Evening Star Newspaper, June 19, 1923, Page 29

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WOMAN'’S PAGE,' FEATURES. Listen,World! WRITTEN AND 1LLUSTRATED By Elsie Tobinson ittle Benny’ Little Capes in Place of Sleeves = ] Note BooK BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. . The Guide Post Learn a Bird a Day il . By Henry van Dyke The Father of Lies. By Lucy Warner Maynard Rather than show partiality for ®ither the coat or the cape, fashion has compromised by selecting as her ohoice a wrap that starts out to be one and ends by being the other. Of course, there is nothing new about this cape-decked coat. Mackintoshes, that you may dimly remember once to have worn in rainy weather, were usually thus constructed. The cape to the wome | Dedicated to the best little alibi ar- | How daring we'd be— And the serpent sald unto I tist T know—myself. | it we were sure an, Ye shall not surely die.—Gen. a.:l iy el e B The attempt to deny or ignore ev it it wasn't so dangerous, How & 0 dalof evavy: | How generous we'd he— has been the stock in trade o | i we w sure they deserved our false doetrine that has befogged and G roalty: bewildered the world since the days | How unconventional we'd be— of Eden. | i people wouldn't talk about us The fairy tale that the old serpent told to Eve is a poetic symbol of the they wouldn't The Shoe Shine Man. 1 His teeth are white and his swetter is red And his skin i3 as dark as pitch, And he shines your shoes elther yello How honest we'd be— Aly or black, h that sin if it didn't make so much trouble. arrangement could be more eas o it O itttk lie fundamental—the theory ‘ o t or trock having - does not mean death, because it has How adventuresome we'd be— Tevge or eiaborato sleeves than an 2 Hoehei exiatence and makes no reo R e Mivencures ! 5 % erence. | ould turn out right. ordinary sleeved waterproof. He atoben everybodys shoes going “Evil i3 nothing,” say these teach- it o e The present coat with cape ar- el svenisithe ers. “It is not real. It is an illusion, | be— rangement at the sides has the same a negation. Shut your eyes and it if every one-didn’t pick on us. And gives you a glity feeling v | How faithful we'd be— his fact no doubt pif " will vanish. e DI e he T o do with its growing B3 VellaEianiue getnie Shine: Yes, but open your eyes again and it only folks were worth it popularity. If you want a wrap that 3 you will see it in the same place, in How successful we'd be. D iy and securely sbout the Hain s el b nesanarsaansible the same form, doing the same work. if we had the other fellow's job body and yet slips on over the sleeves A most persistent nothing, a most clot (Copyright, 192%.) of frock or sult this style of wrap Being ixciting things to do, powerful nothing! = 18 well chosen. tng, ana Bt if ho Jeat kepp on plans shining | EAE S s . et e hbas Side the e ey No Cause to Worry ost cow"g’fl}‘;;’;-w'““:,‘l‘l‘," A He mite be quicker getting (hrnuxh.l % ) 4 5 A - T et s e sk 00 o Cause to Worry. gelient Couta of this description made s ~ et e snnencs imping o OCIDATTENTRIEDN £ 5 soctety e Dreventi no imibie fn soft, light wool, warm but not If he thinks somebody's going to it ‘the discordbreakingithe SHar- from being scoffed at in colleges” nas burdensome. Plaids are the choice glve him something exter, pony. 3 BE IF—— been started. T Bible has been of the season for such outer Wraps, He-rubs their shoes special brisk, £ IS a8 cealian (06 f0) tha ¢ hums scoffed at for about 2,000 years, Loth though many women prefer to keep And If they reely do give him somes you, as the flood that drowns you, as ] g e 3 away from the very striking plaids, NI et tis: DRl erm A S0 oo tant — : > ing what are known as ‘‘shadow Ye wisks them like the dickins with under a microscope and see it squirm. j How wise 'd be— i *instead of those of bold and hio, wich, (Copyelaht: 1923) it it wasn't such a nuisance to outstanding appearance. study. The wrap shown in the sketch is 5 How 105ine wedl e leanor Fitzgibbon of Laurel of another ge‘rllu" dlt! l*l n"adr:ed‘l" Somellm;a m‘- puts on the polish with | H.r p:umu only 1ll"|1r(‘ ted love. 1 1flx klno\\n su{l’:‘up{vs)‘.’in pyt;‘- white silk faille—and that immedi- a brush i ow famous we'd be - first woman to take up the e T et rom thoiranis e Your Home and | [ Sm0%0s i vave an e imDoFinE and’ brecding of things serviceable. It is the sort Wich must be fearse for his fokes at luck TETLEYS of wrap well dressed women would | home YO“ chaose for summer horse shows and Because even on shoes the smell other outdoor assemblings of & rather lingers. formal nature. One no longer need apologize for | a fur collar In summer. It is taken for granted as we now take felt hats | KEN DALL. dSh'O |7§ in midsummer for granted. The | The Breakfast Fruit Bowl. thing that makes fur collars on sum- The little daughter of the family, mer wraps and separate fur chokers who was learning the rudiments of Mak: . < . ar fo - 7 Bersistently popular, or summer as| .eCc\S e akes good TEA a certainty generally becoming. It ix within the | Ol setting the breakfast table out on Bomer rr»fr‘lh; r\;‘l";mg»! nr“":x;‘nb;o';‘nlfl“i;e | Aenabsel the veranda, under the pleasant shade wrap bec o co sl n : : It is for this reason, surely, that COAT OF WHITE SILK FAILLE Y AodRAgton of a drooping tree and a broadly NE cool cl[nklng fur has continued In favor for warm | WITH BROWN COLLAR. striped awning. After placing the ’ weat for so long. To be sure, silver and glass for the meal, she 'l' 9, o e g | both these devices are usually E E T eal, @ L e e s Dut meliner!ias een brought from the dining room inside glass of etleysorange this ; able successfully to banish the fur ‘ot |collar from the list of summer clothes. (Copyright, 19 evening and afternoon wraps ®earon. and enormous ruches * chiffon or tulle have been revived— | the bowl of flowers which had been on the dinner table the night before. “If 1 were you, dear,” remarked her mother, who was keeping a watchful eye on the breakfast preparations, I Pekoe—iced—and you’ll be the friend of this princely blend for life. Try it on a good hot day, and see. LoU ANA WATER THRUSH. (Seiurus ana water motacilla). Length, o Upper parts gravish olive; ous white line over the eye. Under parts white, streaked like a thrush, except on the throat Resident (rather common) April 14 to thrush the He oven bird, with a motion, and b walks, like the peculiar teetering 150 resembles that bird in g ppearance, but will Le distinguished from him by the white line over the eye. He is very nd diflicult to approach he made of twigs, rootlets and is generally under a shelving the upturned roots of a fallen The eggs, four to six, are white, uch_speckl th reddish brown. Chapman writes enthusiastically of his song and says: “There s an & fierce wildness in its ringing notes.” ' (Copy v 615 inches. The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan conspicu- - BY GLADYS HALL. from in When & girl is self-conscious she is likely to be distinctly conscious of her looks. She has them in the fore- ground of her mind all the time, be- cause she hasn’t anything else to fill that foreground. That detracts from all her charm, of course. Beauty must be natural. It must be spon- taneous. When a girl looks out from the stage or is before the camera she must not be thinking about her- self or about how she looks, but of the thing which she must be doing at that moment. If she's engaged in | considering whether she looks better seen at one angle than she does at another, she is bound to lose the spirit of the play. i Giris who earn their living on the stage or screen cannot afford to he tired. They must get long hours of | restful sleep. Fatigue marks the face | with unmistakable hollows and etch- ings. The complexion suffers. The | whole face Is wan and weary “Girls who are on the stage or | screen must eat right and at the It's Hard Work to Be Beautiful. | When 1 was talking to Florenz | Ztegfeld the other day 1 happened to | mention the fact that many girls say | to me, and write to me, “If I had only been born as beautiful as Mary Pick- ford or as fascinating as Pola Negri, I could be a movie star, too.” Mr. Ziegfeld said that such is not | the case. Those girls are wrong. He went on to tell me that beauty September 5; winters the tropics. The water thrush frequents small streams wild where they ds, and ma run PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY. M. D., Noted Physician and Author. flow through found on k and Wi would arrange a bowl of fruit for the center of the table this morning. {instead of using the flowers.” “The flowers are perfectly fresh,” protested the future housekeeper. “Yes, 1 know they are; but you see we want to give the table a little bit different look in the morning, and fruit is alwayvs so tempting at break- fast time. Even though we are to have grapefruit to begin with and may not eat any of the fruit in the bowl at all, it gives a cool. fresh look to the table, don't you think s0? Then when we come back to the flowers tonight at dinner, they will interest us more than if we had them before us at every meal. “If you want to, I think Jusi say oned Chicken Yawn. Throw your face as i i 1 Exercise for the Middle Ear. | 1 e amyour, taccl In many cases of chronic impair-!locating your jaw, of course, but ment of hearing, due to various €nough to produce a feeling of ten- disease procsesses involving the deli- sion in the muscles at the back of | your throat. When you have yawn- it would right times. They must exercise. cate mechanism of the middle ear roughly, take a slow, full swal-[be nice to put g fragrant fresh posy ick even if they do have a lot of dancing cavity, which is a space the size of thir halt a dozen swal-|at lverybody'splate this ‘morning ‘\ieat of Ch)cken, tender and and moving about to do in their work housing the famous little|lows ater, or of air If you can’t|You can bring in some roses, or & E : : Driving and swimming and golfing all 3 Jea o ne ”’A . i \vi1 | B€t water. fow. aptays 'of foimeEme NGt Then dellClOllS, Pad\ed n sanitary are rich in mental relaxation, and bones known as the hammer, ar 2. Monkey face. Protrude the chinlat luncheon we can have a single t' e d b ](' d mental relaxation pays rich dividends and stirrup, just within the ear . n and draw it back |beautiful rose in the slender glass Ins—ready to be transiorme | in loveliness. . there is an associated annoy- 3 n. Jraw the upperbud-vase, because luncheon is a 3 > = & ot casy to be boautiful A Guom. Shatsiis (a0 et o ey far i and out s you can. at | Henior. daintior meal than dimner. you into any one of a dozen beautiful girl has a hard job In the| ance _ callel Snaius = 10198 | the same time dilating the nostrils.|know. and we must have a more ‘deli = J Poid W MOh 18 exnectan Grher ng varying from hissing ~or buzzing | Do these grimaces a_dozen {imes. cate flower arrangement in the center tempting dishes. she dare not fail, even for an hour or a day. ~She dare not rest on her| laurels. ! More and more I seem to feel that being a movie actress isn't, after all, a mere matter of motor cars and press agents and de luxe apartments. It isn't even a matter of being able to Ruby de Remer fan't beautiful merely | act. It's work. It's work even to be “by amccident.” | beautiful. 3 | | Some of the girls who came from 18 a Lusiness rather than a matter of | the Ziegfeld Follies—Ruby de Remer natural advantages. It's also a mat-| comes to my mind, for an instance— ter of intelligence. He interpolated | have been on the stage and screen for the wise fact that if girls who are | 8 considerable length of time. Ruby complaining about going to school | (I saw her last week) looks as blond Tin- uses about both ear them first backward nd then forward and ou can feel the pull Push the little tab in front of the ear opening in and out of the ear opening with your finger. Ma your ears move by aising and lowering your brow or scalp, as the lower animals and some human beings do. First frown, wrinkling the forehead, then relax the scalp toward the back 1d. It will take patience actice, but with perseverance n learn to move vour ears. . Wiggle ears. nd pull upward. downward, so inside the e: Grasp of the table. At dinner the low mass of lilies, columbine and larkspur makes just the right decoration. “We change the kind of fond we have on the table three times a day and as the decorative effect is j as important as the ‘eats’, we ought to l:la\'e a change of centerpiece as well.” sounds to ringing or roaring. nitus is found to depend upon far from the ears or he € i as many cases as it is present in ear disease, so that even if one be more or less deaf and have such head noises it does not follow that the tinnitus is due to the ear trouble, for it may, of course, be attributable to_tobacco, acetanilid, salicylates or salylcylic acld, and to various temic disease conditions which I need not mention here. Exercise of the middle ear remedial measure in chronic de and associated tinnitus, which tre. Even the beginner in home dress- making can produce charming ef- fects if she selects a style such as this. The pattern cuts in sizes 16 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust meas- ure; size 36 requires 2% yards of 36-inch material with 1 yard of 27- inch contrasting material. Embroid- ery pattern No. 602—in blue only— 15 cents extra. Price of patterns, 15 cents, In post- age wtamps only. Orders should be nddressed to The Washington Star Pattern Bureau, 22 East 15th street, It saves the housewife’s time and pocket-book. A standard product for 59 years. Just the thirg for “alads and sandwiches —_— It a little butter is rubbed on the fingers and knife used in seedingi raisins the stickiness will be pre- vented. a ess - . v and beautiful now as she did y v ela eck. k your g “{Lrafl'sufiéfifl r;]: .«"‘t’ml‘“&';? are | dr. Zieg| 1d gave her her mu‘y:;ngf,’u ew York city. Please write name [ment is seldom tried by the patlent| 1. s ,]:.,‘ h’:‘-vh‘ hnft?l‘-ze‘:}{:xcn:o)(logeh?:(l o o itudying how to be beautifui | “try-out” She hasn't done that by |md ad€ress clearly. with anvihing like the constancy of Your neck and press vour head firmiy ||| An Unfailing Way they might not be so willing ‘or so | eating French pastries, smoking ciga- persistenc For k against the hands, then relax dles or treatments are applied that matter, such a cheap remedy as exercise is seldom taken seriously by the very people who most mneed it and would gain most from it. On the other hand, exercise seems such & simple remedy that it is too often used by the very people who should not take the slightest exercise with- out medical advice. These persons who consider exercise a cure-all often suffer irreparable injury from indulg-| ing in a little exercise gt a time or under circumstances which demand rest. Now, then, exercise at vour own peril. | | some middle ear exercis I proved beneficial in some chronic deafness and tinnitu not prescribing the exercises for an individual case, and I do not giv eager to abandon the three R's. rettes and lolling between “The girl who is unintelligent.” he | Think it over i. “is apt to be self-consciou (AIL rights reserved.) i BEDTIME STORIES but already they have learned to mind | instantly. " If they have any questions | to ask, they mind first and ask after- s achool. | ward. Would you like to see how i use. | well they mind?" | _Of course, Peter sald he would. Peter Rabbit was full of ‘“""S“YI’rhe twelve bables were scattered but he was too polite to ask Mrs. about, busily scratching in l]hellea\‘es buse W v : ba- |and hunting for worms and insects. Grouse where her twelve pretty ba- |3, Grouse watched them for & mo- bies had so suddenly appeared from. | pi® GroUe o e B hat fairly “shots, ten times. Then move the| rd your right shoulder, then toward left shoulder, and finally ro- tate and roll the head through all of these positions as far as the old head will g0 without rolling off. The purpose of these exercises Is to improve the circulation in the re- glon of the middle ear and relax the muscles, which become stiff with dignity and disuse. The exer- must be faithfully carried out night and every morning, per- haps In the middle of the day, If pos- sible, but do not carry them at any time to the point of fatigue. They may be done in about five minutes ach time. 1f anybody should suspect that the exercises are just a kind of glorified, systematized stretch and yawn, he needn't make a fuss about it. They are. head to: To Banish Hairs| (Beauty Notes) Ugly hairy growths can be re- moved in the privacy of vour own home if you get a small original package of delatone and mix into a paste enough of the powder and | water to cover the hairy surface, | This should be left on the skin| about 2 minutes, then removed and | the skin washed and every trace of hair will have vanished. No| harm or inconvenience can result| |from this treatment. but be sure you buy real delatone. “Just Hats” By Vyvyan By Thornton W. Burgess. Picturesque Bonnet. A Lesson in Obedience. Obedience you'll find t! That first is taught in o ule rour middle ear am describing whi ¥ You see, there are certain things sparkled with pride and love. Then any assurance that the exercises W SR which the little people of the Green |she uttered a sharp but low note : e iof warning. There 1s Forest keep secret. and it Is motgo, s, 16 SOEC, TR tne good taste to ask about them. Mrs. | game time Mrs. Grouse acted for all @rouse knew just how curlous and | the world as if she really had heard lor seen something that made her | suspicious. For a moment it actual- ly fooled Peter. He kept his eyes on_ her just long enough to make | sure that she was only pretending, and then he looked to see what the | bables were doing. | “Well, T never!” exclaimed Peter, {and in his voice there was such a | mingling of astonishment and unbe- !llef ' that Mrs. Grouse actually | chuckled. ~ You see, those twelve live- ly babies, who only a moment be- fore had’ been running about this way and that way, had disappeared as quickly as if the ground had opened and swallowed them. Peter blinked foolishly, and he looked very sheepish. “Isn't that prompt obedience?” demanded Mrs. Grouse, “It certainly is. Mrs. Grouse,” cried Peter. “It certainly is. But where are the little scalawags?” MOTHERS ] condescendsion Is just funny. The Hn o irls know. The city was filled with the clamor | EL1% it Beryatimel or boys. The papers carried stories| E i O nlavad)ar bome mazsathe plasEround oo e em e anathes et beina the cons | S2cnE scroms I Eheln SmICieRes oB X e e o ok - the | free and graceful with the power and Uit i | strength of health, 1 cheer inwardly principals’ chairs In schools and boys | SE Of EE € ers e e asleep on the hill know and rejoice. “Why isn't there some reference | ™"y, pingq1 Burdened with drags to girls?" demanded somebody of the | ging” petticoats, choked with tight busy man in charge of boys’ week. clothes, lamed with ill-shod feet, A real directoire bonnet is this of grosgrain material. The crown is trimmed in circlets of self cording, and the brim makes a generous and pert poke. One might use circlets of another color ghan the hat, and face the brim with 1, too—or use perhaps many shades, one for each cord. VERSIFLAGE Amazing New Way | fo Banish Wrinkles! Marvelous Discovery Smooths Away Every Line it PETER MRS. Caro-co Cocoanut Oil Shampoo makes plenty of lather and washes out 3uickly and easily. It “AREN'T THEY DARLINGS, RABBIT?” DEMANDED GROUSE. cspumled Setanman, Herioyss Edukles AND THEIR CHILDREN “Why, wo computed tho Dercentage |cripplea by convention: How. they | oes not stick to the hair — Almost Like Magic "‘,;",:"‘T,":,,:y Aasiiags ateciRans T s When There Are Guest of girls that were sent to institutions st smile down on these free, or cause a lot of trouble BIeT. GerAsao Mo Giot ooky Sy 2 or placed under arrest, or got into|pealthy, growing girls. Fine gifls with extra rinsing. It WONDERFUL new discovery after the first few days your face So many wives with ire complain that “hubby” causes them great pain, because their manners are so punk. They will not pass the supper junk. They eat the olives with great zest. The almonds, too, they do digest. They help themselves to butter, bread —but never see that guests are fed. They crack a pleasant joke. or two, trouble one way and another, and it was negligible. We thought it bet ter to put all our effort on the boys. This may have been the very right thing to do. I'm not sure. In my mind something rebels. Surely one necd not get into jail before being thought worthy of care and attention now makes wrinkles entirely unnecessary ! No longer need women fear the tragic lines that rob them of their beauty and charm. For Science has found a quick, easy and inex- pensive way to smooth away every tired line, every laugh wrinkle, every deep frown mark. It's almost On second thought I don’t envy that week for the boys. They probably need it far more than the girls, just as the good man said. Soon the boys will find they have all they can do to hold their own with them. " For the girls of today are strong in body and mind. They are sane as to their relations with the boys. will appear years younger looking. leaves the hair fi and soft. Makes the scalp feel clean and good. ARO-CO Peter nodded gravely. “They cer- tainly are,” said he. “They certainly are. But how under the sun do you Guaranteed to Remove Every ‘Wrinkle This new discovery — called Domino Wrinkle Cream—is GUAR- ANTEED to remove every line and wrinkle, no matter how deep seated, and a $10,000 deposit in the " replied Mrs. ‘Children always are a great care, whether there be few or many. But if they are taught obedience from ‘They are, Grouse. the very beginning a great deal of worry is avoided. ~Obedience is the first great law in life. There are no more obedient children in all the Green Forest than mine, If I do say #0. I never have to speak to them more than once. You saw how they came the very instant I clucked to them."” Peter nodded his head again. “Yes,” said he, I saw how they came, but I didn’t_see where they came from.” Mrs. Gro chuckled. “They were ight here all the time,” sald she. ‘One of them wasn't a foot from ‘where you are sitting. If they hadn't minded perfectly probably you would have seen some of them. When I heard you coming I told them to hide and keep perfectly still, and tbat is Just what the darlirgs did. They didn't stop to ask questions. They didn't even stop to see If there was anv real danger. The very instant I spoke they minded. They have been out-of their -shells only & faw days, One motherysays: I let my children have one after- noon when they can go into the kitchen and do cooking of their very own. They fill the “cooky jar” them- selves. I show them how to make new recipes. and give advice when they need it, but bevond that the kitchen is their very own for th t.lll.h being. o 8 but never say “Do have more stew. grass.” end. bend. toast. kale. slow. ried Iives have spoi grown, WILHELMINA STITCH. s If there house, but there is cocod, may be substituted for chocolate. the rule calls for one square of cho colate, use two tablespoons of coco: @ad increase the amount of butter. They never urge, “Please pass your glass, or have some more escalloped Now see wife at the other Her eyebrows in an arch do She's signalling to husband- host to pass the guest a plece of Her lips are dfawn, her nose is pale because he's eating all the ‘And yet she told him hours ago with special things he must go It seems to me, oh worried wives, that you throughout your mar- t your hubbies when -alone if inattentive they have Is no chocolate in the the. cocoa and apprectation! So here’s to the girls! All honor to them that they are not arrested or sent to institutions. All_praise to them for keeping as near right as they can and keeping out of trouble with the “authorities.” It is no harder for a boy to be decent than it is for a girl, but the girl works | harder at it! And for that they are called the weaker sex, and boys are begged to consider_their weakness and protect them! That day has long gone b: The notion that girls could not run, climb, swim, study and work as the equals and competitors of boys has been laughed out of existence. - At school the girls are beating the boys at their studies. They can swim and make records; they can play games and gain health and strength and team spirit. They can earn their If; own living without help from the boys. From this generation on the boys will have to earn their places in the lives of the girls. The %ir of They are no longer looking up to them and they expect to be able to look across, on the level, at them. The boys will have to step out a bit lest the girls look down. (Copyright, 1923.) The Old Gardener Says Tt is more work to rake up a lawn than to mow it, and raking is not necessary if the cutter is used twice a week. Very short grass clippings improve the lawn if allowed to re- main and decay. But when the clip- pings get longer they smother the grass where they fall and the greens- ward takes on a burned appearance. If the mowing of the lawn is neg- |lected for a week or ten days, the lcllpplngs should be raked up by all means. They will be relished by chickens when green, or can be used as a mulch for the flower or vegetable garden. 3 COGOANUT OIL SHAMPOO is an emulsion of cocoanut oil. America’s Shampoo. Contains nothing that will harm, and t is _delightful and refreshing B your - dealer. } Union, 3.C. as if a magic wand were waved across your face, banishing every line and restoring the firm youth- ful freshness of your skin. Removes Cause of Wrinkles This new treatment is based on a simple natural principle. No tedi- ous massaging, no harmful lotions, mno painful electrical treatments. Nor does it merely attempt to con- ceal the wrinkles. Instead it gets right at the cause of wrinkles, removes it in a perfectly harmless way, and the wrinkles vanish al- most before you realize it. Even Producers and Consumers Bank of Philadelphia backs up this guar- antee. If, within 10 days, you are not more than delighted with re- sults, your money will be instantly refunded. Get It Today ‘Why allow wrinkles to add age to your face when they can now be crased so easily? Domino Wrinkle Cream will soon rid you of every line and wrinkle, for it is a_ natural preparation and works ALWAYS. 1t is sold at good drug and depart- ment stores at a very low price for a package lasting many weeks. DOMINO WRINKLE CREAM On sale at good Drug and Department Stores everywhere, such as all Peoples Drug Stores, O’'Donnell’s Drug Stores, S. Kann Sons Co.

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