Evening Star Newspaper, January 10, 1923, Page 22

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WOMA N’S PAG The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY Colleen Speaks Her Mind. Collecu Moore ha days. Pl ted wife i Chain ving the role negle dwyn's pic roken may but that to with it things like “SPARE TS OUR \OUTH N MOORE. INAL HEALTH GLADYS HALL. rned, ways missed ething. have looked claimed to be so iy, the way they r hair this I've been' concs to that. 1 though 1'd ok like hairless Chi- | to i we have to the back of t hair brought carefu ¢ head and there will be no curl all. Hard Juck for us ‘what 2 As for the vouthful t will certainly d and in its pla ninded profile w exponsibilities. Well, we t we shall My friend is at th see see my of | pper friends, teli me’ they're m with the bob. forever and fore 1 have an unshakable faith in the apperst Thes re “And They re d lon 1 gather Kivts —zowie nger, 1 sather, rcuuse they You think? they will be at we'll trip an't flap if they T know. A us what Jing to he on ip all ¥ oan them. Flapy i flap the desivne believe ndividu chances bwn vle and t fifty to naught nlts will be good would tamely submit one’s personality to suit ctates clothes, He away-—and besides he We cannot see walking mysteries whe ank as mirrors and and the that the r “Who to a doesn’t new style <ophist iUs ng to just to please » u us « SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY. M. D.. Noted Physicias Flexible Collodion. and p properly and drivd ply it to a wisp tip, and t use. No s applicd w trivance stopper, tice, from th and paves blood poi Flexible tnvariably the « 1odion is prac tectiv sions, layers each be next is to be area t with thi will udhe minor, ds. Sever successively, ) dry t scratehes may, be owed Such an tri diately ture of i Flexible protective nipples. fir other raw feceted und applicd if but rather a dressing is in ¢ well to touc ture of iodine collodior Perhaps the best 18 a solution of 30 gra acid in half an ounce of flexible col lodion, painted on_the n daily for a week or more. This is also Kood application for Softening and remov- | feet. The same will in many cases dispo But by no means should plied to a bunion. ferent from from that tirec As a protective for < | sore™) on the lip f excellent, if the drfed and skillfully in absorhe It may with tine- applying the \ su befors s of salicyie N h of warts A Fright in the Night. Imagination makes of nlght A bogey just to give us fright ~Welcome TRobin. in the shed at of Farmer Brown's hou night a rafter under the roof sat Welcome Robin | fast asleep. It was very still. The only sounds we mal snaps Jack Frost froze things harder harder. Welcome Robin didn't notice them, for by this time he was used to them. He slept peacefully. But suddenly he awoke. “Just why It was pitch dark the back for it wis on up and AND THEN WELCOME ROBIN SAW TWO LITTLE POINTS OF LIGHT. he dian’t know. He awoke in great fright. Why he was afraid he didn't know. It was just a feeling that something was wrong, that some danger was near. He listened, but heard nothing. He changed his posi- ‘tion nervously. After a while he be- #an to get over his fright. “I guess 1 must have had a bad dream or something,” thought he. guess it is because I am not yet ally used to this place. Nothing harm me here. 1'm just a silly 1o be afraid. Tl go to sleep apd forget it" was just about to tuck his head a wing when he heard just the itest sound. Instantly he was ‘awake and all his fears had re- ed. He Beld his breath and n and Author. onspicuous dress- dres 2 of the sup. proof is also very applicd befo Here 1 be when dry. a thick or wool and @ snug fingernails comtaining red ipecie to broken th QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. The Seventh Problem. cived the Erady sympho adly per e exception of if 1 un- How can fingers behind i would do. how to beg wi 100, iy claspéd oad rom your struggle with problem I suspect you irst or old Brady symphony. d_Brady sympliony or new ¥ has seventh problem pure harmony without a f ng nxious to anding i1 mbridge, & you a complimentary cop; New Brady symphony. while my nec Answer the sevent have th, The symphe 1 am séng v of the A Regular Canniba a lover of raw nd r they 1ld Ia Faw ovs- ome people tell urious to my heaith 16 have your advie: 1 like b s swer—HEating raw ham or other meats expases you to tri infestati you to t infestation. are cef is all right if y that the car- sitle larva ricultural Depart- warning to the hog meat thor- cently issu to all White Specks in Nails. rous white specks appearing ger nails, 2 teaspoonful of bicarbonate o da in a glass of water.dafly. Have been told this miglit injure the lining 6f my stomach.—X. Answer—Usually white specks in the fingernails are caused by slight injuries of the nails, as in manicur ing. and the best cure consists of in- casing the hands in plaster casts or keeping them in your pockets for about six months, when the spots will have grown out. This is about the only serious affliction which one can outgrow. (Copyrig) waited. Then he heard that sound again. Tt was a'very faint noise, but it sounded like claws, sharp claw on wood. Perhaps it was just a mouse. He tried to make himself be- lieve that that was all it was, And then Welcome Robin saw two little points of light. He knew what they were. They sir, they were eyes! his heart. For two or three minutes those eyes didn‘t move. slowly they began to move, and he heard that faint sound of ¢laws on wood. He stared at, those two eyes. They were creeping up along the side of the shed. 1t was terrible to watch them. Whose they were he hadn't the least idea, but he knew that they ‘belonged to 'an enemy. Presently they were even with him. Then they began to move oukvery slowly along the rafter on which he ‘was sitting. Welcome gave a little shriek of fright, and flew across to another rafter at the far end of the shed. There he sat and shiverad ahd shook. For a moment or two those eyes glared at him and then disappeared Whoever owned them had -turned around and was going back along that rafter. He heard a thump as some one jumped down. Then sud denly he guessed who it was. ¢ the Cat! Poor Welcome Robin! _He didn't dare Ro to sleep again. For a long, long time he sat there shaking with fright, watching for those terrible eyes and listening_for some sound to tell him where Black Pussy was. He had about decided that Black Pussy had given up when once more he saw those eyes. Again he, sat and watched them draw ‘nearer and nearer until Black Pussy was on ‘the rafter on which’'he sat. Then he flew to_the other end of the shed. That_was a dreadful night. Wel- come Robin will never forget it. How thankful he was when he saw daylight and knew that he could leave that shed! Copyright, 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) g It was Scalloped Potatoes, Dried Beef. Drop some dried beef into bolling water and scald thoroughly, then fry it in hot butter until it curls. Serve on toast with cream gravy. It is ex- cellent baked in the usual scalloped style, with first a layer of potatoes well. buttered and seasoned, then layer of the beef, then a layer of po- totoes, and so on, having a layer of the potatoes on' top to be well ‘browned. A - The | A friend advises me | Then- very | oing er, | have | { lives | ourselves | Lulu, after a battle with her mother, and Selma, the “help, ng afternoon tea to several callers, when in walks Aunt Lot, lool ng ihearflil). “Well, for the lands’ sake, what you havin’ suppper so earl ster | | Menu for a Day. SAKFAST ngered Apples neal with « ed with Ham Bread ned Potatoes LUNCHEON P and Dried | uped atoes Custard Biscuits Cookie Marmalad Tea | DINNER, i Delicious Oyster Pie. Baked Potdtoes Asparagus with French Cheese He Alm Quinee Dress ! b { Calery Currant Jelly. Date and Walnut Cake. Coffee: Your Home and You BY HELEN KENDALL. From the Menu. Molly. you're a wonder when it comes to ordering a dinner from ia hotel menu,” ejaculated the young benedict to the youns, matron. “You | never run an egormous bill up on a fellow, and yvet you don’t order such | | ;a meager repast that you make a {chap feel as if he were starving you. Where did you learn to pick out choice combinations that aren’t so darned expensive? You're the only girl I, ever knew who coulddo. it.” “Well, Tl tell you” confided’ the young matron, laying down_her menu With a contented sigh. “I gbt It from daddy. He taught me how & man likes to have a'woman behave when she's dining out with him “Daddy told me, you see, that one of the things that made him un- happiest was the way mother always lused to order the cheapest and least iinteresting dishes on the menu. {When they were first married they {had to cconomize frightfully, and daddy said mother was marvelous in the way she produced delicious meals for almost mothing. As the years went on, daddy’s business prospered and he had plenty of money, but mother had formed the: hablt of economozing and she couldn’t stop. He said it almost broke his heart to think that through her long years never learned how to cut loose and spend. And daddy sald there are times when a man just longs to have his wife cut loose and spend. He sald mother always looked at the price column first on any menu and then ordered corned-beef hash or them both, instead of asking for mushrooms’ and squab+and lobster isalad and biscuit tortonl, as he want- {ed her to. ~And she-was so perfectly miserable if he insisted on it that he jhad to =ive it up. 0 daddy taught me how to choose a little dinner that would be delicious and delectable and de luxe, and still not make & man feel that she was trying to use up his entire bank roll. He thought every woman ought to study how to do this instead of seem- ing either stingy or extravagant. I can economize as well as the next one ‘when I'm doing _the cate: as you know, but when out in public’with you I'm oe going ta try to do you proud. - Ay | | | RACIAL ORIGIN—English and German. of helping him to succeed she hadj ! Hungarian goulash, when she hated ! ring at home, {ming. ’n dining mz'ot brow: | he had three teeth filled and no others | never had a tooth | rest are soon affected. { ! ey WASHINGTON EVERYBODY HAS SOME, QUEER RELATIONS. N 7 i 1 Gay Buttons as Dominant Feature BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE, When fashionable women started for spots on this continent where they could Indulge In sports without in- terference from the weather, they re- verted te the chemise frock. Sudder 1y this straight monastic robe, tight- 1y girdled, again became the fashion. yBut it's a chemise robe with a differ- has won out at last and is triumphantly serv- g tackier than usual, and exclaiming (Copyright, 1923) By Edna BEAUTY CHATS i was not about teeth. Why, A Letter From a Man. | doesn't plastic surgery d A somewhat cynical reader of the |for men with protruding ears? ~Wam- masculine sex. and. I should judge, of | e can hide them—but take & man . especlally If bald, and get & good look guits middle: age, I ® @ |4t the back of his head. If he has letter from Ohio. The letter is 50 in- | protruding ears you'll agres that oniy teresting T must quote part of it | a mother could love hint* He add: He has been reading, he says, vari- | CYnically, that he doubts if Tl read | his letter. I have not only done so, ous articles on pyorrhea. T was talk-!1 can also tell him that plastic su ing about w cure for pyorrhea, which | ery does u great deal for protruding e liiistin cd i ears. Any surgeon and most doctors {he clatms cannot be cured. Curetting, | Siil"cut'a certain tiny ligament bas | he sa the only means of checking and a good dentist will loosen the | Bums from the teeth and curette both gums and teeth. He had a slight tendency to pyorrhea which he check by the curetting process, and by us- ing tooth powder (not paste) and the stiffest. hardest bristied brush he could find. Years of this treatment stopped the bleeding and receding. This tendency appeared thirty-five vears ago. Twenty-seven years ago has written me a of the ear and bandage the ears fla %0 they heal in a proper position. It is a very simple operation and not ex- pensive. only most people don’t bother to find out about it. J. L. T. G—Sometimes when the hair falls out it is not the scalp at fault so much as the condition of the whole system. - In such cases local treat- ment will not be enough to restore the hair to its normal health. It is necessary to attend to both, so build up vour health and all the while mas sage the scalp dally and include a tonic with this treatment several times each week. Young Mother. — Little children often have warts for a time and they disappear without. treatment. You it, have been touched since then. He has extracted nor a toothache. The important thing, he,says. is to atch the keystone tooth in the young child, as’ it is usually the first to de and if it isn't preserved the His three un- sound teeth were all keystones. He has another suggestion which BHistory of Bour Name. BY PHILIP FRAN bing into them some oil, and if t does not dissolve them in a few day applications of turpentine may prove d Sh 10 l‘1§ orecasy Arnabel ‘WortRington 1S NOWLAN, FRANKLIN VARIATIONS — Steadm Franklyn. | Hoffman, Boctar Stain- Made in an Afternoon. Here is a group of family names which in their origin are’ traced to certain peculiarities of the soclal sys- tem as it was organized throughout northern Europe in the days of teudalism. The vast bulk of the common peo- ple, of course, were virtually all re- tainers ~of the nobility, virtually slaves of the soil. The great “middle class” of today was then but a scat- tered hgndful of free men, not of the nobility, but yet who ‘were entitled | to hold'land and in their own right. Their ranks included the merchants in the cities and the owners of home steads and large farms in the country. “Franklyn” and “steadman” we the designations of social and politi- cal status under which these wealthy | middle-class farmers of the middle ages were known in England. Chaucer, Writing whereof he knew about the people of his own day, so describes thé “franklyn” as tb leave no doubt that he was & person of im- portance and wealth, entitled to hold offices as important as sheriff, and yet not a member of the nobility. He was, in fact, the forerunner of the| country “squire,” though the latter designation was not applied to him | until several centuries later, being at that time descriptive of members of the nobility, usually vouths in the service of their relatives and over- | lords and aspiring to the honor of knighthood. In Germany, whers feudalism ochanged less rapldly into the modern order, and where surnames did not become general until two or three centurles after they did in Englan the “frankiyn or “steadman” w known as a “hoffman.” “Just Hats” By Vyvyan As the diagram plainly shows, this house dress is very easy to make! In fact, it could be finished in an after- noon. Gingham, chambray or percale trimmed with a contrasting material would make a very pretty morning trock, one that will tub well and that's easy to iron. Two shades of cambray at 20 cents per yard would make the garment cost about 75 cents. The pattern No. 1612 cuts in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. Size 36 requires 3% yards 26-Inch material, with % yard 86-inch contrasting. Price of pattern, 15 cents, in Pout- Age stamps only. Orders should be addressed to The Washington Star Pattern Bureau, 22 East 18th street, New York city. Please write name address clearly. Almond Cookies. Mix together one-half cupful of but- ter. one-half cupful of sugar, one cupful of chopped sweet almonds, one teaspoontul of powdered cinnamon, (7] : the volks of thres eggs, one and one- Many of the advance spring models T ORE, SWe Sedution. show fans of ribbon and lace as trim- | {easpoontal of ventile extract. Bele The above toque has three|the ingtedients in the order given. m‘:—t‘m at the back and afll.ul'oll."h':uh with white of m‘ streamer ever sprin ulated sugas, S DS E e & Fan Trim for Spring. ' sen ‘shoulde he asks, mething | may hasten their departure by rub- | jence. It is cut in different manner from the garments that ftopped with us too long, like some of the relatives of plantation 4 ., who came for a {week and remained until death. Its itop part extends to the hips, and the skirt has gathers at front and back {of hips In truth, the new one-piece frock cut in two pl not one. It {has a belt instead of ash, and in sport clothes it has a rippling | cape. | “One a short of the elaborate afternoon gowns arranged for midseason gai- eties is of supple black velours, which | looks like velvet; the turnover col- {lar is edged with ermine and there ia narrow band of ermine from nec {to hem, which is repeated on the sleeves to form a tight wrist band. i This frock is put on like a kimono lover a slip of black satin, the girdle {holding it in place. | Another such frock of black cloth {is, fastened from collar bone to hem | with large mother-of-pear]l buttons. {The belt is fastened with a mother- iof-pearl buckle at back, and there's a large V-shaped pocket on the skirt | iGray rabbit shows itself wherever there is an edge for it to outline The sketch shows a sport frock of violet velours fastened from top to bottom with bone Luttons in the vio- {let of the cloth. The skirt is slightly {gathered to the bodice, the sleeves are short, the collar is rolled away from the neck. the edges are bound with black =silk A short circular eap lifted from medieval days is stitched across the shoulders at back ito fall irregularly in points at each side. This is an admirable frock for sports, but it can serve as well un- der a'fur coat In the street. It is copied in pottery red wool poplin with one of thoge new belts made from strands of €olored zephyr. Exactly why these excessively sim- frocks have leaped back nto in a welter of drapery and ornamentation is hard to explain, but here they are. They may be a ymidseason fantasy or they may be {a revolt against too much fabric manipulation. They are not a com- imonplace fashion: they stand high in {the ranks of expensive clothes. Pos- sibly they are launched to show off buttons, for there is a brand-new fashion to, put a conspicuous row of j{them from neck to hem. As mother-of-pearl had Listen WRITTEN AND the lime- ¥ wrote this the other day. no claim that it is poetry. {I'm a good housekeeper. But some | folks liked it. And T know that I need it. whether vou do or not. So T'm printing it here: { Have vou ever stepped on the fam'ly | cat, | Or forgotten to salt the stew? { Or lost the long list of those house- | hold jobs Which vou promised your wite you'd o? vou carried letters unmailed for weeks Which you swore You would post that night? Have you talked too much with your lower jaw And started the duce of a fight? Have vou broken a heart by a | thoughtless act, | Or failed some one's plan of right, Hate you selfishly let a comrade sink | In the depths some tragic plight? Then, by e black score of the things u've done, 1 And the things you forgot to do, Be kind when the other chap bklds] @ bit And does something amiss to you. For few of us plan the harm which | Sealed by Have i | i i | | is the Tea Drink SOLD EVERYWHERE ~ SVARANTEED BY 'DYKE OND, VA. RICHM COUPON WI ,World! 1LLusTRATED BY Elsie Tobunson 1 make | As a poet | | “What's the motive behind the deed? in an air-tight aluminum pacKet, to preserve the tragrant flavor "SALAD TEA | Making good bread is | a science; makinggood i bread better is noth- i ing more than sprea | ing it with Nuceoa | Delicious Wholesome Saving RYZON § BAKING POWDER SOLD EVERYWHERE Dress Cutting ‘ Millinery The Logical Profession | Ask Our Graduates | Send for Booklet || Prof. Livingstone’s Aca I3 G NW. Over 20 Years in Washin; STOMACHBAD !~ MEALS SOUR 03 LAY UNDIGESTED Instantly! End Flatulence, Ga Heartburn, Indigestion de_m ONE-PIECE Gi ORED MATCHING s DOWN' FRONT WITH BON. S, ALSO VIOLET. A ¢ CAPE IS STITCHED ACROSS THE SHOULDERS TO FALL IN TWO: POINTS AT_SIDES. THIS SPORT ; GOWN IS INTENDED FOR PALM | BEACH. | light thrown on it suddenly, it sug- gested itself quickly to the designers for buttons as it did to the jewelers for enameled ‘brooches. (Copyright, 1928) H Chew a few! Stomach fine! So pleasant, 5o inexpensive, so quick to settle an upset stomach. Th moment “Pape’s Diapepsin” reaches the stomach all pain and distres from indigestion a sour, gassy stomach vanishe Millions know its magic. All druy gists recommend this harmless stom- ach corrective. or | | | “left-over” Comet Rice When cooking Comet Rice for dinner, prepare sufficient to allow for serving Rice and Milk for breakfast. For dessert reheat p Comet-Boiled Rice serve with a sauce of thickened canned fruit juice or fresh stewed fruit. we work, Or consciously fail others’ need *Tis well that you ask ere you scold the wrong, (Copyright, 1923) Science ‘Nfl H374 ers’ Ideal Blend. = TRY A PACHAGE rrrsoreees: answers every ruse ifits GoLoMepaLf Co '—“ull“l LL APPEAR Mrs. January 18th The Best and Most Economical BATH ROOM TISSUE

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