Evening Star Newspaper, June 4, 1924, Page 33

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TWOMAN’'S PAGE BY MARY Mukers und purveyors of women's clothes finding that with every seasen t is an ever greater de- mand for knowledge of colors. In other words, the question of color in women's clothes has passed from a| Tairly simple stage when there were | enly three or four “new” colors a | season to the present time when| eveiy season scores of “new” shades and colors are devised. Once brown was merely “brown” ~-now they talk of tete de negre, Havana or tobacco. Instead of blue they speak of “powder’ or lipine, daphane, sistine, ete. Every ason there are new greens. They il talk of Lanvin, reseda and even »f jade. but newer are aphrodite and tarragon and bud green. For each mixture of color pig- ments there is often a whole range of colors, and milliners and dress- makers have taken advantage of the charm that lies in such shadings— “hadinzs that suggest the effect of « sunset where a deep pink will shade Off to an almost imperceptible blush or the shading of pigment fon the netals of a flower, from deep tones 4t the edge to the faintest shades t the center. It is possible to buy chiffon shaded vellow and «iher colors—at any of the shops, and this is used in making scarfs, many | ©f them edged with ostrich fringe. Narrow ribbens ranging from light- ~st to a vivid tone of a certain color are used in trimming picturesque | ~vening froc The idea is worked out interestingly in the crown of a falt hat that ranges from a vivid sreen at the brim to a pale yellow Al the center of the crown. A dis- tinctly faded effect is the result. In the Bat of this sort shown in the| ~ketch little ribbon pump bows trim MARS ll New Color Combinations In Shops ALL. GREEN FELT HAT SHADING TO in front and back and on either ~ide, { (Copyright, 1924.) PALE YELLOW AND TRIMMED WITH LITTLE BOWS SHOPPING FOR THE JUNE BRIDE BY MRS, HARL Third Finger, Left Hand. Whether yvou. like the eynic. con- | sider your wedding ring as a “symbol tondage,” or whether, being of human and romantic turn « mind. you dream over it an | cmblem of everlasting love any | case. you want it up-to-date! And so vou and “John" ransack the | stores for the “very latest.” But| whether that “latest” is the plain| =0ld band of the late nineties, or the | fragile, platinum-surfaced, orange- | llossom-ornamented circlet of 1924, «r any pther of the styles in wedding | ngs which, like styles in other | things, come and here ure some the' features which. regardless of al style. will give your wed- ring boauty and grace. Desizn is of utmost importance in the wedding ring. If there is a pattern. it _should have a center of | interest—one side of it should not he heavy for the other, but the whole | hould be well-balanced. Orange nssoms and other symbolic designs way, if not overornate, he beautiful well as significant. Curved lines | miean lightness and grace. but if they | “sprawl” too much they lack dignity. | Straight lines and solid figures lend | the ring reposeful balance. If you want vour wedding ring to mrow more beautiful to vou the longer you have i, see that this design is founded on a seometrical figure of zood proportions. _Scroll v work and the various flower designs re not only appropriate ornamenta- tion for u wedding ring. but they fit “dmirably into a geometrical back- “round. Wishbones and horse- HAT! Fashion for Ears. 1 that ears are becoming Hairdressers are in- by which half, or are shown. Will -in fus din 4 They say smart again. venting fashions even all, of them your ears stand inspection? | They say that much of one’s char- scter can be told from the ears. 1| don't doubt that there is something 11 it, since everything goes to make up character. There is one good toings 1t the ears are hopelessly ugly they can be covered up by the hair.| r at least partly covered. There| ne special standards of beauty vond the fact that they should lic { against the head, a thing thes +4n be trained to do by wearing an ar cap at might, or, if the case is vxtreme, by undergoing a simple and, Nexpensive operation | The ears must be kept clean. 1} <uppose my readers will think this is Superfiuous advice. But though they | may be washed out daily with soap «nd water, that does not mean that ihey are clean. It is almost impo: '[ sible to get into those minute cre; S “ith a towel, even if it is wrapped Yound one's finger. The result is that Loapsuds collect and dry in the ear crevices. There is always the danger, too, of | cither letting too much wax collect in | Vhe ears and harden or of digEing at Fingers and Toes. are shorter than fingers and not as hansome. There is jx- | meny fingers as wat there is we would proberly miss a quicker than we would a | espeshilly somebody «ltses Toes usually ackly as acs, ony [ few fingel Lfew toes, fingers. N We dont care who sees our fingers as long as they are cleen, but most | peeple are sensitive about their toes. Your nuckles are the hinges of vour fingers and are also used to hit with in a fite, except by gerls, who would yather scratch. Wen the feetcher raps on her desk with her nuckles it is werse than if she used her ruler be- cause she is libel to hert them and get “ven madder. ) Fingers are necessities wen you use them 'to eat with or scratch with, and lixuries wen they are used to wissle tnrough om shoot rubber bands with. Wen a gerl lets you hold her hand it cither proves she likes you or elts she likes to hold hands. Wen & boy has exter big feet every- body says Its a sine he is going to be tall man, not being mutch consola- tion on account of meanwile he has big fect.and there is no time like the pres- ent. . A elefant has the biggest tocs of | eny animal und a fly has the smallest. | this reason one of the hardest ngs to imagine is a clefant tredding | a flys toes Age makes a grate diffrents to toes. utest sites to see is a bak g with his toes, but if he went d 30 vears later with them stick- efen part ways out of his shoes pdy would think he was terrible. | RPN isin Tapioca Podding. e-fourth cupful of instant/ % ‘IID'IIL\DOT water until | from the fire and | ypoonfuls of buis teg, then cool. 1i&gat one cupful o ek o Svir invo\one. heaten exa. | Y4 to the tapioga. RAdd half a cup- fui of sugar, ofe cqgpful of Sagisins and ' caspo $nted lemon pind. Mixgwe greaceqfbaking dis Oderat g oven for a s o e ing everyl Cook tapioca in WL, ar. Remove stir il _two tab) ¢ a forty- | metal | the AND H. ALLEN. shoes, they stable the dther hand, because to connote barnyards and . are in atrocious taste—if their rather graceful, curving lines entice vou, have them somewhere olse than on vour wedding ring! The figures vou will most commonly see inthe designs are the square. the circle, the oblong. the diamond and the ellipse, Color and luster of the is ‘most important. next to design, in giving beauty to the wed- ding ring. (Gold and platinum are the most-used metals. You can buy u wedding ring that is strong at every point, if you get one that has been cut from bar of metal. If the ring is a simple band style, however. it may be made by soldering the ends of wires together There has always been a certain amount of superstition about the wedding ring. In oriental countries ring was & talisman placed upon the wife's tinger to guard her against the glances of other men. Today wedding ring ix merely a symbol hope and love Befoge the present style of ring came ifto vogue. the token was en- graved white gold. Green gold pre- ded at weddings three or four years £0: and it had ousted the red-gold engraved band; before that the plain red gold was popular for about fifteen years. Preceding the narrow. tubular Ting was the old-fashioned, plain, flat. wide band. Jewelers say that “the smooth, prim. commonplace ring ex- presses neither sentiment nor romance, and is u mere badge of the married state; hence it was inevitable that such a ring should give way to the token appropriately carved to express the sentiments for which it stands.” on em BY EDNA KENT FORBES it too strenuously and injuring the ear drums. Twice every year you should £o to an ear specialist to have the ears syringed. It is a simple, painless. inexpensive operation. Thousands of cases of deafness are nothing but ears so clogged with wax that they cannot react to sound. As for those little creases, it would be a good thing if, every month or so0. you took a blunt orangewood stick such as you for your nails rolled the end with cotton wool and then, very gently so as not to injure vourself, ‘wipe out those little crevi- To remove the wax from the s do not use the stick, make little roll of cotton. wet in and squeeze dry, leave in the ten minutes and remove. ol ear it Menu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Strawberries. Dry Cereal with Cream. French Toast Apricot Cream. Coffee. LUNCHEON. Creamed Salmon Rolls. Chocolate Squares Iced Tea. Nut DINNER Raviol French Fried Potatoes. ireen Peas. Tomato Salad Banana Souffic Coffee, FRENCH ‘TOAST. Beat two eggs until very light and add one tablespoon of SUgar, one-quarter teaspoon of 1t and two-thirds cup of milk. ‘ut stale bread in slices one- third inch in thickness, dip thém in the egg mixture and fry on both sides in butter until well browned. Serve with apri- cot cream Apricot Cream— Press through a sieve enough stewed apricots o make two- thirds cup of pulp. Beut two- thirds cup of heavy cream until stiff, fold in the fruit and sweeten with sugar to takte. UT SQUARES Melt two squares of un- sweetened chocolate over boil- ing water, add one-half cup/of melted butter and one cup of brown sugar and heat thor- oughly. Stir in the beaten yolks of two eggs, flaver with one teaspoon of vanilla and one- teaspoon lemon, add one-eighth cup of flour and finally fold in_the stiffly beaten egg Wwhites. Pour into a shal- low pan lined with oiled paper, sprinkle with chopped nu bake in a moderate oven an cut in squares when cool. RAVIOLI: t one and one-half cups of flour on a board. Make a de- pression in the center, drop in one-half egg and moisten with warm water to a stiff dough. Knead until smooth. Cover and let stand ten minutes: then roll thin as a sheet of paper, sing a rolling pin. Cut in strips two and three-quarter inches wide. using a pastry jagger. Mix onc-quarter cup of cracker crumbs, one-quarter cup cooked chopped spinach and one egg. sten with stock and_season h salt and pepper. Put the mixture by three-quarters tea- spoonfuls ‘on the lower half of strips of paste, two inches apart. Fold upper part pf paste over lower part. . Press edges together and between mixture with tips of thumb: then cup apart, using Dastry jagger. Cook in white stock ten minutes: take up with a skimmer; arrange a layer on a hot serving dish, sprinkle gen- erously with grated Parmesan cheese—about _ one-half cup. Cover with tomato sauce. Re- Peat twice and serve at once. Today's aspects are, while slightly adverse, not unfavorable for con- summating business or social rangements, and putting the finishing | touches to matters which have been hanging fire. During the afternoon. certain vibrations indicate a tendency to gloom and depression, and it will e necessary to call on the reseryes of willpower to fight off threatened moroseness and pessimism. In the evening the conditions materially im- prove and justify a certain amount of AaRgressiveness, moderated prud- ence and thought. A child born today will be subject fo fits of nervousness and it should be given as much outdoor cxercise as possible, preferably with the country as an environment. . The noise and din of city life will get on its nerves Just as they get on yours. The best cure for the bad nerves will found in healthy surroundings, nature is supreme. If today is your chief characteristics are honesty, loyalty and an easy contentment with things as they are, without ambition or desire to alter them. You follow the trail and never blaze out a new path for yourself. You are self-satis- fied and have little or no apprecia- tion of those who, by higher educ tion and beter jdeals, attain a posi- ! tion of usefulness in the world. Your horizon is near to your home Your thoughts are centered entirely on your own needs. and you never give a thought to what lies bevond you. You live a life of isolated individualism and are content. This attitude, not an uncommon one, attributable very largely to your ability 1o appreciate the benefits of careful study or higher education. The Chinese say “the living man who does not learn is dark, dark, like one walking in the night.” In Your business or professional career you have only achieved a very moderate success, as you are critical of new methods and original ideas never tolerate the former and are unable to absorb the latter. To be contented is evidence of healthy mind and a good dispositio To be satisfied is inimical to progres and_development Well known persons born on this date are: Andrew C. Wheeler. author; Wendell P. Garrison, editor and author; Samuel B. Whitney, composer; Charles C. Abbott. naturalist and author: Walter L. Dean, artist: Paul E. Archinard, physician and educator. (Copyright. 1924 1 birthday, a Favorite Recipes f Famous Women BY EDNA M. COLMAN. PLUM PUDDING. Mrx. Atlee Pomerene. Mrs. Atlee Pomercne, wife of for- term March again picking up the social threads where th(y were dropped a year ago. as Mr. Pomerene is one of the special coun- o el el to conduct the oil investigation Mrs. Pomerene clings to her tried and tested dishes as to old friends Here is the formula for her favorite plym pudding One cupful suet. chopped very fine three cupfuls of flour, one teaspoon- spoonful ¢ alt, one nnamon. half teaspoonful ;up molasses, one cupful sweet milk, one cupful seceded raisins, one cupful nut meats, chopped; one- quarter teaspoonful ' nutme o eighth teaspoonful ginger. To make: Put the finely suet spices, also the molasses. Dissolve the soda in a little water and after mixing it in thoroughly add the milk and flour, putting in the fruit and nut meats last, after they have been well floured. Pour into molds and steam for_three hours. This may be served with the usual hard sauce and the hot liquid sauce i flavoring according to one's taste. A good hard sauce iS made by beat- ing until very creamy two table- spoons of butter and a cupful of powdered sugar. them beat in the juice of & lemon and a pinch of nut- meg and set in @ cold place needed. | Chopping suet is made casier if a little sifted flour is used with it and | the chopping done in a cold place. (Copyright. 1921, MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. hopped | Deferred Punishment. One Mother savs: One day T told my little boy that be- cause he had waited a half hour to come in after I had called him ¢ must go to bed a half hour soomer. That | night friends camé in whom I particu- larly wanted the child to see, and, against my better judgment, he was allowed to come down. A few other incidents like this have taught that, while a_child should not be punished should follow the fault closely | (Copyright, 1924 — Salad in Turnip Cases. Take one and one-half cupfuls diced young cucumbers, one cupful diced firm tomatoes, half a cupful of shreaded lettuce, half a cupful of grated young turhips, one-fourth cup- ful of thinly sliced radishes, two ta- blespoonfuls of thinly sliced young onjons, two teaspoonfuls of chopped watercress and one teaspoonful of salt. Make a dressing s follows, and when cold combine with the vege- tables. Mix to a smooth paste two tablespoonfuls of butter and two ta- blespoonfuls of flour to a smooth paste, Add one cupful of hot cream and stir until. smooth. Place in a saucepan in hot water, and add one teaspoonful of sugar. one teaspoonful of salt, half a cupful of lemon juice, and three egg yolks, stirring con- stantly. Next fold in three stiffly beaten egg whites, and whip until the mixture thickens.' Cool and combine | with the prepared vegetables. e Sausage and Tomato. Cook six sausages or sausage cakes. | Pour off half the fat, and add to it one cupful of soft bread crumbs. Stir| until slightly browned. Add enough highly seasoned stewed tomato to! make as moist as wished, and salt and pepper to taste. Place the moist- ened crumbs in a mound in the center | of a hot dish and garnish with the sausages. | The Best Kind. From the Chicago Herald. Alice—No man_ will ever dare to trifle with my affections. 1 have five big brothers. s Agnes—Thoy'll trifle with you rooner than they will with mine, I have five little brothers, of of ar- | mer Senator Pomerene of Ohio, whose | | ful soda, one cup currants, half tea- | until ‘ WEDNESDAY, DorothyDix]| |Tf Jealous Wives Would Gain Personal Attractive- ness and Good Humor, They Need Never Fear the “Other Woman.” Don't Give Up the Ship, Girls Advises jeal- ous wives to fight for their Pposaessions A\ JEALOUS wife was telling me her troubles the other day. She sobbed out that her husband was a philanderer, with a roving eye for every pretty face, and that he actually boasted to her of his conquests among the | fair sox. “He is h-h-h-andsome, and he such a w-w-w-omen,” she sobbed out, “he just fas-s-cinates them. They flirt with bim on the street and he is always telling me how the girls where he works make eyes at him, and about a rich woman who is a lot older than I am, and Who has grown children, who is just crazy about him. And it justibreaks my heart. Iam desperate, and what would you do about it?” “Well.” I replied, “if he is the poor fish that you say he is, I weuld be so glad to be rid of him that I would hand him over to any lady who would take him and throw in a chromo with him for good measure.” “But 1 love him. I would rather die than give him up,” wailed the Wlft.] S0 hi “Then,” quoth I, “I would brace up, and make a fight for my own property. I would not lie down and quit without making a single struggle | to hold my own. T would do my darndest to hobble a husband with the wandering foot. aad I would give any woman who got him away from me at least & run for her money. ¥ “But the trouble with you women with flirtatious husbands you have no sporting blood. “Maybe that is the reason why your husbands hunt up women with morc pep to them. But, anyway, the first time vou see your John casting sieep’s eves at another woman you get into a biind panic of fear and just tirow up your hands and surrender. instead of turhing around, and putting up the battle of your lives. “io look at yourseli in the mi; you have added ten years to your age. out looking. | You have wept and worried until You have gotten stringy and washed- You are bedraggled and ill-gressed. You have quit marcelling your hair and putting on your complexion. Not much of a rival. are you, for | young girls who are dolled up to the minute? Yet you would think that an idiot woman would nave sense enough to know that she should try to make herself as casy on her husband’s eyes as possible if he consfders| himself u connoisseur in peaches. 3 | You want to keep your husband at home do it By tears, by reproaches, by scenes, by making everything a: uncomfortable as possible. Fat chance you have of nailing a man te his own fireside by upbraiding him for his sins! Listening to a curtain lseture | is no husband’s idea of &pending a pleasant evening! \Vinegur never calches fli especially the male of the species OW the first piece of advice that I giv ry to use a little common sen: about the ‘once over! calmly and dispassionate! convince you that in about nine cases out of ten your jealou: without foundation. i “The man who looks like u (ireek god to vou is a very ordinary | appearing individual to other women. No other woman is trying to take | {him away from you. No otaer woman wants him. You think that his| secretary is madly in love with him and is trying to vamp him because she | treats his slightest utterance with awe and respect. and jollies him. 'nm] is simply her professional manner, put on to keep her job. In reali she thinks him a funny. fussy, fat old man, not to be compared to some.slim | young squirt in the outer office or How are you trying to| | ou, and all other jealous wives, | and give the man vou are so | That will | s absofutely | “You are jealous of the young girls with whom he dances at parties | and_believe they have designs upon him. They falling in love with their grandfathers. Thev laugh among themselves at | the way he pants after a two-step, and they account it unto themselves for | merit that they have done a kindly act in amusing an uged man by heing nice to him | “Believe me. most of the miserable jealous wives shed harrels of unnecessary tears and lic awake eating out their hearts with groundless fears. Other women do not see their husbands through their eves. nov want the poor possessions they cherish so tenderly Not every husband is the himself to be to hix wife | a fascinator and that he can make SH{ERE also is cemfort for you jealous wives devil among women that he represents A man likes his wife to think that he any woman sit up and take notice. and so he bLoasts to her of conquests that arc purely imaginary. Therefore, the wise wife smiles at such stories and humors her husband by teasing him about his flirtations “Finally. the jealous wife may console herself with the knowledze that she has the Stratesic position when she has to fight with another woman | for her huzband she can always win out if xhe does not get into a funk | her a standing. or run up the white flag | “Just the fact that a Her knowledge of his tastes, the force of habit, fear of scandal and losing | re her allies. And if to these she will add | i he need not fear to meet any | ihe respect of his neighbors personal attractiveness and goo vival of whatever age, class or con. DOROTHY DIX. | (Copsrizht | | man’s wife is his wife gives 1924.) n a bowl, adding the salt and | Writing Letters. ¥ou were warm enough in your berth g | or whether you had to use the extra My Children: Many of you will| blanket she packed for you? Your s00m be going to camp or to some | tFIp tired you? Father would Iike to g e st cnow if vou slept or if you're just other delightful place for a vacation. | FROW, If vou, slept or if youre just Your father and mother w be night long in a Pullman, and whether home. wailing (o hear how you are | the engineer bumped much when he itone : changed at the junction | setting along and hoping that you| ch3uged at the junction, = T are having the fine time they plan- not tell what made it a fine ride® | ned for They do not like to have | What kind of a car were you in?| | you go without them First becanse e anxious about your o away they we would s soon think of | 4 Who drove it? Was the road good? What was the scenery like? Pines ! and mountains and glimpses of blu. | safety. and then because they should | {be =0 lonesome without v | promised to write to them often and you. u tell them everything, and about what you will write: ) Dear Mother 1 arrived safely 1 was a Ittle tired after the trip, but [ | soon_got over it. The ride o the ‘(Amp s certainly some ride I room | with m: group. eight in hut 1 a think Fll like the instructor. He sure is some swimmer. 1 forgot my brown sweater. 1 left it in the back of the | hall closet. And when vou send it will you send a flashlight? The bat- tery ran out of mine. This is one dark place .at .night. Your loving son, TOM. P.S—Don’t forget to send me an extra battery with the flash, - And I need some handkerchiefs. The fel- lows all use khaki ones. About six. TOM. Your mother is so pleased when she sees the letter with the camp postmark. ‘Here's a letter from Tom.” «he savs, and father lays down | his paper and Uncle Jack cranes his neck to hear. Mother reads it over | twice and sighs, “Dgesn’'t say much. does he?' says father, doubtfully “Pity somebody doesn't make those | | kids write a decent letter once in a | while.” grumbles uncle, slumping back into his cushions. “Doesn’t tell us, a thing. Just asks for what he needs. T'd let him wait a while.” “Well, boys find it hard to write let- | | | | { | | water and snutches of bird son (what king birds?) and the ba ho cheered you, gn the thrill t an down vour back- hone when you piled out of the car and faced a long range of hills, shad- owed in the lake. “Some swimming instructor” meyn anything. What is his name and how old do you think he and what color are his eyes and his hair and how does he look when he laughs. and what medals has he won, and does he look like Uncle Jack who can swim some himself. or is| Uncle Jack & better swimmer? Fill | in that letter. 1t _may take some | time, but it took fourteen years to Erow you to the size of a“ecamper. Pay back an hour of that time in your letter. And don't forget .any- body in the family. especially ghum. (Copyright, 1924.) i e Luncheon Tamale. ] Place in a buttered baking dish one pint of fresh or canned-tomato cut up or blended and seasoned with salt, pepper and sugar to taste prinkle avith one minced green sweet pepper, add half a can or the same amount of fresh corn, sprinkle with salt and bits of butter, cover with crumbs, dot with more butter, and bake for twenty minutes in a ) might | oven in the heat of anger. the punishmenty~ good placing six slices of: bacon over the top during the last five minutes of cooking, turning to crisp on both sides. Cook until the bacon is just righ ters”” says mother, loyally. but she does wish that vou had said just a little more about things, You arrived safely? Don't know your mother wants to know you if It’s a great food to keep kids whistlin™—and how they do put it away! Nourishing and delicious— and doesn’t tax digestion either. JUNE 4, 1924 COLOR CUT-OUT Off at Last. There wasn't a prouder bor in the whole town than Billy Cut-out as he and his sister Betty took the train to Viewport, where they were to stay a wiole week, and be the ring bearer and flower gitl at their coust:: wedding. “I'eople will forget all about the bride and groom when they you tws teased Billy's father as he put them on the train. “But remember fine feathers don't make fine birds, and you must be- have yourselves while you're gone.” “We will,” called back Betty and Billy s they hopped up the steps of the train and followed the porter to their seat. Billy swung his cane and was glad he had & new gray overcoat With a cap 1o match, just special for the trip. (Copyright, 1924.) “JUST HATS” BY VYVYAN. Many popular crown fromts are trimmed in latticed ribbon: either two contrasting shades of ribbon are used or one ribhon “beaded” through a straw or felt crown of contrasting co Here is a straw model with two shades of ribbon interwoven. and looping out at the — - Cheese Balls. sides her one pou n whi o four. d 4 pineh thy half red of cracker a roll in and three four fat and fry on lettuce. Potatoes and Corn. Cut some cold half-inch dice in sausage egg Yolk in deep cooked potatoes in and fry until brown or bacon fat Then add one cupfal of canned corn drained. ¥ry u few minutes longer, stirring lightly and serve with bacon crisps or alone. Frigidaire—electric refrig~ eration—can be installed casily and inexpensively in your own ice-box. It will give you at once all the advantages of modern electrical refrigeration at 2 suprisingly low cost. Frigidaire eliminates ice and ice delivery—it pro- tects food from spoilage and waste. Write for full details and our easy payment plan. 17 Soyles and Sizes 8250 up, .ok, Dayton,O. DELCO LIGHT CO. 1219 E St. N.W. Franklin 7157 Also on Disnlay at Woodward & Lothrop in the Mathewson classifications. The change from the “th” | thew to a “ck” or "k in English | was brought about as the result.of the use of one of the Anglo-Baxon | diminutives of the name. “Mat' was {a short form of Mathew. “Matkin, Meekins, | through the addition of the diminutive | ending “kin.” meant “Little Mat." |Hence the meaning of Matkinson is {clear. But that combination of "tk |in the middle of the name was ar hari for the English tongue of the middle ages as for us, and, the “k" he- and Matheson Bistory of Bour Nante. BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAY, MACKIN | VARIATIONS — MacMackin, | Makin, Meakin. | RACIAL ORIGIN—English, also Scot. ish. SOURCE—A given name. | There is a peculiar paralleling of [the forms of the English and Scot- | ing the more dominant sound. the | tish family names in this group, |“t] just naturaily dropped out. | which. have come from the same| The development of the Scottish | & name ix somewhat different. One of | given name. but through a different |the older forms of the Gaelic “Mac- {form of development. in Ma- | Mhathian” (Mathewson) was “Mas | The given name, though you might | Maghan.” met with about 1263, and not suspect it, is Mathew, the same !it ix from this form that MacMackis | that has given us the family names ix developed. Decide Today " that you will try "SALADA' Delicious! Never sold in bulk. CHOICEST INDIA, CEYLON and JAVA TEAS - Reduce Waist 3Inches . inOneWeek ' 'With New Flexible Girdle The instant you put on this amazing new girdle the bulky fat on hips and | waist seems to vanish, the waistline \lengthens and you become erect. | graceful, youthfully slender. 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Worn over the undergarments—fits like a ki glove—and has garters attached constructed that it touches and gently massages the entire surface of abdo- men, waist, hips and thighs as vou { walk, climb_stairs. bend. reach or dance. and while sitting, standing, rid- ing or during any kind of exercise Every movement vou make. cven sci massage which your natural breathing. is met by thi- live rubber girdle. which gently mas sages away the fat. \Women oiter lose from 1 to 3 inches irom wais and hips the very first weck. On. you have Madame N Reducing won't want fo take it off tricd om Girdle th For Sale Wherever Corsets Are Sold, Including M. Collins. The Hecht Juiius Garfinkle & Co. S. Kann's fons & Co. Co.. Lansburgh & Bro.. Eugenie & Co The Porto Rico Store Sigmund’e. Inc. i & Lothrop i | | J REAL French shampoo, not simply a liquid soap; exquisite in quality, wonderful in efiect, perfumed with the genuine French Eau de Quinine fragrance. ED. 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