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8 WOMAN’S PAGE . Sleeves for Long, Slender Lines . BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. Time was when in every large dressmaking establishment there -e‘:e ekilled sleeve lpeclallals——women who @la nothing from morning to night every working day but make !\e;\:a; and set them into the frocks for Wl 'e they had been designed. That vm; 4n the days when the sleeve offeres one of the chief problems to home dressmakers. ) Then’ sleeves assumed amazing “:u s, Moreover, they were ot oatt of-the frock itself that there was no question of setting them in. Sleeveless frocks cappe it may come again when the sleeve specialist will assume her old {mportance, for he who runs may rea in the great unwritten book of fash- fon that unfolds itself “every day about us that sleeves are assuming un ever-increasing amount of im- rtance. POt “there are sleeveless frocks, and there are many women Who are Joathe to see them pass. And the statement is made often these days that any sort of sleeve is as good as any oth Perhaps there never was | such diversity of sleeve design. This much, however, seems to be settled, and that is that no sleeve that de- tracts from the loag, slender line of the body is smart. Di gone back to the middle ages for th inspiration in slceves, and it was then, as it s now, the mode for woen to be a Like- wise we see ¥ with amazing e that charmed ¥ the worl that leader with Paris —in the days that came after the| French revoiution, the sleeves of the | directoire and the carly empire period. | Quite character Then, too, the silhouette was one of | perfod s the slee slender and long line: Listen,World! WRITTEN AND 1 LUSTRATED By Clsie Tiohinson produce s ctitude, the sleeves is—and the rest of | played rfollow-the- matters of dress FROCK WITH ONE WHITE TULI] SLEEVE, NARROW BAND OF ER- MINE TRIMMING OTHER SHOUL- DER. tic of the present e that flows from one shoulder.but not from the other. D his parents tracted when he's home. Won't_get up in the morn until the whole family is mobilized to drag him out—has to be hounded into the bath, and you should see the bathroom when he’s through with it! Forgets the purpose of y on which he's sent. 3 stupid—what in time's the use of oy like that? “There you everything you got no sense? Sprawli place—actin’ it fect weren't hitehe Why don't you keep your eyes open? Almost seems to me as If You ain’t real bright. Clumsy as a calf. Land go again! Breaking look at! Ain’t you ng all over the your hands and on to you at all it Gk : I was wawking to skool this morn- ing and 1 herd somebody running:up in back of me, sounding llke ‘my black and wite dog Yardo. Which it How to Win and Hold a Man |Dorothy Dix] Pisousses Feminine Heart-Trap- ping Methods Keep the “Cave Man” Guessing — Feed the Shy Man Mush — And Let the Vain Man See His Image in Your Eyes. YOUNG woman wishes to know whether a girl should show her affection when she loves a man, or wheth ‘keep him giessing as to the state of was, and I chased him back saying. | Hay, do you wunt to make me Inle] for skool, wats a matter with you? And I kepp on_going and the ferst think I knew Yard® was running after me agen, and I chased him back thinking, G, 111 leeve him.follow me to skool and Miss Kitty will make me take him home agen and Il miss a lot of lessons. And I dident say enything elts to him and he came wawking rite in skool after me and all the kids started to laff, Miss Kitty saying, Well, wats this, a new pupil? He ‘followed me all the ways to skool and wouldent go_ back, 1 sed, and Miss Kitty sed, Well, wat a touching incident, it reminds: me of nd her littie lamb. hote, 1 better take 1 the dog Is the greatest friend vy sed. Wat kind of him most faithill to man, Miss a dog is A 1 dont nt find out, I sed. T gess 1 could ta him home in about 20 minutes, T awt to, I sed, and Miss Kitty sed, No, ufter such a wonderfill display of devotion 1 think 111 allow You to keep him under vour desk. Wich I aid, giving him a push with my foot every once in a wile to make him bark so Miss Kitty would change her mind, ony she jest smiled every time as if she thawt it was cute. | Proving peeple offen do you favors at the rong time. COLOR CUT-OUT The Pilgrim Fireplace. 3 times and then 1 had a brite ideer, | DOROTHY DIX. If a man belongs to the stroni makes a great mistake to wear he: knowledge that h n have h The knowledge that she She does not rouse his sporting bloos HE only woman that this type of who can ever hold him, 18 the w with all his skill and persistence to in he feels that he has never got be is a sacred inner chamber that he & cternal i { now and then, to him. ur affections. camouflage y er answer more than for him. Ne give you str of ma his wife, and dragi head, to his little dugout. her, kicking | him, and that she hobbled him and dr: or for the asking keeps him loves him does not thrill him. fs never sure of; the woman whose heart deal is the woman who I3 snow and iee to all the world, gth to resist calling him up over the telephone. is essentially a_cave man, and he wants to think that er she should affect indifference and her heart. U F LT Which {s the wider plan depends altogether upon’ the man. Generally speaking, the average male craves most the peach that hangs highest on the tree, the one that he to risk his neck climbing to get. If you will observe, you will per- celve that the girls who are most boy- crazy never have any beaus. The woman who 18 most anxious to marry never catches a husband, and those ladies who are all heart, and ready to bestow’ their devotion on any one Who will have it, never find any takers. For again, are by nature generally speaking, men untsmen. They enjoy the chase of the petticoat. The more difcult a woman is to catch the fore they desire her, and the lcss she Cares for them the more they care for her.. The woman who tries to Ton down a man seldom catches him, foF the more she hotfoots after him the faster he sprints. Ve type, a woman Tietlo, agmroas Il!ei}g. ‘The mere ‘from wanting her. Tt bores him. urting what ho ¥ heart upon her d. When he goes aco! wants is to take a shot at a bird on the wing. r really falls in P"lova with, or voman who flouts him; the woman he Oart is a citadel that he has to fight and even when he does break nse, and that there This sort of man's but fire, man eve! take, yond the first defe nay never reach. Therefore, 1f your man is what the movies call the “he-man” type, | Play possum. Never let him {ind out you care Pray heaven to That type he discovered and screaming, by the hair of her half of his letters. He coulan’t stand the mortification of knowing | that he fell into the pit that an artful and deslgning female had dug for agged him to the altar. | So, for the real male of the species, the foxy play is for a girl to hide | her love, and “let concealment, like a worm in the bud, prey upon her sakes, if vou don't begin to wake up | with Of course there is a time when Gus is neither lazy or seupid. Give him an old motor to tinker with and those clumsy fingers become deft tools, those sle cyes wake to alertnes The fellow that Gus is chinery. But his parents have never bothered to inyestigat * side activities. They only know | that he hes or spots everything in sight and gives every evidence of tbeing a first-cl: failure. So they tell him so. They tell him so in pri- | vate and they redouble their scorn in public. Almo: Gus hears a recital of before some visitor 5 al consequence he is com- ing to belleve it. He's at the most sensitive perfod of nis life, his body and mind tingling with a thousand which | dumask cheek,” as Mr. Shakespeare remarked concerning this matter. 1In | other words, the best she can do is to sit on the sidelines and look |indifferent, and keep her fingers crossed for luck. But with two other types of men she is well advised to be up and doing. With the shy man the woman has to make the running, or else there | !is nothing doing. He hasn't the nerve to take the plunge of his own | volition, and the girl who wants him has to let him know in no uncertain | way that she is there, ready and willing to do the life-saving act. | nts a shy man may go to any lengths, even to popping the question herself. She can call him up every day by telephone, and k him why he didn’t come to see her the night before; she can register bliss in his presence; she can shower him with invitations and attentions, |und be just as mushy as she pleases. It will all be a come-on to him, and | he will'be so humbly grateful to her that he will eat out of her hand. ATHE woman who w i The samo tactics work equally well with the valn man. Many an |vs:ml.\uc:n man would never even have noticed a particular woman, or thought of such a thing as falling in love with her, if she had not shown in love with him. That knowledge made a bond between new impressions and impulses, he is still too poorly adjusted to man- age. He's always trrpping over him- self as well as over the furnitur He's always smashing his own bal- | ance as well the property about him. And he's bewildered enough merely with the confusion of growing up. Then on top of his personal dis gust with himself there falls this blighting judgment of his parents Unles e happens, that blight is ol er him all his 1if He's to f “different” in mind and body. to be shrinking from the la lie scorn. be up to you pretty soon worth th when you' vou ain't powder to going Half a dozen tin that ti down at the s often, in fact, as young ambles within « ot urg Gus is fifteen—a gangl sleepy. clumsy youn r who And vet ders through smashing nhighly indignant it you ything he bumps into.andalwavs they didn't love Gus and imping. Drives his teachers dis- working for his good! cted when he's at drives (Copyright, 1 Our s going h of pub would 1 told th were not his parents schoo! 3.) Birds in Verse By Henry Oldys CANYON WREN. Hail, peaceful spirit of the rocky gate! Remote, refined, serene, deliberate! Whene'er [ hear thy clear,,sweet i Unhurriedly and steadily, as though crnity itseli before thee lics, 1 listen with an ever-new surprise That in this word of travail there should be Such restful, soul-refreshing melod Thy voice alone, such power within it lies, Makes desert solitude a paradise. ents flow What turned thy life from burdens and alarms— Made thee acquainted with retirement’s charms— Taught thee to find, apart from all the throng, Companionship in th' echo of thy song? No social ardor, tinctured with unrest And rivalry, finds lodgment in thy breast; A holy hermit, in simplicity, Hymning thy prayer, thou dost elect to be. Teach me thy mood, that whereso'er I stray Thy notes will linger in my heart alway. The Diary of a Professional Movie Fan BY GLADYS HALL. ir |sequence is good business and, 1 Do Screen Players Earn Their|fraunee 5, B0Cl, Re ceonomy. " i | In the majority of cases, film Salaries |actors and_ actresses are most cer- What do you think about it. You |talnly worth every cent they are out there in the great open spaces? | pald.” Do you begrude them their pafided | Now what have you to say about it? limousines and their apartments de | luxe, their maids and their jewels, thelr Pekingeses (they all have ‘em) and thelr-imported frocks, ete.? | Of course you don't really, 1 sup-} pose. Not if you are fans. I mean, you know, you wouldn't want to think of Mary Pickford washing her own | hair, or Nita Naldl mending her own lingerie, or Glorla Swanson manicur- ing her own nails. Now, you know you wouldn't! 8till, when you're dying for a win- ter suit, or a pair of orthepedic shoes, it is a bit rough now and then ‘to think of the seventy-seven unused pairs reposing in Pola Negri's scented presses. The other day 1 _was talking the matter over with B. P. Schulberg, pro- ducer of Preferred Pictures, and he kays that the salary of the soreen piayer is fixed in exact proportion to his earning capacity. If the par- ticular player has something the pub- lic demands, his earnings are apt to be emormous. If his personality is not such as to impress itself in- delibly on the theater-going world, his earnings will be sHght. “And,” said Mr. Schulbers, ‘“the earnings of the most popular stage star are limited by the seating capac- n: fty of the theater in which he ap-|.| plece of meat or. gristle to At pears. Only a given number of per- | | to the bottom. When set, dri sons may enjoy his work; only v.j pings treated In this way will ertrude: You will nest see Tony Moreno in “Flaming Barrier, Paramount production, directed George Melford. If I'm any judge all, Tony ought to surmount all ba flaming or otherwise. Yes, he's marrled. Yes, happily. Yes, house- keeping. Oh, de luxe, of course. Helen: So you are giad that Huntl ordon is “coming to the front You can't keep a good man down, Helen. (All rights reserved.) My Neighbor Says: To wash silk crepes or geor- gettes, use warm water and white--soap. Do not rub, but squeese the garment through good suds.” Rinse several times, iron when partly dry on the wrong side and crosswise of the material, stretching a little ‘as you iron. Never trouble to shave down the end of a too thick candle. There 18 & better and quicker way. Get a little hot water, and hold the end of the candle in: it till the wax softéns; then ress it into the candiestick.’ t il a¢ rmly. 4 “When_pouring hot fa basin 8dd a tabiespoon of beil: ing water. This will cause limited number may pay for admis- be found besutifully clean and sions at the box office. Of the other| | white. hand, the earnings of a pleture star When scaling a fish hold it are limited only by the seating capac- ‘under running water the whole ity of all the picture theaters in the time In the way fishmongers do. (Had you ever thought of | | This prevents the scales scat- «“His face may greet all these | | tering and making s mess in it_he be-| | the sink. The right method of scallng fish is to begin at the tall and scrape toward the head. ¢ Before shaking down the ashes in your kitchen range in the morning empty on them the damp leaves from the teapot. If you then proceed as usual you will find there will be no dust to smother you, and thus you will save time and temper. world. that?) audiences simultaneously comes sufficiently popular, “Players’ salaries, incidentally, do not represent the big item in the cost of a picture that they are gen- erally thought to represent. The salary role usually consumes about 10 per cent of the total cost of a production. To add to the cast of a big production the nam: of players who are proven successes Is not extravagance. It -¥s-an added in- Curance agaiast failyre, and as & con- pur B i P 7 e e S 2 | Betty and Billy Cut-out drove one {afternoon to the home of their cousin, Polly Mount. to find the neighbor- {hood children who w to be in the | Thanksgiviug play gathered before |an old-fashioned fireplace Polly's {brothe m had buirt. “Our play must have {just like a movie” Polly explained, “so 1 appoint Betty Cut-out.” Would you like to make a stage, with all the furniture for the play the Cut-outs are Koing to give on Thanksgiving! Then take & hat box, tip it on its side with the open end toward you, and at the back place the Pil- 2 director, Stand the box on its side, cut & candy box. in the front, then cover Tects lar oPonlnE it with white or br have dmwn a brown orayon. the one above. mount them on cardboard with & standard behind, and put them in the gTate. The mantle is of plain cardboard = littie longer than the fireplace. (Copyright. The Guide Post-~ By Henry Van Dyke The Dignity of Man. How much then is a man better than a sheep!—Matt. 1 Christ reveals to us the dignity of man by speaking to us as beings who are capable of holding communion with God, and reflecting the divine holiness in our hearts and lives. And here His doctrine gains clearness and force when we bring it into close connection with His conduct. 1 suppose that there are few of us who would not be ready to admit at once that there are some men and women who have high spiritual capacities. For them, poasible thing They can attain to the knowledge of God and fellowship with Him. They are born go They are saints by nature. But for the great mass of the human race this is out of the question. They must dwell in ignorance, in' wicked- But to all this Christ says, Nol . He takes His Wway straight to’the outcasts of the world, the publidans and the harlots and the sinners: and to them He speaks of the mrercy and the love of God and heavenly life.- And He does this, not.to cast them into black despalr, mnot because it | was tmpossible for them to be good and to find God, but besause it wai divinely possible—becauss God .was walting for them, and becatse some- thing in them was waltingfor God. (Copyrignt, 1923.) Canlifiower and Peppers. 1n preparing the peppers cat thém in halves, scald in water for five min- utes, rub off the skins with a cloth and ‘then fill with cauliflower cooked until tender and seasoned and mashed with white sauce. Sprinkle chopped parsley over the top or sprinkle with rated cheese and place in a hot oven or a minute to melt the cheese, fore serving. 8 we say, religion is a Cranberry and Raisin. Pie. Mix three cupfuls of cranberries and one eupful of seeded raisins .to- gether. Stir two tablespoonfuls of flour with two cupfuls of sugar, add two oupfuls of boiling water, ‘then the frult, a pinch of salt and & tea- speonful’ of vanilla. Bake, in-two Jthe beauty of the | { him that she {them, for th | congeniality Also the ¢ both loved the same in their admiration for fact that she was en: Doreon supremely and had a perfect m. amored of him proved to the self- judgment and perfect taste, all qualities highly desirable in a wife. | jsonceited man that she was & woman of most unusust discernment. of good Hence, if a man Is vain there is | burning the incense of your love befo | man generally gets him. | considers him such a good thing that | l doses, and at odd intervals. to whet his appetite, and keep him BY R. A. ‘ | | { | grim fireplace Which you can make from a | own paper on which you | rough rogk design with a | Trace another andiron from | In the grounds of the Capitol, sev- eral hundred yards east of the north wing, the reader may have noticed an interesting group of small trees with leaves conspicuously large, one to three feet long in fact, troplc like, the great-leaved magnolia, the largest leaved tree in North America. It is a southern magnolla, with Washing- ton beyond thé northern limit of its range, which is from Kentucky and Nofth Carolina 'south to central Florida and Louisiana; nowhere com- mon, and usually growing as isolated groups of a few individuals in fich soll in wooded ravines and valléys. It ‘{s hardy as far north as Boston if Sheltefed from cold winds and is occasionally cultivated as an o mental here and in Eurc?«. for it is interesting and etfiking tres in decorative planting, with its enormous aves and large flowers. o e troe attains & Height of twenfy no surer way of getting him than by re him. The woman who weeps for a He can't resist the flattery of knowing that she she is crying for him. But, having got her man, the wise woman administers love in broken | She nelther starves her husband for sentiment nor gorges him on it, but she gives him just enough affection and tenderness | always asking for more. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1828.) TREES OF WASHINGTON EMMONS. GREAT-LEAVED MAGNOLIA—MAGNOLIA MACROPHYLLA. trunk, not over one and one-half feet in diameter and with stout wide- spreading branches forming a sym- metrical round-topped head. The bark Is nearly smooth, pale gray, green to reddish on the twigs. The large leaves are in clusters toward the ends of the branches. They are three feet long, nine to twelve inéhes wide, thin, blunt-pointed, wider near the apex and tapering to a small heart-shaped base, bright green and smooth above, silvery pubescent be- neatli. The leaf stems are short and stouts 'hé fowers appear in May and June, lafge, creamy white cups as big as a man's head, ten to twelve inches across, ‘too large to be delicate, vet beautiful:and striking, half hid by the glant leaves in spite of their size. To some, people these blossoms ar fragrant: to others they have a di agreeable odor. There are six petals, each #ix to seven inches long, dashed with- purple to rose ~at the base, The fruits are about thres inche: to sixty feet with & siender, straight loh!‘ nearly globular and rose colored. Pimento and Cheeie Loaf. /.Take two cupfuls of grated cheese and half a cupful of plmento cut fine. Mix and add salt and red pepper. Add half a box of gelatin which has been dissolved in a little hot water. To this mixture add one pint.of aream, ' whipped stiff. Put into a mold ahd set on lce. Before serving. dip the mold in hot water for a second and-tufn out on the platter on which to serve it. QGarnish with whole pecan: trips of pimento or rings of olivi ' e Prices realized o8 Swift & Company sales of carcass beef in Washington, D. C., for week ecding. Saturday, o its sold out, 0 19.00 cents per pound and couts per pound,—Advertiveme iveraged 18.96 i i 52 | i ool Tutban of Apples. sponge cake and slice it into three sections. Spread thickly with straw- berry jam and put together again. Heat half a pound of strawberry jam with a little water and rub it through a sleve. Cover the out- side of the. cake with this and scattér chopped almonds over. Have ready some well flavored stewed and strained apple and mix the remaining strawberry pulp with It and color it a_ pretty pale pink with carmine. The pulp from two pounds of will enough. 1 the d_pures and surro rich custard. -The cake- quite moist, # 0 should beé In the Man-Bird at Last. Sud Da'the ChiEe sou rearcd Go dor” nny Meadow Mouse. Nanny Meadow Mouse had ceased to ! bo afrald of the airplane resting on ! the Green Meadows just a little way | from her. home—that s, she was mnot| afraid to run around it and under it.| But nothing that Danny Meadow Mouse could say would induce her to | climb up into it. It had taken Danny | away once, and Nanny never forgot, that. She didn't intend to give it a| chance to take her away. { Danny liked to climb up into it.! | the Green Meadows it was har { HIS_INTEREST RIGHT THEN WAS IN A MEADOW MOUSE DINNER. He liked to run all over it and poke his inquisitive little nose into all parts of it that he could reach. Nanny satisfied to keep down on the ground. Every day Farmer Brown's Boy and his cousin, the man | who flew the man-bird, came down to | it and worked around it. Always | they left some food for Danny and | | Nanny. They left it on the ground |close to the man-bird. It was such | {good food that Danny and X | could nardly wait for them to le Farmer Brown’s Boy and his cousin | had worked around the airplane later than usual one afternoon. In fact, the Black Shadows were already | creeping out from the Purple Hil across the Green Meadows when they finally left and tramped away up the | Long Lane toward the house. They had hardly turned their backs PARIS, November 5.—Dear Ursula: | Even those who are most dignified | and chic among the leaders of fash- | fon wear animals appliqued on their dresses. So childllke—and vet so! smart! f ? My, black velvet dress has a squir- | rel of gray shaved lamb stitched on in gold. Hat to match. PAMELA. (Copyright, 1923.) —_— Mutton With Vegetables. “ Peel and cut one and one-half| pounds of cggplant, the same amount | of potatoes and the same amount of | tomatoes into small pleces. Cut one and one-half pounds of raw mutton into small pieces the size of a w nut. Then peel and slice four onion Mix together the eggplant, potatoes, | tomatoes, onfons and the mutton, then | put half a pound of butter in a fry- | ing pan, add the other ingredients | and season with salt and pepver. | Cover the whole with water ana cook thoroughly in the oven. H A D | Casserole of Beef. Cut about five pounds of the chuck or round of beef into pieces suitable for serving, and brown them in drip- pings. Then place them in a cas- serole with one cupful of chopped turnips, half a cupful of chopped onfons, half a cupful of chopped car- rots, and .one and one-half cupfuls of macaroni or barley. Add salt and pepper to_taste, cover with water, and-bake for about four hours. China’s new president is sixty years | 1of age. He began life as a common | had grown carel THE TRADE MARK KNOWN IN EVER FEATURES Reddy came trotting along the edge of Farmer Brown's cornfield shortly after ‘Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse had settle ddwn to their feast. Reddy trotted along . mntfl he reached the private 1ti1s path which Danny and Nanny used in running from ‘the cornfield over to the man- bird. His nose told him at once that they had been along that path just a short time before. 'He knew they must be out in the grass of the Greer, Meadows. He lost all.interest in the | man-bird. His inferest right then | was in a Meadow Mouse dinner. H. | began to ‘steal forward very softl: following that private little path By Thornton W. Burgess. when Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse were over by the man-bird to | soe what treat had been left for them this time. They were thinking so much of their stomachs that they didn't think of anything else. They had grown chreless. Yes, sir, they . which Is some- thing the little people of the Green Meadows cannot afford to do. They| It was Danny who digcover, found the treat they had hoped to|Reddy. He happened to 100k up just find, and really expected to find, and | in time. Reddy was almost at once began stufling themselves. | jumping distance. Reddy Fox: Now, Reddy Fox knew all about |Squeaked Danny. and because ther. that man-bird—that s to sa: he | was nowhere else to go he scrambled Knew that it was a machine mady by | up into that man-bird. Nanny looke: man. He was suspicious of it, as he | Ub, saw Reddy and realized thu is alwa, susplcious of new things. | Danny had chos the only place of With usual caution he had studicd | safe Bhe scrambled up after hi it from a distance. But at last he had | and she was only just in time, ¢ made up his mind that as long as it | was more afraid of Reddy than s remained motlonless and nolseless on [ was of belng carried away by thy an-bird. So at last there she wa« ily in that man-bird, where « had said she would never go. (Cop: 192 ’. W. Burgess. On this particular night he ded that he would go nd look it over at cl DEMAND “PHILLIPS™ MILK OF MAGNESIA SAY “PHILLIPS” to your druggist, or you may not get the original Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years Refuse imitations of genuine “Phillips” PROTECT Your Doctor and Yourself 25-cent bottles, also larger size, contain directions and uses. . unshin Kmpyaa ers Dainty in shape and size Delicious in flavor—slightly salty. Just the thing to serve with soups and salads. Fresh Crisp Sold in blue and gold packages. Also in bulk. Joosz-Wires Biscurr (DMPANY Branches in Over 100 Cities Y HOME On Thanksgiving Day i.igllten your kitchen burden with “Universal” Pots and Pans. “Universal’’ Aluminum Ware is light to handle and easy to clean. Made of heavy gauge hard aluminum. Extremely durable, and above all—sanitary. A “Universal” Aluminum Utensil for every need—f{rom soup kettles to pie plates—including a beautiful double roaster for the Thanksgiving turkey, dis- Make or buy a tall, ring-shaped | Excellent Double Roaster THE BEST IS CHEAPEST IN THE END