Evening Star Newspaper, February 22, 1923, Page 33

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WOMAN’S PAGE." SEEN IN THE WASHINGTON SHOPS BY ELENORE DE WITT EBY. ING WINTER played a trick on the Washington shops this | week. for just when they thought he had gone for good, and had filled their windows with | sheer spring apparel, the old fellow covered the city with a blanket of ice | and snow. And all the little flappers thirew the long. swishing skirts | Which had served to disguise them so | effectually the few | months to 1 knickerbocke svits and boyish sweaters that had been packed away in moth ball What fashion pa there was to the Lincoln pool and to Rock Creek Park! Sports suits in bright shades of periwmkle and in softer tweeds with brii'iant rfs and caps: gay plaid sweaters snowy whit 1t mmed v gled to of colur aside during past don i rose or wool skirts sc 1 huts of quills—all min teble picture B i unt youih ful whethef the knicl Ve 'so much as a glance lified sowns in the windows tssed. but a few balmy days will lice to draw her attention to them. will then notice that g a ored color for spring, with almond d light be running close seconds; that Georgette is alinost as widely used as erepes, and t lor Designers are eombinations to its do e still very using some odd color with this season ¢ mone One frock 1 S S BPRING WRAP O BLACK (R WITH COLORFL L, EMBROIDER secn was trimmed 1if of coral-color her an w with delicate 1 and stecl bead re daring des t yellow : o third 1 of tones i w tlams t embroid: " peacock biue and h dinner shetehed ded in two shades 1. The lines were fectly rizht unbelted overblouse tiny the o hion 1 batesu n fuch The shed _in and had ed with running spruy of the front £ blue and ibhon tied < neariy jczest o low e skirt was 1S of seli- erystal and fur- trailing i two-tone ique t cach hip, to the skirt waistline circled by material the wenta blue 1 he The two beaded mented flowvrs fr in fur-collared OF GRAY CREPE MAGENTA AND DINNER GOWN BEADED IN BLUE. wraps, nothing 1d suit h fanc: better than the cape illustrated. Its voke is its collar and the foundation tabrle is completely concealed by all- over embroidery ‘in gay tones of red, vellow, green and blue, taking the ,form of conventional flowers and foliage. The colorful .effect thus achieved is especially attractive In contrast to the soft folds of the wrap which fall below, for they are of black _canton crepé, and might other- wise be.a bit somber. The chapeau pictured of black Milan straw, lacquered so that it has a shiny surface. Two wheels of pleated ribbon, one a trifle larger than the other, are poised at the sides to add a chic touch of trimming. The Jower part of each rosette is of gray sros-grain silk, but the upper is of black, to correspond with the founda- tion turban A more colorful model of rose straw in a poke-bonnet shape. A band of shirred rose silk covers the edge of the brjm and almost extends to the flower wreath that circles the crown. This s composed of rose-colored lowers ibat resemble large. apple is is | : ; ma- | | | | SMART, £ OF BLACK MI- LAN, WITH PLEATED RIBBON WHEELS AS TRIMMING. blossoms and leaves that are oddly rose-colored instead of green. A tiny bow of silver and blue ribbon is placed at one side to give the only THE "EVENING STAR, ‘WASHINGTON, D.-C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY Bistorp of Pour Name. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN, SCHUTZ. NS Shutts, Schutte, Schute, Schutes. RACIAL ORIGIN—German. SOURCE—Occupation or title. The German family name of Schutz has no commection with that of Schultz, which latter is the equivalent of the English name of Bailley, It comes rather from the German equivalent for the English words “shoot” and “sheoter,” and is particu- larly interesting as being illustrative of ‘the later development of family names in Germany than in England. The names in this group are all de- rived from the occupations or profes- slons of the old marksmen or rifiemen of Germany several hundred yecars ago. It is to be noted that the family names came into existence after the period in which the small firearm came into ordinary use. Names trac- ing to the use of firearms, other than the first crude cannon introduced while kniglhthood still was in flower, re conspicuous by their absence in | English, though there is a great num- ber of such numes as Archer, Bowy | Stringer and Arsmith (arrowsmiti). The companies of marksmen, which for the most part were defensive militia malntained locally by the towns and citles of Germany, were known as the chutzengilde,” and i may be taken for granted that gny one bearing one of the variations of the name noted above had for an an- cestor at one time @ member of one Schutt, | touch of color contrast. | Were Happy Jack and Chat- terer Dishonest? A difference in the point of view Makes Tight to me Do wrong to sou. —Happy Jack. Poor. foolish Sammy Jay! He had worked himself into such a rage that [ne didn't really know what he was ldoing. And all the time Happy Jack i the Gray Squirrel and Chatterer the ) Red Squirrel were enjoying it. They Hiked to s Sammy in such a rage. {There never has been any love lost between § d the Squirrel cousins. » make trouble for the other whenever possible. Sammy, you know, had hidden nuts all { these peanuts Happy J terer wer huntin, found many of them, | when they found them the It was this that made angry. IU was this that tim i, {4t the top of h 1t did look very much Faack i Chatterer w {ihose peanuts from Sammy J 1lad rou there you probably would have that they were stealing Ithose peanuts. Lut they didn’t con- der that the were stealing at all. They didn't neider ti in {them from the hiding places of Sam- Jay they were sicaling any more Summy himself in taking the shelf on the window mer Brown’s house. = a law of Old Mother Nature that which one finds belongs to | She has made this law so as to {make her little people use their wits s the were intended to be used. 1 know that to keep a thing ¥ must hide it where no one clse will find it mmy Jay knew Sammy knew all about th knew that whoever should find the pe ts would have a right to them if they conld get away with them. Many a time had Sammy J found things hidden by the two Squir- rel cousing, and thought himself very nart for getting away with them. ut this being the other way und wax very different. in- cd. this was very different! And ammy sereamed, “Thief! Thief! of cours te them. Sammy h. a4 and, as if Happy Tine this law. Of ! i | FEED THE BRUTE Favorite Recipes by Famous Men. CAPT. EDWARD A. SALISBURY, Lplorer. This sauce for sphaghetti is a real Ttalian mixture, and wonderful. This is how I learned to make it in Ttaly: | Place in a cup or bowl a half tea- cupful of dricd mushrooms. Pour { boiling water over them and just let them stand uzntil thoroughly soft- ; ened, about a half hour. meantime cover the bottom fryingpan or skillet with | olive oil (I prefer the but- ter). Ciop one big onion and cook slowly, stirring prequently. In an- other’ pan or kettle place two cans lof tomatoes. Stew them for half an hour. Then make three small cakes of Hamburg and put them In to cook with the onions. Cook thoroughly. Add at the same time the mushrooms which have been softencd and chopped into ifine particles. When the meat is cooked through, {mash the cakes up with a fork, mix- fing well with onlons and mushrooms. Now add the stewed tomatoes, and {in dolng this press them through a |sicve or collander. Stir well. Place on back of stove and let steep for one hour after adding two tea- spoonfuls of chili powder (if avali- fable) or two teaspoonfuls of sauce | with five dissolved cubes of beef or chicken boulllon. To cook the spaghetti, place it, un. broken, in well salted boiling water. Put it in end first. Boil exactl twenty-three minutes. ‘Drain. Hold under cold water tap for a second or two and drajn again. Keep warm on stove until served. This cold-water itreatment is important. It removes fall gumminess and leaves the spa- | Zhetti in perfect condition. (Copyright, 1928.) i ! say vour butter o An interesting poke was seen on bth avenue like the one ghown. The| whole. thing was draped in black, and a light wood shade, and the material was straw, cloth, i BEDTIME STORIES so | talking | You | steak or chopped beef!| of these militia organizataions. By Thornton l W. Burgess. I Thief!” at the top of his lungs. 1pre- sume that Sammy really thought that Happy Jack and Chatterer were dis- honest. _But were they? Iarmer Brown's Boy didn’t seem to think so. | He came out to see what all the fuss AND SAMMY AMED “THIE was about, and it didn’t take him long to find out what was going on. He hadn’t intended all those peanuts for Sammy Jay, and so it rather pleased him to find that others were getting ome of them in spite of Sammy's greediness. Farmer Brown's Boy i ey AT THE TOP NGs THIEF: THIE OF HIS Li that law of Old Mother N: knows that laws which & and girls and grown folks differeut from the laws w { the little people of the Green orest ‘u)u] the Green Meadows, 1 that the {Tatter must not be judged as bovs and glirls would be judged. That whi right for a quirrel may b w for a boy. So. rmer Hrown® Aid not feel that Happy Jack : Chatterer were doing wronk. And didn’t_feel o, As for Sammy Ja llow was simply Josing what he mig | have saved if instead of wasti { time shrieking “Thicf! Thic he had hurrried about to his various hiding places and taken the peanuts to safer pla Annabel Worthington Child's Set of Clothes. For the tiny girl's dress-up outfit this would do very well. The dress is gathered to yoke and an inverted pleat at cach underarm seam gives the necessary fulness. Kmbroidery flouncing could be used, but a more | 1 simple dress that would probably wear better and would be just as at- tractive could be made of batiste, nainsook, or some other such mate- rlal, and trimmed with a tin of lace. The one-piece drawers petticoat are included in the pattern. The pattern No. 1349 cuts in Sizes 1,2 and 4 5. Size 2 requires 21, yards 21-inch flouncing, with vard edging, for dress. The petticoat requires 1 yard 36-inch material, with 23 yards edging. The drawers re- quire 8 yard 32-inch material, 1% yards edging. Price of pattern 15 cent; a stamps only. addressed to The Washington Star pattern bureau, 22 East 18th street, New York city. Please write mame and address clearly. VERSIFLAGE A Cheerful Thought. ' These are the things that make one ! glad at times when the world Is cold jand sad. ‘These are the things, let's {count them o'er, I'm sure we shall d at least a score. The laugh of & ild at play on the street—what a ousing sound for heavy feet! The ;1. histling boy on an errand sent, the song _of the worker homeward bent. The flash of a maid-in her best attire as she hurries along to her heart's desire....The..smile..of . a..mother, a babe at her breast:.the. sigh of con- tent when the weary rest. The joke that bubbles from lips of pain; the I cool, sweet air from the summer rain. {The words of wisdom the aged tel | the mysterious sound in a curved sea- jshell. ~The. gentleness of those who jare strong: the desire of a heart ‘to right the wrong. These things and more_have power to cheer. especiall the Chought that' the ‘¢oming year nineteen hundred' and ' twenty-four, when_girls-propose, to .the, men -they adore! i ‘WILHELMINA STITCH, with understands | Happy Jack and Chatterer Cgrtainly | . the foolish fel- | % Fashion orecdsy edging v tertainment in Odd Fellows' H. her encore will be “The Rosary BY *Just Like a Woman. Lik Woman the name a picture. But the t am about to tell is not just like not just lik hought of them is the story i Haski she is only twer the producer world. She buby of She is not o e 1 woman— as we have “dust of is, women hrough the miniature of Gri ty-two of motion has been P 1y the Lut Weber is younzest the “the produce pictures hailed ture as motion ked with ces of the W. W, He ration, producers of her » told me a story of rare ambition {iveness. ~ She made there is truth in th can do in this world just you want to do, if you w enough Grace Haskl {in the xouth that you bout what nt to hard s was I worked v teen. She of jobs. She operator, a stenc tary,"and fina most fportant largest shipbuildine Pacifi t. While and the ition of that vhe the men: and, of cour: her man wrong she admit a spy or an agent been rapher. membars of the concern on the she was ther, held w po bility, i she “pon: ing guessed ant as not tc tinto the work: It wax while she was that she made up her mind into the production of pictures the inftial impulse was the wast saw going on about her in the making of pictures. A great many film com- Ypanies from Hollywood came to the shipyards, she told me, to make their scenes, and they had (6 get their pe mits through her. In return she w invited to the different studios and there saw the tremendous waste of money that went on. It came to her lthat she could make pictures better |ana cheaper than they were made. She had absolutely no experience in had the hir- BY WILLIAM ‘Why Pneumonia Attacks the Fee- ble. It is true, though jthat pneumonia more likely to occur shortly after the victim has been rescued from drowning or found wandering in the open insufficiently Iclothed after some hours of exposure to extreme cold or shortly after a major operation under a general anesthetic. But whatever Mrs. Gamp ay deduce from this, physicians who misundérstood. is 1d has an3 of enfecblement of thing to do exposure to c pneumonia. | with thg occurren {They find that th |the victim, p ! debilitated lung function. is the im- portant predisposing factor of pneu- monia in such circumstances. The exhaustion incident to submer- sion, for instance, is just as serious, so far as the danger of subsequent pneumonia is concerned, when the water is warm as it is when the water PAM'S PARIS POSTALS PARIS, February $.—Dear Ursula: !Just because one always expects a bertha’ to be of lice, this one fs of ostrioh feathers, caught on the shoul- ders with beads.. Needless to say it {8 the “very lates{" - Py Ktoit- | thut | war, | mous re- rking there | being | have investigated do not imagine that | articularly weakened or | s Inabellec Jimpson, who “took vocal” when she went off to school that time (1901-02) is still obliging ified townsfolk with'the prevailing gems of that era. Here you see Maybell 929 iy 1923." cornmeal in one and one of boiling water for twenty minutes. Agd one and one-half cupfuls of milk. ift and mix togethe white flour, sugar, one and one-fourth table fuls of baking i one-half teaspoonfuls of salt and add t t { doing her bit _at the en- | Her selection is the “Gypsy Love Song” from “The Fortune Teller,” and | (Copyright, 1 The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan GLADYS HALL. whats peopl siened f v I She aleo ot some oxt » and there in the variou thus leaned and amassed her i | formatic | When studios sl en somewhere | | URE PRODUCERS.™ [to o to work with she wa at. “What do vou know they said to her. One man finally told her that if she could get cor {tract he would see that she had the {money. Mr. Hodkinson finally prom- |ived the contract, but si Kkins went work befo | With about $30 to stand sands of dollars of expe There isn m to tell the t Like a 1bout it?” ust rde: PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. D., Noted Physician and Author. [is cold {oceur. cases ir | which m: Postoperative certain pective of pneumonia proportion of all precautions be taken to keep the pa tlent w nd the truth is, as | physicians generally are aware | unfortunates found wandering open in their delirium, who “develop pneumonia.” already had the pneu- monia and in_the delirium_of pneu- monia wandered away. Physicians who have had any derable ho: pital experience know that this is s Invasion of the lung tissue by the pneumococeus monia. Some 20 per {according to the tent bacteriologist bor in nose or | mococci—that is to the germ capable of producing dis- jease.” (Nearly all o harbor mnon- viruient strains which do not produ, disease.) If an individual happens to be e dowed With virulent pneumon germs—or, what is about as likely. presented 'with a virulent strain by some talkative bystander—just why do the germs invade the lung to set up pneumonia? Persons superficially informed about the essential cause of pneumonia are too prone to assume that ‘“exposure” somehow weakens the lung or lowers its resistance and thus favors the necessary germ in- vasion. tion, for there is mo evidence that even severe and bitter exposure So affects the lung or any part of the lung. The superstititon of catching cold from “exposure” cahnot borrow scientific respectability so easily as that. _Aged persons, or persons of any age who are much enfeebled and con- fined to bed, if permitted to lie long in one position, especially on the back, tend to develop what is known as “hypostatic congestion.” a kind of stagnation of the blood in the lower parts of the lungs, and if such pa- tients happen fto harbor virulent pneumococel, as in some low-grade chronic . nose, throat or bronchial trouble, they are quite likely to have pneumonia. Recent stug e of a lobe of the lung co edes the pneumonia which de velops in certain cases shortly afier an abdominal operation. The col- lapsed lung becomes congested: then infection and pneumonia readily occur. Sometimes the collapsed lung or part of a-lung again expands within-a day or'so0; pneumonia ‘then’does not fol- in n the all 4 strains of es have shown that col- HASKINS IS “THE BABY 01! hat | nonly | { | laughed | 2ift) into t | | is the cause of pneu-;\Was a pad iinto Menu for a Da; DINNER. Cream of e Roast Bee Pudding Creamed Potatoes String Beans Ciicese Biscuits, Nuts Coffee Jelly with Whipped Cream Coffec, Your Home and You _. BY HELEN KENDALL. 5 The Narrow Seat. When (the all finally found that they could palatial, all t mofe than wough to hold 1 . two wall newest youns couple of | tiny apartment ord they thought! sept the entran niinitgetim long—just | to the t it « . wide only @ | twice de mees and t dayi the ‘little hall room. At first handsome the hail new _chair tiny space, oe nts put a wedding but some one was always falling over it. They | took it out and had nothing to sit! on in the hall for a while; then the; bride found that she w hav- | ing to kecp people standing in thei hall—the man who called to get her| fur coat for storage. the maid who! brought a note from a friend. the messenger boy Wwith a telegram—all( of whom had to wait for her. { “I can't ask them into the living, room.” demurred: “vet it looks! so thoughtless to keep them stand-! ing, when they are probably on their feet all day { The upshot of it long. | narrow—oh. very was built flat against the w: hall. Tt was scarcely 100t wide and it cons between two end p s alway she was that narrow-—seat I of the I more th A jpad covered with gay cretonne form- ed its back (this was tack ith fastened to the wall) cushion on_th flit valance fell to the floor. The whole thing took up so room that one could move casily it ‘without stumbling against “Of course, it wouldn't be able to sit on for very long. ted the bride, “but by sitting eways on' it you ecan g weight off your feet. at least d to a nd there t. Al littl The Housewife’s Idea Box It the End of a Draw String Slips ! Through the Casing. | You will find a crochet needle a very | But that is mere presump-lyseful instrument to have in your ! i 1 i i sewing box. 'If the end of a draw string or ribbon slips through a cas- ing you can easily pull it through again with the hook of your needle. %5+~ THE -HOUSEWIFE. 4 (copyrignt, 1928.) leggs well beaten, two tablespoon of melted considered | t { flour. FEATURES. - Southern Waffles. Cook one-half a cupful Beauty Contented You are always confi- dent that your beauty has been developed to its highest possibilitics after using Gouraud's Oriental Cream. White Flesh-Rachel. 1 10c for Ttial Size F. T. HOPKINS & SON of white alf cupfuls three cupfuis of tablespoonfuls of poon- and three powder and one o the batter. Add the yolks of two uls and the whites of eggs bea SUf. Cook on a reased watfe iron. These wates are most people to he bet- than those made with all-wlite | Serves six people | butter wo Gouraud’s Oriental Cream 'Ele most celebrated gardens of India and Ceylon give their best teas to Tetley’ Orange Pekoe. It is the perfect blend. TETLEY'S Makes good TEA a certainty Your Pantry—A First Aid Station FEW cans of Wagner's Beans converts your pantry a “First Aid to Hunger Siation.” inlo You're then npoeper emergen Juct heat and serve iWagne the stearn e witat he derived ont of such a wimple dish. ers | Oven Blended d Stany Pork ¢ Beans WITH REAL TOMATO SAUCE on Girls! Try This! Hair Instantly Appears Abundant, Soft, Lustrous and Colorful—A Gleamy Mass! 35 Cent “Danderine” Also Ends Dandruff; Falling Hair! A “Danderine Beauty Treatment will immediately double the attractive- ness of your hair. Just moisten a cloth Danderine is the best, with Danderine and draw it carefully | most delightful hair through your hair, taking one smail | tonic. It is to the strand at a time; this will cleanse the | showers of rain a hair of dust, dirt or any excessive oil | gocs right to the roots, vitalizes and —in a few minutes you will be amazed. | strengthens them. Tts stimulating Your hair will be wavy, fluffy and | propertics help the lair to grow lor possess an incomparable softness, luster | heavy, strong. and really appear twice as thick and| You can surcly have beautiful hair. abundant—a mass of luxuriant, glinty, |and lots of it, if you will spend 33 colorful hair. cents for a bottle of Danderine at any Besides beautifying the hair Dander-]drug' store or toilet couriter. ‘It i$ not ine eradicates ,dandruff; , inyigorates | greasy, oily or stic! i 4 3 the scalp, stopping itching and falling hair. cheapest and corrective and hair what fresh to vegetation. Tt

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