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.- FEATURES. BEDTIME STORIES | far away from th tho ‘end” of the could. But he was ready vantage of oppor might offcr. So when that old ¢ top of that®pilc coming with ground, as Danny peeped it meant. One quick understood. Danny that old tin can and great pile of brush leaped up aftes thc Danny can niove WOMAN'S PAGE. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. JANUARY 22, 1924 By Thornton W. Burgess Evening Use of Long White Gloves o By Mary Blake. BY MARY MARSHALL. litti i ittie opening cani uk hir poncik to take ad- th How Danny Meadow Mouse Escaped. | ! Tu patience wait and do uot fret, Your chauce jou're surely bound o g —Danuy Meadow Mous Danny Meadow Moueo had begun to think that the dreadful situation he was In was going to last forever. You remember that he was in a rusty old tomato can, which was belng knodked. around this way and that by Yowler the Bob Cat, who was in a sad temper because was unable ife Whose Husband Is a Good Provider, But : Who Has Forgotten How to Court Her— | ] < What Is the Age Limit for Bachelors to Marry? | ould al- | Pe ans gloves. | Timo was:when a girl most as willlngly have dance sans stockings as s Mot to have available a pair of per- “octly fresh long white gioves was =ood reason for remaining at home. a we used even to-wear long white | gloves to dinmer partles, too—didn't | we? There was qulte a trick about | 2!ipping onc's hapds out of them and tucking them neatly under to be out ©f the way when one ate And now they say that white gluce kid glove is returning for formal evening wear. At the horse show and the opora it Was ap- parent carlier in the winter, und at overy first-night performance since them where hionable folk have suthered you may have scen women Zn the boxes wearing long white Foves ar they did ffteen and twenty sars ago. They are drawn up over 3 » he clbow leaving the top of the s sed, and ma sed, You tuwk kind of upper ¢ when a sleeveless | dum like, If you wunt my candied frock is worn j oginion. "And’ she went own stairs “How ugly,’ {and I went in the setting room closet servers. {and started to wissle to see If the D er Emarts ol others: | canary would think it was & frend And 80 began-tho debate—whether | of his'and wissle back, wich it dident. | | i uny Capricorn. No benign planetary vibrations operate, so this s an inausplclous day, and not to be chosen to transact important matters. There will be some tendency- to indifference to the opposite sex and domestic discord, all of which may be vanquished by aintaining a peaccful and loving attitude. A child born today will be sensi- tive, finaginative and affectionate, and’ easily influenced both for good and for evil, with a splendid talent for music. If today is the anniversary of your Lirth, vour character should be rich in native common sense. In fact, | you arc a person whose success in inything you undertake will depend upon the fideilty with which you follow your natural impulses. Your mind :‘null?iruhlly flear and inventive, and should be allowed to ox; Bol _ never guide your actions, but you are in- ‘x:?..l“‘»'v jaa “1":?- v‘:.‘wa ) clined to distrust your judgment, par- (lxorugh Yo sllp i);)' v’ ”. cen ticularly when it leads you to form and dowh under that e plans that appear unusual and lnu- A Sowa mnger tha genious to duller minds. that old can up on ti tcmember that the commonplace thatield can up is not zlways the most rcasonable {0 yda way, but that your method, no mat- | R I e tor ‘how_ different, is probably the IR Z0d st Rud gion mort direct. b R el f ¥ You are saving and cconomical— it ‘Was dreadfal to. hear again a quality of reasonablencss— It was dreadtul {o hear, | Lut {n this you are often thought to fo it Ceaned tor Wis be selfish, because you lack tact and r"v.ru\\ py: -“ Vt are never ostentatious in helping brueh to plece others. Because of this fundamental he wou sincerity vou would bc more of a producer than a eelier, more of a statesman than a politician. You are | naturally enthusiastic and intolerant of weakness. Physically you are alert and nimble, and, {f a woman, | should make an excellent dancer; in fact, one who might make It a pro- ay not bs as romantlc as a bunch of orehids, but it can | fession. If a man, you should be an ve token, and us long a8 your husbund brings them home ; admirable athlete and succestful in | to you and doesn’t forget to pay vour bills, you needn’t worry about his | &ames of skill rather than of chance. remembering your wedding day, and the day you got engaged, and other| ~YOu have nothing of the gambler anniversaries that sentimental women set such store by. in you, and are religious in a phil- As for the kisses, look out for the husband who | 0sophical zenee, but not bigoted. He is generally trying to kiss his wife's eyes shut | “Well known persons born on this comfort, remember this: Still waters run deep. And the very people who | date are George E. Belknap, naval love most, find it hardest to talk about the thing that is most sacred | officer; George . Wright, theologian; of b hard Danny lad out to dis insten expe over glane arted down just old_can Kkl wi and | The man from the berd and fish store brawt ma's canary this aftir- noon, being a ordneery looking yel- low canary without mutch ixpression, and ma hung it up in the setting room, saying, I hope its going to sing, 111 be sv disappointed if it dont sing. t dont look sed, can o! EAR DOROTHY DIX: I have been married nine years to a man who has no bad habits and who is a home lover. e does everything he can for my comfort and that of our two children. Here is my trouble: My husband does not show me any affection whatever, and his undemonstrativeness certainly does hurt me. I have tried only a loving, affectionate wife can try to get him either to say something affectionate or to act that way, but he meets me with coldness, and oh, how hurts! Please advisc me what to do. A LOVING, DEVOTED WIFL. u, dear lady, is to try to bring a few rays 1 common sense to bear on the situation. Perhaps that will make vou see 1ow foolish you are In permitting a little pecullarity of your husband's to ruln what should be an cxceptionaliy heppy married life. Of course, you would like vour husband to be a Romeo who spent his arrled life, he did his courting days, in_making love to you, and in olding your hLand, und kissing vou, and telling you how beautiful and wonderful you are. Virtually every other woman in the world craves the me thing, and, personally, I think that men are idiots mot to perceive that all wives have this common weakness and cater to it. For as long as a man jollles his wife enough, she is deaf and blind to his every fault, and he can beat her, and starve her, and she will still think that slie has a matrimonial prize. However, men don't see the situation from this feminine angle. They are not sentimental. Tt embarrasses them to make love, and the reason why the average nian hurries on his wedding day is tu get the courting over with as soon as possible. But because he quits telling his wife every day that he loves her and that she looks good to him is no sign that he hu3 ceased to love her or has lost interest in her. IHe thinks that she will just take it for granted, as she does the sunshiue. I beg you to consider thi | can and gone down in brush almost as qu wink your ere ! bottom he worked hi hie drew o long breath, He heard Yowler lund on of brush He heard Yow! at that old can. Then he he ler sniff. He was sniffing at ing of that can to malk Mouse was still ins covered that D he flew into a + Bob Cat never the long he as 1f it would, ma, I und ma sed, Tawk sensibie, how + berd look as if it would ging is i€ it wouldent” { Well, it looks kind of dum like, 1 happere ' commented zome ob- % wot tl fvec Wl love and I tried diffrent things to start it, TSRO S B e sutch as running erround the room ot eveming. tlooping my arms like wings and then There is this much about it—a fact | jstanding in front of its cage and mak- Pt A BiACOatacare et {ing music on w comb with a piece r high fu r. Wormen are still en- | of tissue paper erround it, but the thusfaetic about weariug them. TUn- | canary wouldent start, jest setting doubtedly oune t the reasons why ‘-"ll its stick like a berd trring to French women dlscarded the long see how ignorent it could look, and évaring @love #o:completsly, was be- {pop came home and we ate suppir wause they liked to show théir arme | 7 |and the berd hadent sang vet, ma decked with bracelets. And the :.\_L)xru:. \\lll,\'}un, 1 wish that L-erri‘ Ciot Pul nab by hh ineany apeat] would sing, of corse its ony its ferst | e cheiey: Sihcr: hove: or svtoun day heer bit I wish it would let out Some bracelet enthusiasts even wear @ cupple of peeps enyway, jest as an | i e eyec thelr gloven: indication. t to her in kindness, in falthfulness, in working for her. As long as a Perhaps its deff and dum or has|man toils to support you ard your children, he docsn't need to talk about ft. One thing seems evident—that if . e Janan d E bl o ey 1ot EloveR HOtha cves some impeddiment fu its speetch, Pop | That's a certificate of devotion that you could draw moncy on at the bank. 1 -1‘351 _Lm:'h::‘x‘\ml be white and they e tal e “One furrier advised his customers | bleeve tho berd is jest obstinate, ma get rid of all thelr muffs having )'l“‘dv d pop sed, T have an ideer, as trimming made of the AGAIN | 1ONE a8 You havent named it vet. there is no chance that { ¥ dont You call it after some grate e S wiil Te i harily eviven - singer sutch as Melba or Patty and “or many years. On the other hand thus appeel to its vanity and maybe any French and American dress spe you'll get some action. alists are pushing the fashion with Well, Patty is o nice_cute name, he ! breafo e ma sed, and pop sed, Yes, canary DANNY DARTEDS 0UT oF ThAT OLD TIN CAN AND DOWN INTO THAT GREAT PILE OF BRUSIL to get Danny out. Yowler was strong and his blg paws sent that can fly- | tng. Sometimes it would hit agai a stump and bounce off. Sometimes it would go end over end for quite a distance. Danny kept hoping tnat Yowler would_grow tired and leave the old can alone. “He ought to kuow by this time that he can't get me out of here,” said Danny to himself. “I supposc he thinks he's having fun No, I don't either,” he sdded, s he heard Yowler snarl. “He's lost his temper and therc & no knowing what he way do now. It lucky” thing for me that this old can was lying right where it was. Graclous, he has sent me flying this time!” Yowler had sent Danny flving. had caught that can just right and sent it iling through the air| straight toward a pile of brush. It | was o big pile of brush, and it was | just beyond the edge of the garden in the woods. Between them Gray | Fox, who had first chased Danny into that old can, and Yowler had knocked | that can wcll over toward that side of the garden. Danny, of course, knew nothing| about what part of the garden he was in. Being shut in s he was, he had 1o chance {0 peep out, for he kept as sister: Words are the cheapest things tho world. The man who really loves a woman is the one who tells Oyster Biscuits. dough, six A beefsteak be just as much a lc Alaio o of flour, powder. two tablesp butter Moisten out half an Iuch thick spread with melted b nice fat oysters on ha | Sprinkle with pepp ver with the re buttered a very hot oven brush” with m using fc to strips of Te think THE LON SMA WHITE FOR L is a Kkissing bug! WwHliraturn, Lesides, for your women ure Several already close slecve they notably smart carrying thew. (Col h 1924.) laced He filstflt!’ of gflflf Rame. | Menu for a Day. o | BREAKFAST. Baked Banauas Dry Cereal With Cream. Baked Sausago Cakes Raisin Corn Bread. Coftee. LUNCHEON. Stuffed Egg Salad with Thousand Island Dressiy Rolls. Irish Moss Blancmange. m Cookles. Tea BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. LOOMIS. VARIATIONS—Loomis, Lummls. RACIAL ORIGIN—Weish. SOURCE—A locality. While the Welsh had & system of Gistinguishing one individual from | .other by reference to his parentage a very early period, their system ¢ nomciiclatura ditfered considerabl oz the Scottish and the| i Celts in soveral ways. uze of family uwames as su Welsh is a comparativel dgsvelopment, due as much to Tnglich influence as anything, and it conscquence, while most of the Welsh names are cvolved from tho Welsh tonguc, they were likely to follow the Bugli thod in their formation. “Ap” in the Welsh tonguc had much sume ficance as the Irish and ttish %O’ and “Mac,” but it was 1scd incividually ana specificall stead of collectively and zenerally, Thus “Owen ap Tthel” would be | *Owen, the son of Ithel.” not “Owen of the clan of Ith re might be sons named Nwen, the svstem did not quite definitely cnough serve tho pur- tablespoons of vinegar. Dose of differentiution, and the an- o of one-Lalf orange, two ent Welsh therefore used to include Jlospoons of raw onion ihe name of the grandfathor, the ruted, threo tablespoons of cfather and so on, inaking | | finelv minced pareley. Shake name of a single person, when| | until creamy. = This mixture written formally and in fuil, look Uke | | will keep until used if kept in the list dance at a banquet. tho refrizcrator . Rut w family names came P AT il I ato being they wers ofien based upon COTTAGE PUDDING I i { I ! Rub t cream one table- U R T TR s i slace names, 3 English. | Toomie is one descrip- spoon of butter and one-half cup of sugar; add onc beaten ast Night! HUSKY youngster after a hard day's outdoor romping can sleep like a top The and -tfted two teaspoons on anything. THE TROUBLE OF COFFEE MAKING—-USE HuotmiTonss Collos IT IS MADE ‘JUST DISSOLVE . ~AND DRINK IT. A GREAT CONVENIENCE 7t AND OH, SO GOOD! 4~ DINNER. Vegetable § led Sirloin Bakcd Crean Cottage Pudding, U BAKED I the The Cencentration of hundreds of experts on “SALADA" TEA mare has produced the finest tea, the finest blend and the finest pacKage. prediction that with the long # ot 2 i to them. OROTHY D @] Francls L. Pation, ex-president of | ;“:gfi(cv;o(h‘:ix)_s like some wonderflll J o DOROTH DIX. Il‘rl\nulon College; ’[crencg V. Pow- | Now jest for that Iil call it Melba. | [JEAR DOROTHY DIX: What would be your advice to a man forty-eight | 1¢rly; labor leadcr: Walter Gay, artist, ma sed. And she went up to its cage | vears of age regarding marriags chelor. He has two women | & Conselonr T4, - saying, Sing, Melba, sing, Melba. |in view. One is thirty-three, the other twenty-two. Which of these wome i ARG Wicli Melba dident, and hasent yet. | would it be, in your judgment, most advisabie for him to marry? — = Mary Johnson, writing the other day, says: “Marry for love. To pl st V. | vourself is the firet eugenic law. Within certain limits there is no best a i C 0y eIn Bnd celer’ | | for matrimony.” What may be considered certain lmits? £ W, Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter i " in"a pan and add one pint of rather . highly seusoned cream sauce and one Answer: The age limit matrimony differs « widowes and &l cupful or more of ed and cooked | bachelor. A widower may, with safety, marr later than the bachelor, | white celery. When it is all boiling { because the man who has Leen married s accustomed to pulling In doublé | hot, add ong pint of drained ovste - harness, He is house broken, o to speak, and it does not irk him £0|and cook tiem until their edges curl. | to endure the bondage of domesticlty as it does the bachelor. Also, he is|Shake a bit of cayenne and some | accustomed to putting up with the ways of women and side-Steppini their | puprika over all, and serve on Lot Hlx!(-wfpu‘ullurlticfl. and is, therefore, more adaptable than the bachelor. | puttered toast squares. hiti Of course. men differ, 2nd you can never set any arbitrary age limit for The Exhibition Skater. marrlage. But I should say fifty-two or fifty-three would be the ver: The lce carnival looked like o |latest ut which It would be advisable for a bachclor to venture fo take the | pageant with the skaters in bright | Plunge into the sea of matrimony. [colored costumes flocking everywhere. . [Tho first event was w race. Billy | A between the two ladies whom my corrcspondent bis in view, 5 el > > lone who is thirty-three is the Lest bef. and Betty were breathless until it A girl of twenty-two has little in common with a man of forty-eight. was over. “You know,” ald Betty | Tlc is tired of the glddy whirl, and wants to settle down to his own fireside, whon some Indians from Alaska were | She Is Just at the stepping-out ace, when she is cruzy for amusement und re. and she will either lead h nerry danco or else be @ sour and ntled companion if forced to stav at home. ! But the woman of thirty-three is also ready to begin tho business of life. And she makes an fdeal wife | her heart is in Ler job. <harp knife from ottier through tr small piece enty minutes and scrv Ancther way s to boil them and remove the skin before serving. settle down and mother he DOROTHY DI nd to “use Superfluous Hair Harmlessly Removed . .. ng man of thirty. T have been g vear and Iike her very much. But about six | months ago T met another girl whom [ like just as well and sec just as often fine, one | What shall I do? I hate to loss either of them, for I know that they fine | both love me and that T will break the heart of the one I don't marry. Shhtepan Tend Jcook Please give me vour advice. ANXIO! until thick. Rub througl a feve iuto @ frult jar, udd one Jlespoon Of sugar. one tea- | of salt, one teaspoon of one-half_teaspoou_of mustard. three-fourths tup alad oil, juice of one lemon, EAR MISS DIX: 1 ai With @ girl for a_whole THOUSAND 1 SSING. oing steadily Ono cup of stewed tomatoes, outons chopped pepper ehopped Answer: Now that they have stopped polygamy Utah, I am afraid rou will have to emigrate to Turkey if you are not willing to give up ome oc the other of the glrls. Turkdy s about the only place left where a_man can have two legal wives, and they tell me that even in Turk plural wives nre not so popular us they used to be, on wccount of the high cost of living. So perhaps vou had better, after all, dectde which one of the ladies you prefer and throw the handkerchief to her. But don't worry about the } { other one dying of a broke: Girls have dled and worms have eaten | | them, but not for love. DOROTHY DIX. t paprika, I i The family fore, It t of baking powder and half a salt- o spoon of salt. Beat thoroughly, turn into a tube pan and bal MOTHERS| |56 & an lour. Serve with creamy sauce. AND THEIR CHILDREN Creamy Sauce.—Cream one- fourth pound of butter and add by degrees one-half pound of brown sugar and four table- spoons of sweet eream. Be until very ligh add the juice and grated rind of onc lemon, place over boiling water and tir until meited and frot “Just Hats” By Vyvyan. walk two miles Weath- ther, “‘wo used to The Weather. |along & country road to schuol The most interesting thing about the |er never stopped us: When it snowed | weather is its emphatic way of doing|WC put on rubbers hoods and warm { > s of | OVercoats, and trudged along with our | precisely what it wishes regardless of | g,.cq to ‘the wind and backs bent to the wails and whimpers of those who [fight it. ilve under it. If the weather decides | ‘“We coasted the hills and elid on that the cky chall be high and blue, | th% ice and paddied in the puddles with- with dabs of white clouds flocting by ‘restless” afternoor children started on the mera game,” it keeps them quieter | more c¢ngrossed than any other out ever a thought of trouble. Nobody thought of sending the carriage after j on a snappy bit of wind, nothing on | us.” Nobody worried about our get- 15 5 ng wet or tired or chilled. We rarely giving their stunt, “I don't see the |CATth can change tho program. High| qif “ZLPrpiredl §f SO0l e miey pretty little girl we met anywhere, |37d bluc it 13, and mako the most of it. > lookaa o Y dontt think she's. Here™ | ©Of course, the weather may change | had vadgoxoul in all weathers - : = |or stay in. and who cared to ctay in? For the Schoolgirl. | “Littis Marie, the Childa Wonder in Ké‘r:v“”anx:’d el slie fickenne f,‘;:ndi;";in.,‘dwfig,‘”[ B S | @ Skating Dance.” read Billy from hie | Swaches - iteel? in eray and dropa | I Eathered along the road as I chased e L e {squirrels and gathered apples and Lif form of amusement. A small paper| “ox, open 2t one end with a hole the lze of @ quarter cut in the center 51 the other end, makes the camera. ach child tekes his turn in being tne photographer. The others come | o man and wife or mother and child to have their pictures taken, some- mes dressing up in outlandish cos- sumes 1 help them to get up. Slips of paper are used to make the pay- aente, and the completed photographs ziven by the camera man arc old spapehots which T supply. opreight, 1924, i boyish bob. This is @ hat the younger folks are wearing—a fcit poke, with a broad leather feather tucked under a silken band. A poke is & delightful plcture frame for tho shert cuds of the program a few minutes later. his jaw tfairly dropped in surprise as he saw the falry-like perton he and Betty had met come ekating out in little fancy dance step “Oh. Billy,” cried Bett: ren’t you glad she is our friend! She is ‘the most wonderful thing at the carnival Why she fairly skates on her toes At the end tho child made a deep curtesy and blew kisses straight at Billy and Betty Cut-out! Make Marie's cost green, ber scarf tan with green and tiny Ted 'stripes and Ted | frings.” And her skating boots aro red! (Copyright, 1924.) Sheridan Eggs. Slice two onions of medium size and brown them in two tableepoon- fuls of butter, then stir in two level tablespoonfuls of flour and cook, stir- | ring all the time until the flour is } brown_and well mixed with the but- jter. Then stir in a pint of milk | slowly and cook until smooth. Add six hard-boiled eggs cut into eighths | lengthwise and season highly with salt, pepper, paprika and good table sauce. Serve on toast. EVERYBODY—Interpretation ) HEOR tuar? BABY SAID TMumt ANYONE BUT A WOMAN WOULD SDMIT SAD ‘DAD"™ DONT BE ABSURD! HE DISTINCTLY SAID "MUM* Fickle, provoaing, the weather picks | out a cold, gray vaulting, a shifty north wind and a douse of inoisture and changes tho dun earth into a fairy- land of exquisite, dazzling beauty that thrills with its purity and stuns with its_majestice aloofness. Can_you touch a snowstorm? No, nor paint it, nor f1x it in any way save as a haunting. flecting memory of the | carth made clean, « masterpleco of weather! Yet people are afraid of the weather. The children cannot go to school be- cause it rains. The rain will hurt them. ‘The east wind is bad for them and the wind will whip their faces and chill thelr poor littls hands. Isn't it sad?| Isn’t it eflly? | Weather won't hurt children if they are prepared for it and taught to en joy it. There is health, joy and in. | spiration in it, If only the house-bound elders will stop complaining long enough to sense it. Youth has noth- ing to do with chills, and fears, and| dreads of the rain, ‘snow and wind. | Left to themselves, the children would never think of the weather as some- thing that held them in the house with the cats and Kittens. “When 1 was a child, caid grand-| By Ridgewell| AHERE YoU ARE, "DAD; HE saID! TAE CHILD GIVE us YOUR UNBIASSED WHAT DIDUMS SAY, THEN ¢ ed my face to the wind and the But the children are sent to school in the city in a closed car or elsc they live two ‘blocks from the school and stay home when it rains. They're afraid of the weather. (Copsrjent, 1824) i sl Cheese Delights. To make cheese delights, grate two cupfuls of fresh soft cheese, add a tablespoonful of butter, one well beaten egg, a dash of salt. paprika, cayenne, a teaspoonful of mustard and a teaspoonful of a good table sauce. Mix to a paste, then pile thickly on neat squares of bread and top each with a wafer-thin slice of bacon. Heap the cheese paste up to- ward the center of the slice, as it fs apt to run and spread in the bak- ing. Arrange the delights in a pan and place them in a very hot oven for about ten minutes. The cheese paste will puff up and brown, the bread will toast and the bacon will cook to a nics crisp. 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