re- gretfully of the advantage a coal range presents in cooking foods which require hours upon hours of simmering. It costs so much to make these things on any but a coal range! Soups are one of these foods. Yet there are some soups which can be made in a reasonably short time. The following cream soups are of this kind: Potato Cream Soup.—Put six boiled and pared potatoes through the food chopper if they are hard, left-over potatoes (mash them if freshly boil- ed) and add them to one quart of hot milk together with one chopped onion and salt and pepper to taste. Thicken with one tablespoon of flour mixed to a paste in a little cold water, and serve after the soup has boiled up for a few minutes. : Cream of Celery Soup.—Use the ‘rrecipe given above with one bunch of celery (put through food chopper and cooked' till soft) substituted for Creamed-Cabbage Soup.—Use above recipe with one small head of cab- bage (put through food chopper, then | boiled till soft) substituted for hoiled potatoes, and leaving out the chopped onion. Tomato Bisque—Strain the juice from a quart can of tomatoes and let it come to the boiling point. Then Plants must have light, air agd They will not grow and three things, and. it is well to remember that a' ynseen as long | house in which plants Will not thrive he came in sight | Is probably a house in which neither children nor grown-ups, will thrive. Farmer Brown's boy stopped short. | Growing plants in a house are a Hjs eyes opened very wide- and he | pretty fair index of, its air, light and moisture conditions, and may be re- garded as a sort of meter for them, ‘This one | as the thermometer is for tempera- ture and the clocks for time. Plants that have come from the had | greenhouse have usually been well potted and grown, and their future depends on our care of them. ear turned and saw Farmer Brown's | should be placed in a sunny window, “Reddy is giving Bowser a good |®Re didn't disappoint him. She ran, thia morning.” boy’s head stand rtraigh Bedr rusbed Ight up, Mrs. I suspect he at him: fairly well without much sunlight. boy. He expected to see her run, and | though ferns and begonias will do said Farmer |Put Instead of running away she ran | They must not be allowed to freeze, straight for him. Yes, sir. with a growl | but must be near enough to the win- that made the hair on Farmer Brown's [ dow to get the sun and aiy. They should be kept moist, not doused one day and neglected for four, They should not stand but With a vell Farmer Brown's boy|watched and watered daily, if they in Joying it by the sound of his voice, | WaY he went up it would have been|water, however. A little soapy, greasy Bowser hasn't baying once. and misseg that stead: that means thay| el Chatterer, who saw it all, sald Dye Don’t Streak or Ruin your Material in a Poor Dye ‘Woolens Each package of “Diamond Dyes” contsins Dresses S§weaters directions so simple that any woman can diamond- Silks i anenu dye a new, rich, fadeless color into worn, shabby Blouses Skirts garments, draperies, coverings, everything, wheth- Jackets Waists er wool, silk, linen, cotton, or mixed s. Buy Hangings Stockings. “Diamond Dyes”—no other kind—then perfect re- Linens Children’s sults are guaranteed even if you have never dyed Cottons Coats before. Druggist has “Diamond Dyes Color Card.” Coverings Dia e / Dande.ine anae Immediately after a “Danderine” massage hair takes on new life, luster and wondrous beauty, appearing twice as heavy and plen- ful, Decause each hair seems to ff and thicken Den't let vour hair stay lifeless. zolorless, plain or scraggly. You, tau. want lots of long, strong hai your is “Beauty-Tonic” glistening with beauty. Rcddy hasn't tried a single trick |C himself afterward. He must want exercise or else he has a plan of some kind in that shrewd (Copyright, 1921, by T. W. Burgess.) head of his and is leading Bowser on for some particular purpose. I hope that rascal isn't going to lead Bowser so far that he'll get com- pletely tired out. I suspect he is up to his old trick of leading Bowser trail all up 8o that Bowser will lose | 59 A 18 GIVING BOWSER A THI MORNING,” SAID FARMER BROWN'S BOY. it. while he returns fo my heényard hoping to find those hens out where he can catch one. If that is his plan he'll get left. for I shut those hens up. Hello! Now what's happened?” Bowser's deep baying had stopped abruptly. Instead, a sharp “Ki-yi-yi- yi-yi! Ki-yi-yi-yl-yi!” came to him faintly from deep in the Green Forest. Farmer Brown's boy knew what that meant. It meant that Bowser was either hurt or badly frightened. Farmer Brown's boy began to run. Louder and\ louder sounded that “Ki-yl-yl-yi-yit" If ha is hurt it isn't so badly that he can't run' thought Farmer Brown's boy. “He's coming this way faster than he went.” Pretty soon ho saw Bowser coming. Bowser had stopped yelping, but his tail was between his legs. and, if looks countcd for anything, he was as bad- 1y scared a Jog as ever lived. Farmer Brown’s boy called to him, but Bowser paid no attention to him. He kept right on for home, and it was plain tkat he didn't intend to stop until he got there. “That's queer.” muttered Farmer Brown's boy. “Now, what under the sun _can have frightened him like that? 1 wender if he unexpectedly met Buster Bear. Bustor gave him a terrible fright once and he never has gotten over | Farmer Brown’s boy kept on. He Trying on a Suit. Each year' there are different pit- of ready-made clothes. Here are some of the things to remember when you go this year to buy a made suit. Be sure it is big enough around the armholes. Most of the suits are made with sleeves that are fitted into the armholes rather snugly. ready- is_comfortable. Look to the sleeves around the hands and wrists. One of the at- tractive things about many of the suits is that they are made with tight sleeves. Thcse look well. Es- pecially does the trim sleeve at the hand iook well. But be sure it is not tight-enough so that at the first really warm day you will have to tug and tug to get the coat over the hands. Don't, because the jacket fits, think the suit will do and order it. Try the skirt on carefully. Whatever may be said about the probable return to favor of the full skirt, the suit skirt is still made scant. Sometimes & jacket will prove quite large enough and the skirt will atick over the hips and refuse to be pulled into place. Never be content in trying on a suit to look at it only without your hat on. Remember tiat you wear a kat usually with a sult and pose ur hat carefully on your hcad be- fore a mirror while you have ’the suit on. The effect is usually much better with the hat than without it, for suits are made to be: topped off 'by a hat. And if it {sn’t better, then tho suit isn’t tie right one for you to choose—unless your hat is wrong. Anyway, be sure the two go together and compliment pach other. Frizzled Beef. Place in a frying pan one-half pound of thin sliced dried beef with enough cold water to cover It. Set it on the filre and when steaming well, but not boiling, pour off the water. Return the meat and the pan to the stove and heat gently, stirring continually until the beef is some- what dried. Add one tablespoonful of butter” and stir and cook until the meat curls and is getting slightly crisp, then add sufficient milk for a dressing for the beef. Moisten one- half tablespoonful of flour in a little cold milk. When smooth and the milk in the pan is hot, add this mix- for them. a credit to Chatterer the Red Squir- | water from the dish pan is very good Dead leaves and flowers should be regularly cut off and the pot turned often in the light, 8o that its growth will be even. Insects or disease growths should be watched for and promptly treated. plants they can be From ome or two picked off and burned, but with many some anti- septic spray should be used; tobacco way off and then cleverly mixing his| f3ll8 for the unwary in the buying | juice, very dilute, is very good for most troubles of the kind, and soapy water may be used to wipe off the leaves, especially on the under side. (Copyright, 1921.) Molasses Rye Cakes. Into one cup of rye flour and one i Just [-cup of pastry flour put one teaspoon- notice the feeling and be sure that it ful of salt and one teaspoonful of cream of tartar. Add two eggs wel beaten, one-half a cupful of swee milk and one tablespoonful of mo: lasses in which one-half a teaspoon: ful of soda has been dissolved. Dro from a spoon and fry in deep faf Serve hot with sirup. smart fabric glove Durable aswell z3 Dainty Made in theUSA for men” women & children ture. When about as thick as cream had had several meetings with Buater Bear and he had learned that Buster always took to his heels the Instant he cayght the first whiff of man A : scent. So Farmer Brown's boy was This stimulating “beauty-tonic” | not -.lrsl-:::. H:‘ had Een o, llzn:flo: : ; 2 er this spring and he curlou sives to thin, dull, fading hair that | B5e0 M "HuSE F Was’ still in the youthful brightness and abundant |Green For;;:. e thickness. AIl drug counters sell [ o, 50: WAtHINE for, Siens of Duster “Danderine.” into the Green Forest. He walked A 35-cent bottle of delightful Danderine” freshens your scalp, checks dandruff and falling hair. take up on a platter and serve. K Grapefruit Relish . Mix eight tablespoonfuls of grape- fruit julce with two tablespoonfuls of sugar sirup. Add two tablespoonfuls of maraschino if liked, add a few tiny pieces of the pulp and pour the whole into small glasses with crackes ice. 5 that’s all you S need to know abofu a Glowve . 1 t a _WRIGLEY 'S JUICY FRUIT the add one heaping teaspoon of soda Be lua iof S t of on 4 th and, while it foams. add one quart of hot' milk. Thicken with cracker | crumbs and serve. Corn Soup—Mash one piht canned corn thoroughly in a chopping bowl | then boil it in one quart of milk for {ten minutes, together with one small chopped onion and a small lump of butter; thicken with ‘one tablespoon |of flour mixed t& a paste with cold | water, and add salt to taste. Press through a colander and serve. To make a frothy soup out of any of these. thicken with the yolks of two eggs mixed with one tablespoon | of cream, instead of with the flour. Mrs. L. L.—Answer—You can serve jherring in the following delicious way. Baked Smoked Herring.—Cut enough smoked boneless herring into dice to fill one large cup. then scald it well in a little boiling water. and drain it Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter and in it cook one-third cup minced celery and one tablespoonful minced onion. When these vegetables have become slightly browned, add the fish to the| mixture with a pinch of mustard and one-quarter- teaspoon of table sauce: stir well, add one cup of thick tomato sauce’ (made by thickening the juice from a can of tomatoes with a little flour-and-water paste and adding a little milk) and pour the mixture into a baking dish. Sprinkle crumbs over the top, dot with small pieces of but- ter, and bake fifteen or twenty min- utes in a hot oven—it should be well browned on top. With this dish you | might serve mashed potatoes, peas| and q fruit pudding. tu caps among | in | In Brlltar'l)' widows’ !hlo peasantry are always yellow colos If that 13th RINENININNINNN U 3 that m Orange Juice water with | dere, en add t Strain into a dish, ers Every Meal” U U HUTHLL 4 Next time you want. fo concentrate on a piece of work just slip a stick of WRIGLEY’S between your teesh. . I’s a wonderful help in’ daily tasks — and sports the course has been getting your goat — fry WRIGLEY’S. appear and hard places come easy — for WRIGLEY’S gives you comfort and It adds a zest Orange Juice Cereal and Cream Poached Eggs Popovers Coffes Sliced Ranan Cereal and Cream Fish Balls Toast Jam Coffre Cereal and Cream Potato Omelet Graham Muflinx Cereal and Cream Scrambled Codfish Prunes Coften Bran Muftiox Coftee Rhubarb Cerval and Cream Fried Apples and Racon Rolls [§ Raked Apples Cereal and Cream but they are not nourishing amd I Broiled Potatoes 4 1 Gems do not believe they will help grow offes hair. Use olive oil or almond oil i castor oil or a mixture of all three| e wr;f;-‘.:fl“ or a salve made from vegetable oils — e e and lanolin. lLanolin is also nour-| Coften ishing and helps make hair grow. It| {is often part of hair tonic formulas. | Oranges With some treatment like this you | Brorieq focrral and ceeam will be sure to see an improvement.| roiled Ham = Buttered Toast Only you must remember to give yourself this treatment faithfully| Rhubarb every day. Spasmodic treatments are and Cream very little better than none at all. oot TR Muffin Coffee Charlotte Russe. Scald one cup of milk over hot one-half cup at the yolks of two e 1 of =ugar. < and grad-, add two tablespoonfuls of pow- sugar, one-fourth teaspoonful salt and the hot milk and sugar r over the fire until it thickens, heaping tablespoonfuls gelatin dissolved In of clear, hot coffes stir over ice uatil thicken. then powder e-half cup e mixture begins to fold in three cups of whipped cream rn into molds lined with lady fing- For years discriminating women have insisted on Nadine Face Powder You will like its soft texture, exquisite tintand fragrance. It adheres throughout the day. Con- stant applications not necessary. At leading toilet counters or by mail, 0c. Send 4c. for postage on sample in tint preferred. National Toilet Co., Paris, Tenn, US A. hole on ards dis- LT -

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