Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Aprons and Scarfs for Frocks BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. Come out of the kitchen by all means—if you can—but bring your apron with you, for “the -kitchen- apron effect” is glibly spoken of wherever -dress affalrs are discussed as one of the striking features of the season. It is through no sentimental af- fectation for the domestic and haus- frau ideal, however, that women have adopted this new style. When Marle Antolnette, bored with the formall- ties of the chateau of Versallles, played dairy maid at the Petit Tria- non, she wore jaunty little lace- frilled aprons, and forthwith aprons became the fad, and every fushlnn‘; French w ore frocks an S2ps and Tnumerable little ceeso- rles that made her look like a glorified edition of a peasant girl dairy maid or shepherdess It is with no such fond regard for | things bucolic that apfons have been | drafted into the present fashion.| They have no smack or flavor of the | hausfrau ideal The sketch shows the original way | in which the apron idea Is inter- | preted. The frock is of yellow crepe | de chine. and makes use of another smart mode—the ec entrically placed scarf. ‘In this instance it passes with | mevere stmplicity s chest, | and forms all the dress boasts of sleeves on its way to the back, wher it is tied at a low belt line. Scarf; like berthas this season in fashion when put on ba A charming new linge makes use of an antique lace scarf, fastened to one sheulder and brought around the buck over another scarf of the same pattern. An evening coat of deep rose silk shot with gold has | a sca tied in & bow in the middle of the back | As the seuson advances mee lingerie frocks worn with real | lace scdrfs—cld ones that Jook as if | they had come out of attic trunks. | If you chance to possess a real lace | Ecarf of old vintage now is the time o turn it to account. And don’t send | it to the cleaner. The more sere and | 1 it looks the better. To have it | bleached and toned up to pristine | freshness would be like having a worm-eaten, battered out chest of co- | Jonial days “done over” at the cabinet maker's | right, 1923 WRITTEN AND ¥ you W isten,World! YELLOW CREPE DE CHIN| ING SCARF TRIMML) APRON SKIRT, SHOW - 1.LysTRATED By Elsie Tobinson T like not to it 1 Erea have learned importance critici reful pr: lse, but atta h any T ‘treasure v and give it respectful study. evel m ch come nd It doesn't take much study to un- and / DO YOU LIKE T BE CDIT]CJSED?OO derstand pralse centage of it is fection and admiration merely a social lubricant make things more pleasan dangerous to take uel’lul‘sl . not contribute to your®self- A very small per-' given from pure af-| The rest is It serves to but it is | It doe nowl- BHistory of Pour Name. FRANCIS NOWLAN. | BRODY. VARIATIONS—Brodle, MacBrody, Mac- | Brodin, MacBruodin. RACIAL ORIGIN—Irish. | SOURCE—GIiven names. | The Scottish name of Brody, which bas been explained in a previous ar- ticle, and the Irish name are not the same at all. Not only have they sprung up independently of each other in the two countries, but they are derived from entirely different sources. The Highland name of Brodie is de- rived from a place name. The Irish lan names, for there are two of ®hem, are derived from given names. Oné of these clans apparently formed somewhere between the vears 550 and © The Gae form of the name is “O'Broduigh.” The | founder of the clan was “Maolodhar Caoch,” called “Brodach” (proud), who a member of the ancient Cin-Airt” ~ (Clan O'Hart), and a descendant of “Art Ianfhear” a high-king of Ireland who dled 195 A. D. The other clan was that of “Mac- Brualdeaghea,” which derived its ame from “Bruadeagha.” The clan s formed, as well as can be esti- nated, abdut 430 A. D., as a branch of_the O'Briens of Thomond. The Anglicized forms of Brody and Brodie have been derived from both of these clan names. The forms Mac- Brody, MacBrodin and MacBruodin are Anglicized versiond of the name of the “MacBruaideaghea” clan. PAM'S PARIS POSTALS By PHILIP "PARIS, May 8.—Dear Ursula: My latest umbrella has'a watch set into the handle. The case shuts in neatly with an enamel door. What a won- dertul world it is! Virtually nothing left to be discovered! PAMELA. (Copyright, 1923.) Savory Steak. I Take a steak about two inches thick cut from the shoulder clod and pound it into all the flour it will ‘hold and until the fiber is thoroughly broken up. Season with salt and pepper and sear-on' both sides in fat in a hot frying pan. Add bolling water to cqver,_ or the liquid-from & can of tomatdes, and’ let-slmmer. for about thsee hours, edge giving you a constructive 11 {esis of your work, and the spirit which depends upon it for inspiration becomes the most pitiful of “drug slaves. s0 with criticism, even ously ill-natured criticism. Long ago I made an amazing and valuable dis covery about praise and criticism as applied to myself. 1 found there wasn't a particle of foundation for most of the praise I received. Th would have Tralsed me anyway, either out of d to make me happy or to work e scheme with flattery as its camouflage. But eve word of censure had some basis of truth. ven when. the ocharge: brought against me were not true the hate which inspired those charges was my fault. It took me some time to recognize acknowledge that fact. 1 have a very human fondness for myself. T wanted to believe myself right even when the other chap thought 1 was wrong. But 1 found that the other chap was generally correct. much better by welghing what he said than by getting “hurt” or angry. I have no desire to be an angel. Pilous propaganda to the contrary, I see nothing alluring in a harp. But [ would like to be a successful, popu- r, helpful human while here on arth. 1 want to do the square thing nd to be loved and respected for so doing. And I've found that the surest way to attain this end is to turn a deaf ear on those who praice me and listen like the dickens to those who blame. opyright, 1923.) COLOR CUT-OUT Alice and Betty Have a Plan. Alice and Betty were playing house under the trees. They were giving a tea-party for Alice's doll, Anne, and Betty's doll, Sally. Mrs. Cut-out had glven them a pitcher of milk and some fresh-baked cookles, cut out in the shape of little stars. “Tea parties are such fun” ex- claimed Alice. “Wouldn't- you like to be grown up and go to real partles, and calling, and everything?” “We could go- calling- without be- ing grown-up,” replied.Betty. “Who would we'call on?" “Lots of people. We.could get all dressed up' and mother would let us take some of her calling cards.” “I'll wear my pink dress” cried Alice. “1 wonder if mother put it in my suitcase!” She jumped up, spiil- ing poor Anne on the ground. She was so excited about going calling like real society ladies. Maybe Alice and Betty will go calling tomorrow. 1s ru." with w, sad hoso of light ) bave colored if oarefull Alice. house {(Copyright, 1923.) _ In order to get firs tion of girls’ problems in industry, Miss Elizabeth Dennison, daughtér.of | a ‘h‘lllonllte mm“ulmzunr'ot l:'n::. ingham, ' Mass., ‘working at 16 bench as. & factory: handein Dayton, Ohley > AND | obvi- | And 1! also found that [ would serve myself ! Sundey afternoon I was up in. the setting room looking at the funny pages and pop was taking a nap on the sofer, snoring 50 loud it sounded as.if he was doing it on perpose, and 1 hierd the fellows wissellng for me outside and I went out and Puds Sim- kins and Skinny Martin and Sid Hunt Wwas on our frunt steps, me saying, G, fellows you awt to heer my father snoring, I.bet he's snoring louder than Reddys Merfys. granfather. Reddys granfather being a fearse loud snorer, and all the fellows sed, Aw go on, nobody snores louder than him, wats you tawking about, youre crazy, thats impossible, aw go on. Wich jest then who came up but Reddy Merfy, and I sed, All rite, Il prove it, let Reddy be the judge and you feliows come up In our setting room and lissen to him. Wich they all went up to do, wawk- ing up stairs on thelr tip toes so as not to make eny nolse, wich they wouldent of if Puds Slmkins hadent of fell down twice on account of try- ing to wawk too carefill and If the other fellows hadent of sed Shishh to him so toud, ony pop dident wake up cnyways, proberly. on' account of be- ing 50 close to the snoring he couldent heer enything elts, and jest wen we Bot In the setting room Puds nocked & chair over trying to keep from bunking into it, and it made:~utch a fearse bang that pop jumped up say ing. Wats ‘all this rackit? Benn wat are all these boys doin in heer? Sir? We're looking for. something, 1 sed,_Aint we, fellows? I sed,.and they all sed, Sure yes. ‘thats wat we're doing. “And they ail ran out of the room like the dickins and down stairs with me after them and we went and sat ou Pudses steps for safety ferst, me saying, Well, you herd him, enyways, how about it Reddy, does he or dont he? Meening snore louder than his granfather, and Reddy sed, Well, he snores pritty loud, 1 wouldent wunt to say enything agenst my own gran- father, and Jd haff to heer them both | together enyways, so I guess I wont { Judge. Wich he dident. Your Home and You BY UELEN KENDALL. | Serving Al Fresco. ! It was merely an ordinary meeting lof ‘the bridge club, but someway it istood out as quite the most mem-. (orable party of the year. When the ! members strolled homeward, in thelr pretty afternoon. frocks and wide ts, they felt as if they had been {to a garden party as well as a bridge | game, and 5o Indeed they had. 4 When two tables had been played, and the regular time for refresh- ‘mwn had 'come, a&n innovation was {sprung. At least, it may not be any | novelty suburban women, who were apt to follow the regular procedure for so- {clal events devotedly. Moreover, the | were prone to leave their green vel- | vet lawns as empty and unused ag their grandmothers used to leave the dark- ened “parlor” in days gone by. But not only had this hostess learned to live out on her thick closely-woven turf; she had found that there is nothing so charming as eat- out of doors. And so, instead of keeping the bridge players at thelr respective tables,-and replacing the {black satin covers- with fine lnen {ones upon which to serve the refresh- ments, she invited the twenty women out to her lawn where, beneath a big tree, a buffet table was spread. delectable liquid, plates of sand- wiches and cake, and two opalescent vases of garden blossoms. The guests wandered about delightedly. “It not only .the pleasantness of having our ‘eats’ out here under the sky,” exclaimed, one. of them, “but the real relief of getting up. from our tables and resting a bit-by walking around. You know generally we never leave our tables during the entire afternoon except to progress a few feet or s0 to another table. And since I play bridge only by ear’ 1 sometimes never progress at all! It rests me mightlly to get up and. relax my muscles and get a change of pose. “Well, I move that we all have our refreshments ‘4l fresco’ during the summer,” " %ald another member, reaching. eut for a sandwich. “If makes It seem like a veritable gar- den party, as well as a bridge party.” “Just Hats” This" Is . the turban they aré .all wearing in New York town. -It'comes in “crepe” de ‘chine or” georgette; in shades of caramel, navy,.blsque and— well, all the fashlonable stock colors. | {3 And every time it is worn. madame twists ‘and .turns. it"anew ‘about her head, for it comes.in one.plece, as is shown. in the diagram. . An oblong.strip. of miterial a yerd and a half.long-is. gathiered at ‘one end about 'a cabochon. From the other end it is slit down through the middle for about one yard. The edges are pecoed. To-put it oh, the cabochon is pluted “over the center of the brow, the vell-drawn-back ends crossed ‘and swirled around’the head and tucked .under:at-each ‘side where they finish. . g L o shown' in_the result. is :neck firidescent G_STAR, 'WASHINGTON, D. A»LearnaBirda Day By Lucy Warner Maynard MOURNING DOVE. Mourning dove; turtle dove (Zenai- dura macroura). Length, 12 inches, General color, dark fawn; sides of a dark spot on the slde of the head. Tail bordered with black and tipped with white. Under parts pinkish. Resident all the year, common in summer. The mournful, monotonous coo-ah, coo-ah, coo of the turtle dove is not the most cheerful of rural sounds, but he is suc a dainty, pretty ture that we are always glad to have one come whirring our way or to see a Here there wus a great punchbowl of | | new bables there. pair fly up before us in a woodsy road. They build in a variety of places— on the ground, in a bush, on a stump or on the lower branch of a tree. They use a few dry twigs and root- lets, which they put together loosely as to justify the observation f a Maryland Uncle ey builds mighty traiflin’ nesses Two pure white eggs are laid. Lan- gille says: “The young doves are well matured before they leave the | nest and sit side by side upon the ordinarily rude affair. At night the old one sits crosswise upon them, even when they are quite large, the nest and birds together making | grotesque pile.” | . Outside of nesting season these doves gather in flocks and visit grain and cornflelds. (Copyright, L. W. Maynard.) The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY Mary Astor on the Telephone. There's been much ado about some- thing (or nothing) concerning the girls of today, popularly and all the tirie known as “flapper: but there hasn't been very much said, written, or even thought about the boys of today—unless it be by their mothers, who haven't, however, given their thoughts to the world. I was thinking about this the other day and 1 thought It might be in teresting to have on record what some un girl thinks of the boy of today—and what ung girl could qualify quite ®o well as some par- ularly beautiful one, someone on the screen, to whom admiration and adulation and & chance to know boys at their party-best is daily fare. 1 thought of beautiful Mury Astor. Mary = Astor with her young- Madonna face, her unflapper-like at- ere, her serene and thoughtful brow. “She ought to know,” 1 thought. So 1 called her up with the idea in mind of arranging some sort of date, but Mary. having just signed a grand and glorious contract with Famous layers Lasky was, quite suddenly, ordered to the front” which; with ber, meant Caiifornia, to begin work on “To the Ladies,” her first picture for Famous. “Well,” 1 said, “we'll talk over the ‘phone, then.” 'This sounds simple enough at first blush, but fen't so simple as it sounds if you bear in mind central's untimely hint of “Please signal when through for overtime collection!” Anyway; I sald to Mary, Central notwithstanding, “What do You think of the boys of today?” And Mary answered, in her unex- pectedly deep and meliow and rather thrilling volc & rature voice for sweet sixteen, “Why, Miss Hall, you couldn’t print’ what T think of them!” (Stand steady, bove!) like men.” young Mary said, vs. I like men of_thirty and over. Boys are so silly. Most young girls are. too. Whenever I hear a lot of high school girls and boys talk- ing together, I thank my stars I'm in the mowfes. Work does help, and then, too, I have to Keep up my edu- cation, my singing and my French, BEDTIME STORIES Boxer -Grows Sulky. A sulky person is a bore; Nothing less and nothing more. —O0ld Mother Boxer, the young Bear who with his twin-sister Woof-Woof had been sent out to make places for.them- elves in the Great World, had dis- covered the real reasqn Why they had been turned cut of their old home by Mother Bear. There were Yes, sir, there were.new bables there. Boxer's nose was out of joint, as the saying is. Instead of belng pleased, he was jeal- ous. Now, jealousy Is the meanest feel- ing-that can take possession of any- body. It leads to.anger, to sulkiness, to envy and. other bad fee'ings. At-first-Boxer was simply very angry. Whiat might have happened to those helpless bables -under .the old wind- fall had Boxer got in there before the return of Mother Bear no one knows. . But he didn't get in there Mother Bear returned just in the nick of time, and she gave Boxer one of the greatest frights in his whole 1ife. In (hllt ffl?hl he forgot d everything else. e After ho had fully recovered from that fright ~and had found that Mothr Bear was not after him he began ‘to grow angry again. It was jealous.anger. He felt that he and Woof-Woof had been very badly treated in being sent out in. the Great World to make-their own way. They hadn't,r you know. They were big enough to take care of them- selves, and it'was high time for them to. be, doing it But Boxer just ouldn’t -think -of it in-this way. e blamed those helpless babies uander the old windfall -which had been' his old hemu‘h 3‘8" sir, he put -blame on them. - O SRCall. thelr fault he kept mut- tering'-to himself, - as ‘he: prowled about. in.the Green Forest, always takin, re never to go very neal 1 windfall.” “It-is all their my, home and Woof- and" they have mo’ busin there. _1f ever- I catch -them make them sorry. -I'll teach them a lesson. Yes. sir, that's what I'll do. T'Tl _teach .them .a lesson. .I they'll never-drive anybody el of a home. There miust be two of them. I'm sure I heard two-cry. I don’t see.why Mother Bear didn’t put them out when they first came. My, but’ she was ugly when she’ chased me-away from- that windfall! So. as ° Boxer -wandered about | through lhod O{hl‘.n.’l‘or“:o‘:\te t:;‘l’: ‘thinking al k08 inthe. bld ure. oo o 3 o :‘}m’« them the he ;' He. felt; that Y -young GLADYS HALL. MARY ASTOR SAYS SHE IS “OLD- FASHIC c so I just don’t have any time for boys and for petting parties and all that. “Anyway, I'm all out of sympathy, I'm afraid, with the modern flapper. That was just one thing that fright- ened me about my new contract. I haven't quite decided what type of thing I'd best like to grow into doing. but Ldo know the type I never could do, that's the flapper type. When I thought for awhile that I would have to, play in Scott Fitzgerald's “This Side of Paradise,” I was terri- fled, because T do have to feel a cer- tain amount of sympathy for the part I play to do it justice, and I couldn't have for that role. “I suppose I'm just ‘old-fashioned'; perhaps, because 1 am an only child, and most of my friends have been mother's and daddy’s friends. Really, I shouldn't be expressing any views about boys and men because I know @o little about them. Just a few of daddy's best friends, and the boys in the Film Guild, and Mr. Hunter, it 80 | Remus that ¢ il | of_course, and Mr. Barthelmess.” No doubt it will not be necessary to page the men over thirty! (AlL rights reserved.) By Thornton 'W. Burgess. Bear. He thought only of himself. He dldn’t give a thought to Woof- Woof. By this time he had almost forgotten her. Probably had he mnot discovered that there were new babies in_ the old home he would by this time have |been a contented and well satistied young Bear. He didn't need Mother Bear any longer. He had no use for that old home. He probably would very soon have left Mother Bear had “IT'S. ALL THEIR FAULT,” HE KEPT MUTTERING TO_ HIMSELF AS HE PROWLED ABOUT IN THE GREEN FOREST. she not driven him away when she did. But the discovery that there were new bables and that Mother Bear had no thought for any one but them made all the difference in the world. And ‘so Boxer sulked and sulked and sulked, and. was as bad-tempered as a young Bear could be. Dozens of times he was tempted to go back to that old windfall. But he dldn’t do it. Every time he was so tempted he remembered that ugly growl of Mother Bear's and-how .dreadful her teeth had looked. He would shiver at the thought and wander off in an- other direction. \ (Copyright, 1923, by T. W. Burgess.) To_Prepare Fresh Pineapple. Grasp the pineapple firmly in one hand, then take hold of the follage with the other hand and twist it off. Now slice. the .fruit across in thin sMoes not less than three-fourths of an inch thick. Put a slice on a plate, arp knife around the of “the slice inside the peel. Then the. peel will come. off easily, together ~with -the eyes. Now cut across the slice. through the core, making four pj ‘of pineapple, one on each side of the.core. In this way the core :will*be ‘cut out without any. C., TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1923. We all have family troubles, family secrets. Usually they are little per- sonal matters that we would rather not discuss with the neighbors, just because they "are so little and so very personal. It is almost impossible for us to keep them from the children. They seem to soak them up through their skins. We may not have uttered a word about it in their presence. We may have been models of discretion all ‘day, and yet at sunset we know that they know. We betrayed the secret in a dozen different ways. Our eyes kept str ing. The tones of our voices changed. We did not open a certain door. We whispered once. We omitted doing something we always have done and did something we never did before. And the children sensed the thing that was troubling us. To be sure, they did not know it accurately. They could scarcely put into clean-cut words. For that matter, neither could we. They have a vague uneasiness about the hidden thing and dread it. That is why it is 80 mean, so unsporting, to question a child about what goes on in his family. If children can talk, the best way out is to teach them that what hap- pens in the home must stay there. Tell then 'We don't want th WOMAN’S PAGE. | Spoken of outside the family. Only you and father and I must know. It is our business, and real people never tell their secrets to outsiders. This belongs to us. Just us:" Loyalty is essential if there is to be a family feeling, and the sooner the children get the idea the better. Teach them that when people ques tion them about family concerns they are to answer, politely, just— nothing at all! Silence is the child's wall of defense. Silence and flight! Patsy was four years old when something happened In his family that greatly Interested a neighbor n street. If only she could get the right of " She stopped Patsy on his way for the morning milk. His mother, watching from the window, saw and hoped that Patsy would remember her cautions. He did. ‘When he trudged up the steps with pail his mother asked: “What vas the lady saying to you?" She told me how did T do, and I told her how did she do herself. Then she told me did her see Something coming into our house this morning, and I told her nothing a-tall and came on home with the milk. Was 1 a good boy? “Fine boy. None better. Just tell her nothing at all and you'll be quite right.” But wasn't it mean to ask him? (Copyrignt, 19 An Easy Way - To Banish Wrinkles New Discovery Gently Smooths Them Away — Like Magic | O longer is there any excuse for N wrinkles! A new discovery of ience proves i With this new treatment it is just as if a magic wand were brushed cross your face, banishing every tired line, every laugh or frown wrinkle, every tell-tale mark of time ! Why let wrinkles add age to your | face? Why let your beauty be spoiled by tragic lines and (furrows, when they can now be eras\d as easily as pencil marks? \ How It Wor\'s This new discovery, cAlled Domino Wrinkle Cream, is entif\ly different from anything known or \tsed before. Unlike other treatments it does not attempt merely to conceal the lines. Tnstead, it gets right at the under- Iying cause of wrinkles—removes it in a perfectly natural and harmless way—and the lines and wrinkles disappear almost before you realize it. No_tedious massaging, no painful | electric_ treatment, no harmful lo- tions. Just press a small quantity of this fragrant new cream into the | wrinkles, remove it in 30 minutes— | then note the results! Even after the first few days your face will ap- pear years younger looking. Guaranteed to Remove Every Wrinkle Domino Wrinkle Cream is guar- | anteed to remove every line and | wrinkle no matter how deep seated it may be. If within 10 days you are | not more than delighted with results, your money will be instantly re- funded. A $10,000 depodit in the Producers and Consumers Bank of Philadelphia. protects this guarantee, 0 sou don't risk a penny. New Beauty Awaits You I Nothing.will more quickly rob you | of your natural beauty and charm than unsightly lines and wrinkles. Why tolerate them any longer, when | you can now banish them so easily? Get Domino Wrinkle Cream today— I now. QOMIANO WRINKLE CREAM On sale at all good drug and ples Drug Stores, Liggettx, O |S. Kann Sons Co.—Advertisement. department stores, such as all Peo- onnell's Drug Stores, Palais Royal and T took a hun- dred years to develop Tetley’s Orange Pekoe. Every cup.is tea perfection. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN Co-operation. My child never works for me. works with me. I am very careful to say to her: “Come on, Marjorie, let's get dinner for dad. Suppose you e table while I 'peel the pota- If 1 leave out the partner- ship feeling and merely say, “Set the table, Majorie,” her attitude is en- tirely different. (c She ght. 1923.) Almost Unbelievable Youcan hardly realize the wonder- ful imprr 7enient to your skin and complexion the mirror will reveal toyou after usin Gouraud's Orient Cream for the first time. White-Flesh Rachel. 6 Send 10c for Trial Sice F. T. HOPKINS & SON New York Gouraud's Oriental Cream BETTER LOOKS BETTER TASTES _BETTER 80id im sealed packages only. Sead for recipe booklet FREE. Comet Rice, 57 Laight St. N. Y. - 'No Soap Better —— For Your Skin=——= Than Cuticura s g Chicken Tender meat of chicken for home use or for out- ings—tasty and convenient. STANDARD SINCE 1855 ADVERTI Beauty Secrets Of 1923 BY MONSIEUE GLEBEA! THE CORRECT use of Rouge is not generally understood or their various shades. Mademoiselle Par- sienne is justly proud of her com- slexion and is so particular about ‘he tint of Rouge she uses, know- ng that the improper tint will mar that chic finish to her appearance. Nhen viewed casually or in a be- soming light, the wrong tint of Rouge may not be moticeable, but 3 change of seat, a stronger light, nakes your complexion _entirely lifferenth:nbacommg and aufey. Glebeas Rosetone Rouge is a fav- srite among fashionable women be- zause,—It’s a two in one Rouge— as it gives your complexion the same even, lovely coloring whether| in the shadows or in the glaring light. There is no_other Rouge, quite as perfect. O’DONNELL’S DRUG STORES