Evening Star Newspaper, January 10, 1924, Page 34

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Little Quills to Trim Small Hate BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE, One of the most original of ovening hoaddresses offered by French.millin< era this season was a little arrange- ment of sllvered quills from Antoine of Parls. Two curving quills crossed in front over the forehead, another at the back, with a fourth rising at the crown and curved down to the opposite side. The actual quill ends were left projecting, further adding to the originality of the urrange- ment. Now even qullls silvered 8 osprey used fo litt are quite inexpensive; quills cannot cost as vstrich—plummniage iing headdresses. a_ae a as quite irre Thero vouthful & that is why it has so stro poal. It seems fresh and and ‘we look with faver sp1ing, ng it to the more stately For months there have b trimmed compactly th 1 quills and quite recently mea have adopied the fashion. Thore was a dozen or so ways to arrange ihese quills, and the clever woman will get her milliner to leave the adjustment of them until she is trying on the hot, for the contour or the face and hedd should ily determine this. . 1923.) Susie and Sissie. Henry were brother and Their mother believed strong- famfly tie and kept the much tc ther Al e your by the hand, wait for vour toddled together ver went until they were vears old and were gent to school teacher gave them a pre- 5 look and sald to the mother, “We'll put Henry in room seven and sie In room two. They'll be home cheon at 12 o'clock.” that n't do at all” sald r bastily. “They have never separated sinco they were born. an’t they go to the same class? ith boys and they Wi we don't think it is a Dbrother an'd sister in We find they get on earnestly ith t her head two. with the mother teacher. The “Room sev- littla boy boys, He ving too itended she hat to live needs it, 1 tel much of his siste “Then hell be rough and bad and push his sister away. I want them row up together. I want him to ntle and kind and good.” “He can be gentle and kind and good but he has to grow with boys and be like are none of those thin v are seven Years old, except on occasion. If the occasion 1s prolonged Into & steady PERSONAL HE BY WILLIAM He needs boys.” | i { e FELT HAT TRIMME BLACK AND WHITE SPR QUILLS. tout | ma | routine you'll | have a mess” mother would not both children, hool v have no boy; have it and tos o a priv ¢ in the L week the head ate 1 wrote d told her that she though ter to place Henry in the boy ision and him more of | ciety “of Mother we | schaol post-haste Whiit §5 the {rouble? {when I brought the ¢ | wanted them to be together ‘True,” said the teacher, *“hut the hildren have a right to tlie best (he hool has to give them. Neither of | hem 18 getting It becaue the girl |drags the boy with her wherever sha | goes.” When the boys pia back and if the girls will | joins in their ga { neither child plavs. Th | and nd against t | boys lling him and 3 | un: me room. mistr told yoi n_here let hin won' hold hands wall. _The Sissie; Stssie led out as posr_school | let children” call Hennie S| for Henry I fally a9 | didn’t know he wanted it \ | 7 Little hoys have to grow up with | other Dittls boys with an occasional tid-bit of little giris thrown in | Little boys are not lovely, gentis and £00d in the sense their palpitatin mothers think they should be. | They're grubby littlo things with wonderful potentialit Potentinl itfes must not be man-handled. in the case of little boy women-handled, to the “Susie and Sissie.” (Copyright, 1824.) ALTH SERVICE BRADY, M. D, Henry | Noted Physician and Author. The Merits of Castor Oil. It b rrandma worse- than it nurts i nery himself, but she Just has to give it to him. Among the great discoveries pre- dicted for the twentieth century there s to be a boy who demands castor oil on his pancakes, and perhaps a s£randma who doesn’t give it on gen- eral principles. 5 st profession har- old_superstitions, . rerit of is fts ant And (t is true. It produces justifiable nausca in most cases; it~ produces smany of the most obstinate cases of constipation in children; it produces a feeling of disgust for medicine and doctors tha es the poor victims on to extra t retaliation against the profession later in life; it pro- duces a dread of the doctor. Castor oll, like a promissory note, e binding In effect. That is why it i used in the treatment of diarrhea. Most all cathartics havd a secondary binding effect, but castor oil particu- larly. It is unnecessary and unkind to In- ict a dose of castor oil on a child svhen another physic will do as well, There are plenty to choose from. No need of selecting ¢he crudest. BEAUTY CHATS Insomnia. It you ask eéach of your friends for a cure of insomnia you will find at the end that you have as many cures as friends; cach one will have # different theory. And then if you are troubled with this unfortunate habit you will probably find your cure different from any of the sug- gestions. A standard remedy for a time was & glass of hot milk and a few crack- ers. But many people can digest milk in the morning only, to have It turn sour in the stomach when taken at bedtime. Many people suggest hot chocolate, but chocolate is soothing Medleine may | 't horrible | Good substitutes for castor oil a | the aromatic sirup of rhubarb (U, |P) In the same doses for the same purposes—children call this the candy medicino; milk of ms petrolatum, arom cascara, llquid cf senna leaves choppe |and phenophthalein enges. Parents should consider seriously before adm! dose of castor oil usuaily an fntrodu be good even if tabl long ering in t friends. In & recent article entitled “Moist ure and Comfort In Vicious Circles, you sald the best way to regulate the | humidity of the ndoor climate was to keep the temperature below 68 a grees Fahrenheit. We have an strument {n our office for registering the relative humidity. Will you | please advise me just what percent- | age of relative humldity s best for| general working conditions in an office? (H. J. H) Answer.—The comfort zone has a minimum temperature of 65 to 60 de- grees Fahrenhelt, & maximum humid- ity. 55 per cent; a max{mum tempera- ture, 70 degrees Tahrenheit, and n minfmum humidity, 30. per cenmt. Ideal for the average offics would be | around 64 degrees Fahrenhelt and 45 per cent humidity. (Copyright, 1024.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES mula for a tonic that will suit your needs, upon receipt of a stamped, golf- addressed: envelope repeating your re- quest. L. E. B—Agar agar is a Japanese seaweed sold in any quantity at the drug. stores. It is tasteless and is usually eprinkled over the breakfast cereal. It becomes ‘gelatinous acts as a cleanser for the dig tract, but it does not act li medicine. When you are physic: and mentally exhausted take bath, drink a glass of hot milk or hot malted milk, and lis down to sleep, if possible. MOTHERS to some and very stimulating to others. Hot tea, which is supposed to be stimulating, s very soothing to many people, and just the right thing to help them to sleep. It should not, of course, be strong black tea, but wenk and freshly made. Some people can get to sleep through a sort of eelf-hypnotism by deliberately excluding the unpleasant thoughts and thinking only pleasant ones. None of these things have ever worked with me, while the only times I have ever tried the tradition- honored method of counting eheep as they jumped over a fence I found myself so hopelessly wide awake efter the two-hundredth sheep that there was nothing to do but ®et up &nd read & book. In fact, I find that the best way to grow sleepy on & night that promises sleeplessness Is 10 g0 to bed with a cup of hot, weak tea and a book of pleasant monotony, gomething bright and cheerful that will not bore you but that also will not stimulate your brain too much. ‘Have you ever tried yawning your- self into sleepiness? You know how catching a yawn is when it's another yerson doing it. Try it on yourselt 3na see whether in a few minutes You don't begin to do it uncon- sclously. When You yawn you must bo sleepy, and though being sleepy and going to bed and going to sleep are two difierent things, it is quite Jkely that you can Stop insomnia this way. ubled—Bay rum is often fn ciaacd in hair . tonics, but 1t would mot be advisable to ube it alone on & scalp that is covered with dandruff. 2 will be glad to mall you the fape AND THEIR CHILDREN To Prevent Teasing. One mother says: I never let my child gain the slightest thing by tessing. If what | she asked for is right she gets it; | otherwise not. If I happen to have made a mistaken decision, I tell her | &0 and change my answer. This In-| creases her respect for my good ense and makes her understand that “no” means “no.” She is always amazed when she sees other chlldren . #Ropyrisht, 19043 . iiw I | youll |z 5 {tell him he wont bo back till la ho stands (4 THE EVENING STAR, WASHIN Pop was smoking to himselt and ma was looking at the paper and I was dolng my lessins agenst my will, and ma sed, Theres a fine radio pro- &ram tonite, ony we heve no radio. And no likelihood of egetting eny, either, pop sed. Meening he hadent changed his mind about not wunting one, ma sed, How can men be £0 &tubbern 1 dont know, I never tried, pop sed. You dont haff to try, ma sed. Meen- ing he I3 alreddy, and pop sed, If all men were us mild and reasonable as |1 am; thera would bo no more wars or nigh rents and the werld would be a bewtinll place to live in, 1 sippose so, By the way, I met a frend of down town this aftirnoon, she eed. Did you, who? pop ted, and ma sed, Mr. Low Well, 1 havent seen Lewis ' for munths, pop sed, and ma hats quite a coincidence, be- nvited him to call and see us, ed he would. 11 well, will wonders never ceese, | you never’ used to like him, Couldent stand site of him, it know, but he's nicer. i minded eny- | I ho say he fancy that, 1 pop sed, Tonite? vringing the ser- | 1 well, 11 sure be | the old son of a sea cook. | Jing now? he 1 i to sen bizniss, ma ive got for me. in the radio Good nite, , dont sit up got his hat and went and pritty soon the bell r and i, Benny, g0 down, and if thats r. Lewis tell him your father is out, he says enything about w quick Wich I did | COLOR || CUT-OUT| A i e [ Paying for Her Pleasure. When Alice Cut-out opened the @oor to Betty Cut-out's house where had been invited to dinner, Betty l} I | | { | eritic \ | and e} | Whether you should marry the young man to whom you are e Your own heart must answer that question. GTON, . D. 3 Dorothy Dix’s Letter Box Can a Man Love a Girl Whom He Has Known as! a Friend From Childhood?—The Girl Who Is Seeking Perfect Happiness. [DEAR DOROTHY DIX: Iam twenty-eight years of age, and from the time T was seven years old have had a close friendship with a man two years | my senlor. I have always been very fond of him, but have never let myself consider him in any light but that of a big brother, as I knew that whils he liked me very much it was more friendship than otherwise. he seems to be Interested however, -Recently, in me for other reasons than old friendship, and I am writing to ask y‘uu 1f you think it possible for a man to fall in love with a girl he has known so long? Can a shan love a girl before whom he yawns to his heart's content without {ncurring to whom be can.talk If he feels like whose habits, and best hat, he can criticize without annoying he a love a girl when such a perfect understanding exists between them? displeasure; man her or remain sllent; 1t, Can & T know I woyld make a very good wife for him, but am afrald that k. m: thla Answer: lightuing stroke. flower. vears of true friendship are agpinst mo, Love comes {n many ways. Sometimes it is a slow growth, and takes a long time to Pleaso tell me what you V. M. Sometimes it is as swift as a And, of the two, the latter is apt to last the longest. * Certainly there 18 no reason why a man, who has “palled” with a girl ever since they made mud ples together, houldn't discover that his feelings for her had changed from little sister to sweetheart. and that friendship had ripened Into a warmer passion. the recipient of such an affection that it will ever.change, for it ls man’s life, and she is woven Into h After all, what wi pa Lucky, indeed, is tho woman who is that. rt of the very warp and woof of the, every thonght and mem e call romantic love (tho alry, etherea ¥ouiys made up of fllusions and delusions) that a man and a maid have She will have no need to fear and habit. thing that about each other—the love that is composed-of thrilla and tremors—lasts a very short time. Marriage brushes away all of the cobwebs, and then If & man and a woman are to be happy together they have to fall back upon a kind of glorifled friendship. vawn in each other's faces, rriage instead of after it, ro happily ever afterward.” [DEAR Miss DI man, but still I woman after marriage sloset. It is just me, that is all. try to met and so Answ quest, my child, fc the world 10 You ask if perfect happiness reca men are ! peop happiness ever co No womun ever 1lls for sacrifice, for work an wre slaves to their bables. Y to say what cism without offense and to be able to commune together in silence. You are fortunate to be able to a nce will end like the fairy book, four years old and of a very eensitive nature. am not perfectly happy. There {8 no other man, nor any skeleton in my Should I go ahead, and marry this man or terested In gome other one or something else? ¢ | happiness brcause without it nothing is worth while. A DAILY READE The nearcst we ever come ease to attempt to secure it for ours human and full of human fanlts and shortcomings. yest husband has little ways and habits that frritate his wi worry t for all of this, the freedom to They have to have and take they think, to glve ly this test of congenfality before ou may be very certain that your ‘And so they were married and lived DOROTHY DIX. Please tell me how to be perfectly happy. Iam twenty- T am engaged to a fine Will happiness ever come to a 1 am seeking 1t you are seeking perfect happiness, you are on a fruitless nobody has ever found it. There is no such thing in » finding happihess 1s when &e lves and try to bestow it on other man after marrfage. Not t she desires in a husband Even Murriage Women bear children in agony and most women are happier to 2 is all w rried than they would be single, and the less a woman thinks of her rwn Idren the happier she is. yr not T cannot tell. marry him expecting to find perfect happiness. ‘han just seeking your own happiness in life. ppiness and the more she thinks of the happiness of her husbznd waged Do not But there 1s a better thing It 18 to do your duty. and to be of some use in the world. And along that road you will find content- «s | ment, even If you do not find perfect happiness. [DFAR POROTHY DIX: I am engaged. DOROTHY DIX. T have had several fights with the woman to whom When she 18 wrong she is broad enough to admit it and each time I have forgiven her and said no more about it. On two occasions she angered me to such an extent that I told her that T was done with her. d to have anything to do with her for a few days, until fins entreatles and oceans of tears on her part—which I expecte after toolk Now, here i3 my problem. No matter how many times I forgive her there is always the chance of her angering me again, but it I don't fo her, that is. if T actnaily carry out m lose I Is 1t possible that 1 exuzg | in love? 1 { . Lut hobbl »‘old lady. at appened?” erted Alice ed to the door like a, grinned Betty. co skate so 1 can t Bear Lake, and | fallen down | about a hun- | the carnival will b 1 brutsed up for? I know it will. But when 1} stairs, 1 feel worst It! our minutes by my watch | to_get up Betty's silk dress that she wears| when there’s company ix a soft | pregty blue, with a bunch of pink flowers at the waist. Her stockings are also blue. (Copyright, 1924.) — i Baked Dates. Slice Into a buttered baking dlsh layers of dates and bananas, Sprin- kling each layer with granulated sugar and a few pieces of candied orange peel. Cover with water and bake in a medium oven for an hour. By this time most of the water ought to be mbsorbed and the frult of the right consistency. Serve hot from the dlsh with a splce sauce in which orange peel gives the favor. Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST | Strained Orange Juice Qatmeal with Cream Plainy Omelet Hot Spidor_Corncake, Coffee. LUNCHEON Creamed Shrimp wigh Green Peppers Buttered Toast Pineapple Fruit Cup Hermi Tea. DINNER Tomato Blsque Baked Stuffed Haddock Mashed Potatoes Boiled Squash Lettuce with French Dressing Cocoanut Custard Ple Coffee, PLAIN OMELET. Six eggs, half tablespoon salt, three tablespoons milk, one’ tablespoonful butter. Beat eggs very light, add the salt and milk. Have the pan very hot, put in the butter and pour in the mixture. TIlL the pan to allow the omelet to run to the lower side and scrape from the upper half perfectly clean, pushing all to the lower half. ‘When set, turn over back on clean half of the pan, brown and serve. CREAMED CHRIMP. Remove the seeds and parti- tions from two sweet green peppers, cook five minutes In boiling water, then drain and cut into match-like strips. Melt three tablespoons of flour, then add slowly one pint of milk end stir until smooth and thick- ened. Season with half tea- spoon of salt, add one pint of shrimp and the prepared pep- pers and cook until thoroughly heated. COCOANUT CUSTARD PIE. One pint of milk, two eggs, half cup sugar, helf grated nutmeg, one cup shredded co- coanut. ' Beut eggs and sugar until light, then add milk, nut- meg and (‘cocoanut. Line pie pldte with crust. Add mixture. Bake thirty minutes in a rather hot oven. Answer: There is no self-respect | zentleness, and tenderncss, and a desire not to W Before real love. dignity and what vou call self hreat for all time, I will ult te the value of a man's sel love, Pete. There nd the one spect, which is nothing in 1s but personal vanity and arrogance, shrivel up Into nothingness, Because it isx gratifying to your egotism, vou You hurt her tender, and make her grovel befors you. humiliate ‘this woman foolish heart =o that ehe sheds oceans of tears, and vou make her crawl back to you Itke a whipped dog—and then you talk about love! You don't know what love means. the word. Evidently, the kind of wife you want i independence of her own, one of the ‘ves-yesser It is @ sacrilege to use a woman without eny spirit or * who will ba your echo nd agree with everything you say, oue of the humble sort who will kiss the hand that strikes them. So my advice o you is to marry this one, who comes on her knees, and weeps, and begs to be taken back. extinct, and you won't be likely to find another one. That of woman is about DOROTHY DIX. specles (Copyright, 1924.) BEDTIME STORIES An Exciting interruption. If danger bappens to be near, Forgetfulness may cost you demr. —Damy Meadow Mouse. Whitenose the Fox Squirrel and Danny and Nanny Meadow Mouse were careless. Yes, eir, they were careless. They were 0 busy getting acquainted and so interested in learn- inz about each other that all three orgot to watch out for danger. Yes, v forgot, and that is the most ss thing that any one can do. Nanny were on the ground, while Whitenose sat on top of the stump under which Danny and Nanny had their home. Whitenose was even more curlous about Danny and Nanny than they were about him. You know, it was a wonderful story that Danny and Nanny had to teil about the way the great man-bird had brought them down to the Sunny South. Whitenose had seen that great man-bird, wjth its broken wing, as it stood on its head not far from where they were, and had wondered about 1t Just why Whitenose turned his hend and looked behind him when he did_he probably doesn’t know him- self. But he did turn his fhead. “Runl” he screamed. And made a fiying jump from the top of the stump foward the nearest tree. It was all so sudden and unex- pected that for a minute Danny and Nanny didn't move. They saw White- nose jump to the trunk of a tree and 20 up it so fast that in & second he had disappeared In the long, gTay moss that hung from the branches of that tree. Befors they could blink their little eyes there was a rush of feet from the back of that stump, end they had just a glimpse of a big form bounding straight for that tree. Up the tree it went, quite as quickly as Whitenose had gone, and also dis- zppeared in the long, gray moss. They heard the scratching of sharp claws on the bark high up in that tree, and then they had just a glimpse of Whitenose meaking a flying leap from the end of a long branch across to_the branch of another tree. With their little eyes almost pop- ping out of their heads, they watched to see if Whitenose would be fol- lowed. He wasn't. Then they heard from up In that tree such an ugly, spitting snarl of rage and disappoint- ment that it made the hair all over them stand right on end. They waited to see no more They scur- ried into thelr home under the old stump as fest as their short legs could take them. “Who do_you suppose that terrible fellow was?" whispered Nanny. “I haven't the least idea,” Danny whispered back. "“But the nolse he made up In that tree sounded very much like the sound I have heard Black Pusey the Cat make when she has been disappointed In catching me. Only this was ever and ever and evex #o much louder.” and-yellow can of the original ready-to-fry <od fish cakes—made of famous Gorton’s Cod Fish—No Bones. By Thornton W. Burgess 'm so glad Whitenose got away Nanny whispered. hope he'll come back. Probably -he can tell us who that dreadful fellow is M Whitenose had a narrow escape “80 did we,” replied Danny goberly. ““That_fellow might have sneaked around this stump and caught us if OF A BIG FORM BOUNDING FOR THAT TREE. it hadn’t been that he saw Whitenose first. I guess, Nanny Meadow Mouse, we've got_something to be thankful| for. My, I haven't had such a fright since the great man-bird fell with us” (Copyright, 1924, by T. W. Burgess.) A I SR Tapioca Cream. Put into a double bofler one quart of sweet milk, half & cupful of quick tapioca and a pinch of salt. Boil for fifteen minutes, stirring frequently, Beat together the yolk of one egg. half a cupful of sugar and a table- spoonful of cold water, and at the end of fifteen minutes stir into the milk and taploca. Boll until it begins to thicken like custard. Remove from the fire and fold in the beaten white | of an egg. Add any flavoring desired. This s delicious poured cold over fruit or berries, fresh or canned, or nuts may be stirred in while cooling. Butterscotoh Cookies, Take two cupfuls of brown sugar, one scant cupful of butter and fat mixed, two eggs, one teaspoonful of cream of tartar, one teaspoonful of soda, one teaspoonful of vanilla, one cupful of chopped nuts and four cup- fuls of flour. Mix all the ingredients, make into a roll about three Inches in dlameter and let rise overnight. In the morning slice them and bake in & quick oven. Do mot crowd the ookies in the 0., THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 1924. “Just Hats” By Vyvyan. Fuzzy-Wuszy. The detall sketoh at the lower left | corner shows & fuzzy-wuszy ball of | \Z | | OETAIL graylsh cotton, with long, slim, green leaves. Three dozen of these fluffy bits dot this pale green feit cloche for the south. The leaves are but a trifle deeper green than the hat, and the combination of greens and gray- ish fuzz gives & very Lazy, attractive effect. HEALTH HINTS By Bernarr MacFadden. | It is true that as a general propo- sition moderation in exertion should be the keynote of physical tratning after middle age. The term “mfddle age” fs a very elastic one. You may regard forty to forty-five as fep- | resenting middle age and you may | el yourself growing old from fifty years on, or you may regard the mid- dle perfod of life as belns from fitty to sixty-five years. There fa uo doubt that the period of middle-aged vigor, energy and| all-around ability in some cases ex- tends far beyond the biblical age iimit of three score years and ten. But whatever your Interpretation of the meaning of “middle age” it is best, if you are unmistakably past| your youth, to observe moderation in the quality of your exerclse and to make up for it, If necessary, in quan- | v. “The ideal exercisos for extrome age are those which make for flexibility. An elastic condition of all the tissues | and of the joints of the body s im- portant, just as flexibility is of pri- mary {mportance in the backbone. This Is not merely because of the value of being able to bend the joints to the limit, but because of what it means in relation to the circulation | nd the health of the tissues gen- erally | To keep these tissucs as much altve as possible, one must keep them sup- | ple and elastic. All kinds of seretoh- ing and bending exeroises calculated to promote this necessary flexibility are most important for those who would avold growing old. You should maintain mobility, or the possibility of frea motion with every jotnt and svery movable part of your amnatomy. Quite the best way to do thie is to stretch every part thoroughly at 1. t once each day and bend part to the limit. Such stretching and bending movements should be applied, 1f pots | sible, even to the fingers and toes. Start with the finger tips. Firee stretch the arms far out to the sides and_stretch the fingers out. Than proceed to bend or double up the |fingers fistlike in such a way &s to put the greatest possible stress upon the joints, bending each joint of the finger to the fullest extent possible. e When Oliver Cromwell snd tae Puritans ruled England a law was passed which stated that Christmas was 2 heathen festival, and Ineisted ‘that no rejolcing might legally take place on that day | | .. | Just | soarcely pay her to do #o, in this day FEATURES. When We Go Shopping BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN, 5 Filling the Hope Chest. From hope chest to honeymoon is not & far ory nowadays. In the old days, our mothers spent their girlhoods sewing—in prepara- tion for the time when their “hopes” should materialise. But the modern Eirl doesn't find time to thifk of the hope cheet until the honeymoon s ‘round the corper. It would more pretentious homs, I think the following will best stock her bridal Chest = edmirably: Six tablecloth tlree dozen dinner napkins, or breakfact napkins, two dozen tea napkins, ona lunchéon set, one lunc con cloth. six tray cloths, one ta pad, twelve pairs hemstiiched line: pillowcases, two pairs embrold ered lnen pillowcases, six pal lnen sheets, six paire cotton eheets four pairs blankets, four hedsprend two comforters, four dozen bedro towels, two dozen bath towels, tur dozen dish toweks, two kitchen table cloth, one dozen mald's napkins two dozen mald's towels, two paire blankets, four pairs sheef spreads, two comforters fo pairs tpilloweases for the maid's ro The girl “in-between” in 800ds must eompromise hetw. two lists and Jjudiciou selections to meet her reg The linen for the hope chest should be monogramed with the initials of the bride’s own malden nam placing of the mark varie: style, but there are conv guldes to follow. Tablecloths show the monogram or initial on top of the tabls, about six inches the edge, at the right of the hos Napkins are marked in the corn that the inftial shows in the m of the square, when the napkin ironed and folded. Bhests and._pillow cases are marked in the middls, six inches from the edge, with the mono gram turned o that it is read from the hem. Towels should have the in itial placed four to six inches above the hem; in bath-towels particularly there {8 often a special medallion woven for the mark. of changing styles. The era of swift-changing fashions is also a factor in determining with what the modern bride-to-be will fill her hope chest. It means, for one thing, that she will not stock her chest with llnen to do for a life- time, but will buy a moderato sup ply. She may, If she chooses, reserve & Tittle fund with which to reflil the vhest later. She doesn't relish the prospect of using an out-of-date Suest towel any more than she enjoys wearing an oui-of-date hat! For the girl who expects to start housekeeping on & modest scale, this 1ist may serve os a guide: Four table- cloths, one dozen breakfact-size nap- kins, two dozen dinner-size napkins, one ‘table pad, two tray oloths, two dozen face towels, one-half dozen bath towels, six pairs cotton sheets, six pairs linen pillowcases, three bedspreads, two pairs blankets, one dozen dish towels, two comforters, six _buffet and dresser scarfs. For the young woman who has more means at her disposal, and ex- pects to begin housekeeping in a with tional hould SOUTHERN FASHIONS and motors Here’s Vogue, all packed for Palm Beach! Bur quite willing to show you what’s inside the trunks —frocks and suits of silk alpaca—simple dresses of white crepe, silk shirting, lannel—coats like out-of- season snowflakes—printed silks for afternoon— frothy laces and tulles for evening—hats and shoes and stockings, brilliant scarfs, bathing suits . . ... Pgris sends over its thirty best models from the midseason openings, with a snowy postscript from Saint Moritz. Paris,too,sends acouple of ingenipus chameleon costumes that begin with a coat and two dresser, and do everything but talk . . .. But if you don’t crave Paris frocks, there are 27 Vogue designs for the seamstress, some of which achieve smartness with—just—two—seams ! And there are five pages of Mators ... Take your own ts the news stand ! DATED JAN. 15 OUT TODAY V 0 6 U E Traveling the Road QfiRolmst Health | DREN at play are traveling the road of { sturdy ! they spend health—providing that the vast energy is replaced and stored up by nutritious, energizing foods. ) the energy Because Karo contains such a large percentage of building food element, Dextrose, the ! tremendous health value of which your doctor can i tell you, Kero is one of the Great foods for growing i children. And how they love its delicious, extra- ordinary flavor. Every day after play give them Blue Label or Red Label Karo on sliced bread. v Cora Products Sales Co. 204 Candler Bldg. , Baltimore, Md. Get this Beautiful Aluminum Syrup Pitcher Worth *1- for 40c and 3 Karo Labels Buy 3 cans of Karo from ‘your groocer, sead labels to address above with 400 end you will receive the Syrup Pitcher by parcel post. /

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