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WOMAN’S PAGE. TUESDAY, DEC 105 0 chocolate fudge, and perhaps one big| quickly, and let it drop in the desired WOMAN’S PAGE. Circular Skirt Is A d Menniter/a pay; HOME ECONOMICS. | | Pin, b sanut brite, BY bed;| sizg on sheets of oiled paper. A very ircular rt 1Is cccptc AR e — packed in pretty little parcels and ")!lhtlmt water may be aurrded tnto . ready to use, and the children have| the fondant if it seems too dry, but Exit Cockroaches | g e, | | [ e s e | i SRR S A crumbs and scrapings, and a wonder- | much. tes may be stuffed with BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. Maple Birup Cofteo ful time. % | Tondant colored pink and favored LUNCHEON Divide the fondant into portions for| with vanilla, or with blanched a Spanish Omelet Creamed Parsley Potatoes Biscuit Tea At Last! A clean way to exterminate these insects Spray harmless Flyo- Flyosan is non-poi- san around the cracks sonous, easy to use, and crevices the roach- leaves no tell-tale trac- Longer and fuller is the ory of skirts. Woe is woman! Longer and narrower might suggest & chance of slimness and youthfulness, kat full- ness and length, while they suggest smart fashion, also tell a tale of age and bulk. DINNER Vegetable Soup Without Meat Braised Calves’ Liver Mashed Sweet Potatoes Chive and Cabbage Salad esinhabit. Inaminute ©8 DOmusstoclean up. The quality of youth, even its sem- Goftes Sticed Pincapple e them 3 blance, cannot be maintained in such you will see come Flyosan kills all sorts garments. The old will look old, the of insects. Ask for our young cannot fail to look older, the Fruit and Nut Salad. the various colors and flavors de- | sired, and set the portions to be used | blanch almonds, i for peppermint and wintergreen drops {in bowls over hot water to soften the | fondant. When it will drop from the tip ,of a spoon, flavor and color it monds rolled in white fondant. To shell them, pour bolling water over them and split them out of their brown ins with the fingers. (Copyright, 1921.) “Merry Christmas! Here we are— spray of Flyosan and they turn over and die. Hyosan COLONIAL CHEMICAL CORPORATION . NEW ORLEANS, LA.: Tchoupiteulas, S¢. Peter and Sce. Mary Ses. $1.00 introductory package at your store. READING, PA. fat will be fat, dignity will be justi fled. The preachers may stop preac ing, the reformers may find their oc- Cut one can of pineapple into small’ cubes, add one cup of celery cut in small pleces, one cup of orange pulp cupation gone. and one cup of broken walnut meats. There is one ray of hope left in the Shred one head of crisp lettuce very approaching eclipse of youthful ap- pearance. That ray is the usage of thin-clinging materfals. If fashion persists in crepe, in foulard, in mous- seline, woman may hope to achieve the classic lines even in garments that are long and full. We can call them flowing, which s a gracious- sounding word. But {f serge and kasha cioth, velvet and tweed are built into these five and six-yard skirts, nearly sweeping the ankles, then youth is verily eclipsed. The sketch shows a new gown which is on the path of fashion, one that is no longer an experiment in silhou- ette, but an actuality, although it is a reversal of that which is. The fabric is Moroccan crepe, which is an aid to grace. The color is black, which is an aid to slenderness. The skirt is flat back and front, with its width gained by circular sides set in. Such was the trick the advanced ex- ponents of the full, long skirt tried out last August, from which the pub- lic shrank. The bodice, at least, is youthful, and its round yoke is original. Little by little, this deeply rounded neckline repeats itself, sometimes in an even- ing frock; again, as now, in a street frock, the outline secured by an or- namental yoke. This one Is made of red and steel beads in geometric pat- tern. The workmanship matches that of the belt. which makes no attempt to tighten the hips, as its companions o. The sleeves have value, for they are GOWN _OF BLACK MOROCCAN UL, WITH PTAIN FRONT AND BACK. STRAIGHT BODICE HAS A NEW KIND OF YOKE MADE OF RED AND STEEL BEADS. SLEEVES END IN SCAL- LOPS, WHICH IS A NEW TOUCH. fine and form into cups or nests on individual plates. Mix one cup of whipped cream with one cup of may-|" onnaise dressing, stir it lightly through the pincapple mixture -and divide into the little nests or cups. Decorate with canned red cherries and chopped nut meats. If the com- bination of fruit and mayonnalse is not liked, a dressing may be made with the well-beaten yolks of four eggs. one level cup of sugar, one-half cup of strained lemon juice and one cup of whipped cream. Things You'll Like to Make A most attractive candy container can be made with a glass bowl and a rag doll candy dish cover. Take a square of fine unbleached muslin. (The size will depend upon the size of the, doll to be made; this depends again upon the size of the bowl to be cov- ered.) Stuff this square with cotton; round the back for the head; keep Ros-Do" Cond.y DishCover hie~ sinter makes maple. cream and —— e Christmas Candies. It is time to make fudge and to: shape and color the fondant made' some days ago, and get them finally, ready for Christmas day. Dates, nuts.l brown and maple sugar, red and green coloring matter, wintergreen and pep-| permint flavoring, oiled and tissue! paper, red cord, cardboard and strong scissors—all should be on hand, and the kitchen and dining-room given over for an evening to this merry| preparation. Of course, the children; have to help. They cut and fold little; paper boxes and cornucopias to go' into the stockings or to be hung on, the tree; they crack and shell nuts they stone dates; they beat the fudge! after it is cooked and cut it before; it is quite hard; they shape fondant balls and stick walnut halves on each side, and they stuff dates with nuts! or fondant, or both. And mother ori Save Meat—Save Money I ‘With every roast of ‘meat, poultry and gam- L W ] id every baked ish, serve a 1ib eral amount of, STUFFIN: 0 DRESSING 1 vored with Bell Seasoning. In-, ESTABLISHED 1888 Real Plum Pudding— crease the pleas not the only ones that have appeared. 4 d A gown that attracted imitation in| Such treatment is a relief from the the late autumn had elbow sleeves|universal decolletage which shows which were finished with successive [ merely a strip of bare skin along the loops of uneven depth, following the|edge of the collarbone. The latter is same idea expressed in the sleeves of |80 generally accepted for even formal this black gown. Possibly they are|evening gowns that one despairs of evidence of a revolt against the wrist- | the return of a really ceremonial bod- length arm covering which women (lce. Youth stands this treatment very wear because it is the fashion, not|well, but age does not. It needs always as an expression of their pref- | something softer than a sharp line of erence. The sleeves of this kind do|cloth across the shoulders. But age, not slip upward on the arm. They!along with youth, has accepted it as are held by a snug elbow band, fromithe one and only kind of opening at which the loops or scallops fall. the neck, so protest is useless. Re-|the front flatter for the face. Tie a One of the new expressions of the|form, however, begins to creep in.|piece of cord arounud to form the round yoke effect is the placement;One sees signs and symbols of a|neck. Paint in the eyes, of two ornamental bands, one at the | change in the fashion sky. mouth. With wool make the hair; base of the neck, the other about| Another fashion that this black!use either loops or large French where it Is on the frock in the sketch; crepe frock scorns is the sleeve cut in| knots. Wind strips of muslin around between the two there is bare skin,|With the bodice, extending nearly, if|the ends of the square to form the which is attractive, and over it run‘nnt quite, to the waistline. No one|body. Attach a wire covered with ¢or sample pki o AskGrocers for Be'P's Seasoning Wholesale Agent, - Charles H. Knott, Washington. Every One Fascinated— New Way To Make Christmas Gifts UDLOW Crochet Twine is the ‘new sensation in needlecraft. ‘You can makc the most fascinating gifts imaginable innovel color effects ~—easily and at a trifling cost. Every one on your gift list will be delighted to rec:ivea beautiful articie made py your own hands. Get Ludlow Crochet Twine at department, notion or art stores, and start making your Christmas gifts today. Price 50c for large ball. gossamer-like threads of braid, silver |can lift the arms, but what matters| mualin for each arm. Make or buy a or silk, maybe coarse lace insertion |that inconvenience? The dressmakers | wire frame like the one shown in the or crystal strands. The choice de-'go on cutting them over the sound of | lower left-hand side of the illustra- pends on the type of frock and the:the wailing protest. And that part|tion. Dress the dolly in silk and lace. hour of its appearance. of the public which accepts them|Join it to the frame. A rag doll, Orientalism is imitated when this|quickly changes its mind and goes to|candy dish cover makes a_stunning kind of decolletage has two bands a tailor and has diamand-shaped gus-!Christmas gift. FLOR, placed much lower about the chest,; sets inserted in the under-arm seam. one going over the top of the arms in|It may result in a patched-up effect, the Eugenie manner. Between thembut anything {s better than the feel- is the skin and beaded bands of col- ing of having one's arms pinioned to ored crystal, maybe of cut jet. the side in the struggle of life. “A plate of Ancre Cheese chance to rest on our table,” con. fides Becky, “It’s cheese-cheese- who's-got-the-cheese? till the last delicious morsel’s gone.” { Personal Health Service . ".» By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. - Noted Physician and Author New, Coated, Sanitary Wrapper pertaining to personal health and hygiene, net to disease diagnosis or treat- ment(.s'sv‘l:ld b ermebored by Dr. Brady if & -mnpg' seif-addressed envelope is inclosed. Tetters should be brief and written in ink. Owing to the large number of letters received, only a._few can be here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instrue- tions. Address Dr. Willikis Bfady, in care of The Star,! in coftee and theine in tea for thelr Crochet Twine In 30 Beautiful and Artistic Colors MADE BY LUDLOW MPFG. ASSOCIATES, BOSTON, MASS. The Tea and Coffee Question. Ohe or two cups of coffes, with or and in my judgment should be deemed wholesome and beneficial for most adults. This is true also of one or two cups of tea with meals every day. Coffee, and in less degree tea, de- end upon an alkaloid called caffeine well known stimulating action upon the nervous system. An alkaloid present in cocoa and chocolate, known without cream and sugar, for break-| 4, theobromine, has a similar action fast every morning must be acknowl-| upon the nervous system. edged to be harmless for most adults,| and chocolate are the mildest of the The cocoa three beverages and coffee is the most active. Oxygen is a powerful stimulant of the nervous system, and most of us take several drinks of oxygen every!. substitute for oxygenm, and therefore day. Nobody has as yet introduced al no extensive propaganda to discour- age the drinking in of oxygen has| yet been launched, but we should not | be surprised to learn almost any day | that oxygen is to blame for that tired | feeling and the universal desire of| civillzed mankind to evade all labor| and just loll about or play. Some- | body probably will assure us that un- | less we break this habit of using so | much oxygen every day, so many la- bor-saving devices will be perfected shortly that we'll all have to turn reformers. Children under the age of sixteen are invariably harmed by coffee and tea, and, in my judgment, by cocoa or chocolate if they use the latter habit. ually. It may be, as many bett doctors than myseif believe, that little chocolate or cocoa made with a large proportion of milk and cream is comparatively harmless for children Gouraud's Oriental Cream over ten years of age. Still. milk is’ the child’s beverage, and why trifle Beneath every with the child’s nutrition? There are ! Christmas Tree!! still, or were until recently, a fewi parents with so little responsibility ' the tinseled branches i or intelligence as to think that a ristmas | little beer does a child no harm. Just such people, by similar reasoning, be- gin feeding younug children weak tea { or coffee, and wonder why their chil-! | dren are so nervous, so dificult to' | manage, 8o much inclined to wet the bed, sv susceptible to 8t. Vitus' dance, so0 likely to develop habit spasms or; ! tics, so precocious, and, alas, some-! | times so strangely vicious in monlj . . Packed in special Xmas Box— Complete set i conduct. "According to the observations bf as shown fbf Dr. Philip B. Hawk, professor of; phsysiological chemistry in Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia (Prof., Hawk {s not a physician), the pres-| ence of either tea or coffee in nowise' retards the digestion of food in the stomach—and Dr. Hawk 1s rather cold toward coffee drinking himself. “A PERFECT COCOA Es > 4 ” One point that skinm: g an nourished folks should know {s that the sense of well being produced by tea or coffes sometimes encourages ~SIR THOMAS J. LIPTON Slang in ADVERTISING Maybeit's alittleundignified but to many who are th-eat- f the drinker in taking too little real 3 %00d and deceives him with the false sense of satisfied appetite. $10 2——T"A;$Wear- Ever’S,TORE r the name = stamped in both ends of the tin PLUM PUDDING A Food-Confection famed for three generations ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT Wear-Ever” solve your Christmas problem this year The set of beautiful, evershining “Wear-Ever” aluminum cooking utensils shown below, packed complete in a most attractive Christmas wrapping, willwir;:veafine solution for the Christmas problem of to give a wife, or a mother. A gift such as this will bring a twinkle to the eye and joy to the heart of any woman. These “Wear-Ever” utensils will not only improve of any kitchen, but their use will in- sure -cooked, better-flavored foods hout the years and years of service that they will give. Made of hard, cold-rolled, THICK, sheet aluminum, “Wear-Ever” utensils heat evenly and, once heated, they maintain a cooking temperature over a REDUCED flame. Hence, “Wear-Ever” utensils in- sure thorough, even cooking; they save fuel and time; they rarely burn; and they minimize the care and attention required to cook foods in ordinary utensils. container, just as described, can be purchased NOW at “Wear-Ever” stores complete for $10.00. Go to your favorite “Wear-Ever” dealer’s and get the set that you need to solve this year’s Christmas problem. Make this a Christmas that will “Wear-Ever. THE ALUMINUM COOKING UTENSIL COMPANY W T NEW KENSINGTON, PA. ‘This set of *“Wear-Ever,” i special Xmas wrapping consists of :— 4-qt. ssucepan and 3 1-loaf bread pan; 2 pie plates; 8-inch ?7";--; M-MMM' Lipton’s Instant Cocoa dis- sclves the moment boiling water or milk is poured over it. No mizxing or further preparation is necessary. Lipton’s Instant package of Lipton’s Instant Cocoa; if he hasn'’t it in stock, send us his name. Also write us for our new free QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. | , Braise. i Is there any danger of bruise gath- sring under the skin What will re- lieve the pain and swelling of a bruise trom & fall? —(Mrs, H. R. C.) Answer—You probably have in mind ened with baldness we can say it with confidence: “Get Wise to ED. PINAUD’S Cocoa is healthful and casily booklet giving 30 delicious cocoa suppuration (formation of pus or mat- digested. recipes. Address Thomas J. :;:’-,fi;“.‘.“;gk’;;";:“.’;'.fi f{;"“;‘;'..’f HAIR TONIC Ask your grocer TODAY for a Lipton, Inc., Hoboken, N. J. T e “tne tmmediate appil- 0| use it faithfully and watch results.” Look for the signature of Sir Thomas J. Lipton on every package of cocoa you buy—thus cation of ice-cold, moist compresses, or cold wet bandage, or a dressing motstened with some evaporating lo- tion, such as witchhazel, bayrum, sologne water or any highly alcoholic {otion. After swelling and discolora- tion have occurred, hot applications are better. . And in the black and blue stage alternating hot and cold appli- cations stimulate absorption of the. cftused blood. ‘ Fig and Cranberry Pie. | Chop one-half pound of figs and cook them until fender in a pint of, water. Add a pint of cranberries and -ook until they pop. MIix one cup of sugar with four tablespoons of flour ind stir into the fig and cranberry mixture. - Let boil, remove from the fire, and stir in two tablespoons of)| butter and the juice of one-half| iemon. Put into & pastry shell, ar- range strips of the paste in a fancy| pattern over the top and bake until these are browned. i s A Ask your barber to apply it. :::l-t upon Keep it on your dressing table and gently rub a little of it into your scalp every night. American Impoert Offices b SRR O 2-gt. pudding pan; 6-qt. kettle and cover. Complete as described for $10.00. Lookfor thestore having the Christmas Box ints windon