Evening Star Newspaper, October 27, 1924, Page 24

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WOMAN’S PAGE. THE EVENING STAR, MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1924. WASHINGTON, D. C, BY THORNTON Pajamas, Ruffle BEDTIME STORIE W. BURGESS LY MARY MARSHALL. | Found by a Friend. Conrage, knowinz it I Admits no odds too gre 0ld Mother Nature, and Flounces WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. brush. He thought it was a He knew that if this were so a chanco in the world for Therc he was with a little . which ho thought was ' t on one paw and no chance or climb, and very little chance ht Farmer the br There to find a cert in the wear skirts. r woman wr writi consisting ¢ sort. During mada This on severcly masculine was because we consid- ntially masculine. there is nothing a bit mannish oo 1 them, We wear them with S p 5 1 frills, gathered rufles and | actually shook fright t made him shake. oxcitement and nothing else wasn't afraid. In the men who exhil raw fi er are loosely that form quite h penctration the dyestu visted mat wisted toge Althous 80 sure tc is the Penetrate erial re facto sort ‘ : » - ‘Dyed in the Wool.” “Dyed in the wool." plied to political haters or woolens, s come to stand TR which cannot fade 3rown’s Boy pulled but, which are fixed & : R h, m and moro Hght|an1a So it is casy to sec knew that Ro one knew that h came into whero Bobby walted 10T |in' the woel™ clath is re: hiding i fhat hollow 1ok 80 160,008 | the snd Bowss: Jitotibaiiine tors knew he was there there was nothing | 4;q axcitedly, o ket et |%ired and to bs looked fo to fear. The cause of Peters -| ting in the way of Farmer Erown's |52 shopping. ment was the fact that Bowser the |, At lust his mastor made Bim | o syeyC0l Hound was barking as if he were try-| io down at the foot of a treo a short | e meor G - ing to bark his head off, and at Bowser obeyed. Bat | .S W00 Piece-dying same time was trying to dis his wa o, B Kept whiniagr wnd |Lhe name tmplies—the under the big pi brush where ¢ with exertement Harmer|EC008 after it Is comr ne one had f ned Peter by " cxpected 1o meo Bobhy | 110, Plece; eross-dyir t ho would find ont who What of 1o = 0 oimidd of lack A Yars: | moro under that pile of brush ity Ay St i Ne sar | Brown's Boy was com HE a) o S e o to find out | in the form of sk while 1t 13 | = Th, ess and oyed i whether ap- partiss woman i8 a phrase which m . ted ter makes thor | to run e rming pajama suit of French made of lemon-colored etyn, printed with large blue de- signs. It is made. with two la revers of mnattier blue, and with pleatings of crepe de chine in the ime down the front, at the side of the sleeve, at the pocket and cach trouser leg. green, crepe marocain is used another French pajama suit s wide pleatings of the crepe of each of the at the n a thod away mnd the gt more may be or yarn-dved ‘dyed in|dye has penetrated, s just what | conely coloring of the | You ocan etely woven in |price fc a form of |than for is woven |since the just y a highe ed mater t are plece dve ving process is 1l ott out now w Farme and Pet would pull | coon run s | t sid He dldn't hips and to make Corn Chowder. tul of butter ed add k until of potaic 3 to the on blue for that is tr s another pa- mmed with black ribbon which cdges the facket | users. A warm pajama | the Winter is made of white | So Poter poker his head o h lored | b end of the hollow log to wa hown | o A while he watched w o citament. H have i up to and trs prush hat he over that pile ¢ s brush who it was who Bowser 0. it one tabh pan a spoo: ’ when fmportant thin as you shop for woo can tell yarn-dyed cloths bit of their thread. which you ca spread eve face, and ha ster or le lyed in the stuff has not penet to remember |* * g t of the 10 is that you model Farmer then 2dd one c Ho two cupfuls of own's wser his way Bow keep or ' rocesses for yarn be, first , or is be extremel : is | ¢ sur Second, Horglum, the Danish-Amer- n sculptor, born in California, has shown Sheridan in this monument as the slightly built man that he was, r when he was chosen by Grant as a cavalry leader, ed but 115 | pouna Sheridan. ENERAL PHILIP DAN, the dash ma and horse, warm gal n hid ve ready irop them in on the il uncovered until done aroni is a fine substituts SHERI- or the H WAS PULLED | cole THE LIGT BOLDY. HE GLARING, mpling. worn by than 12 miles perpetuated to at Sheridan Circle. Whose ¢ least weig could SO THA LLY ED THERE later all th ay, how about mpty o limonen Ox in i n was idea, s men. of Virg Appomattox 1 il war h the e general ham returned to W and the o join his in Shenando: heard battle Hisgory has reco sprang into his saddle, faithful horse, to a bre and galloped over miles | « he met his confused and = army x from 100 late, we'll be late for = thunder of E stron the away nted how he purred Rienzi center of a larg hip with could not b ved if t re a high tal | 1924, by Victoria Faber Stevenson.) | ES”: 4 (Capyright, “JUST HA BY VYVYAN, | srious most that t at th thi bare the holds 4, , and the man ving, Dont left lded go through | motion backwards, e enyw o venan e e w 1 men, ch w Dresiin clasps hand. He in his right ha ded in a sweepin if to respond from his sur- new heart at MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDRE and the man HOW IT STARTED | BY JEAN NEWTON. , Leroy s us e cheer t : Hats for Big Collars. who Calling It “Billiards.” has been halted so sud gs are straight, bend under the irown back un- In this famous package Everything you need except water to make the finest pancakes you've ever tasted! Aunt Jemima Pancakes with the old-time Southern flavor! com- tie, mind du el - >t and shell those propert ge wh to this one. with a round ing to Is to flags Gorton's ReaQy.to-Fry Cod Fish Cakes a », and him, nd cou lowest ; Vel wat Hime| ot o n sed, Well, : 1 the d 40 sec- | e like them —delicious flavor and big saving of time. Gorton’s fa- mous*“No Bones” Cod Fish ready-mixed with fresh boiled potato. EOOKLET FREE: “Deep Sea Recipes”, Gorton-Pew Fisheries, Gloucester, Mass. ri wore de famous in poet sculptu His real work, ver, was not in the ride | itself, when he met his | troops : 1 their con d | .‘,L..‘[' may was turned to te . . painting and ] er, herr. thats the ybodys told u Sure, he's the ferst corract | Sl ¥ time to have you to wear -with its biz fur ¢ went s that enemy were earried rit that fa talian Minestron lat it it g Gives “Inside Attention, What Today Means to You on her wed- n old English ot Dope” to r-ouT [ BY MA 3 LAKE. i ¥ P i Lending a Hand. BY BLARE Brides! Young Wi lay s while indi- n and ny suce chars narrow down im from | some fried food can be. In the hot Snowdrift a crispy, brown crust forms so quickly that the food does not absorb too much fat and, inside this thin crust, cooks to tempting lightness and daintiness. TEvery bride begins by believing that she can be all-in-all to her husband, and that he cannot possibly tire of holding her hand or desire any other diversion than telling her over for the billionth time how beautiful and wonderful she is, and how his guardian angel must have been working overtime when he got her for a wife. Therefore, when she begins to realize that, having got married, her husband takes marriage for granted and has ceased to be excited over it, and that he has resumed his heart interest in| the grocery trade, and the stock market, and golf, she sheds salt and bitter tears, and moans that he no longer lo-o-oves her. The honeymoon is notoriously a time of strife and bickering. The| average married couple look back upon their first year of married life with horror and wonder how they ever lived through it. It was the season of torment because the bride was trying to monopolize her husband’s every thought and interest, and he was fightting for his personal liberty. Fortunately, for most couples, before the battle ends in the divorce court a baby comes along to dis ract the woman's attention from the man.| Jut hefore she has cut her wisdom teeth on her wedding ring and found out that no human being can be all-in-all to any other human being, the hearthstone is strewn with shattered illuslons and love has got sgme body | blows from which it never fully recovrs. | T is this monopolistic spirit that makes a woman jealous of her hushand’s mother. She knows well enough that the affection a man has for his mother is entirely different from the love he gives his wife, but’she cannot endure to share him even with the woman who bore him and to whom he would be a dastard to be ¥isloyal. s bt makes a woman cold-shoulder all of her husband’s old friends out of the house and supplant them with her own friends, because she is determined to blot out the life in which she had no part. *Need any help, Betty?’ Dix, a Black-haired boy with twinkling eves, came stroll into Betty Cut-out's vard, where Betty had lined up in a row the Jack-o-lanterns she had made. | “Thank you, but I don’t vet® an- swered Botty. “Come over when I start putting up decorations and youn and Billy can help me, if you want to.” 1t is what makes her hate even the business or profession in which her husband is absorbed, and even causes her to speak with resentment of the “old office” in which is made the money that supports her. You meet women who boast that they have been married for years and have never left their husbands for a single day, and that they tag their husbands even when they go off on fishing and hunting trips. And you cease to wonder that the women who make the mistake of trying to tie their husbands to their apron strings find that these gentlemen | so often slip the knot. For the thing that is chiefly the matter with of one hundred guns to be fired. DorothyDi. Scorpio. = pins ary ssmaces, Old Question, “How to Hold a Husband?” )\ rreat m ure of . ” 7 . ’ Bl e Be Answered in Three Words, “Don’t they presage a condition S Ao R, AT Monopolize Him. e e ilea | Fry in Snowdrift and see how delicious and whole- and anything that savors of | TF I could give onc piece of advice more earnest than another to the young alism, risk or h should n I woman who is about to be married. it would be th attempted, Today is great op- Don’t try to monopolize your husband Don't attempt portunity for the cementing 6f ties|his every thought and interest to his hon Don't try to separate } her friendship or love, or for|y own old friends. Above all, don’t ve him an overdose of toration of those that have been Of course, no bride will take my tip, for there is no other hun sunderec except a collegian in his freshman years, who Is so absolutely c. | A child born today will be normally | he or she has been bitten by Solomon’s dog and knows all there is to i healthy and vigorous, but will be sub- | about men, as is the young person upon whose marriage certificate the ject to grave fllness when it shall |is still wet. Nevertheless, if she would hearken to these w ords of warn Ave s fully survived the period|it would save her a lot of trouble. infancy. 1f taken in time, this affliction will have no serious con- sequences, Its character will be self- reliant: its disposition, attractive: its mentality, very keen and alert. Given the right training, and good environment, this child's character 1 develope into one of strength and determination, while the attrac- { tiveness of its disposition will pre- elude the possibility of its becoming will be professional lir If today is your birthday, you possess ability in a marked degree, | and, along certain lines, are almost brilliant. You, however, are easily | | discouraged nd st down, This lack of resurrectional rea n has often prevented you from consum- ently, it was well within yofir grasp. Unless things go your w: unle: events shape themselves as you think ed in, would have led to ultimate Truition, Nothing of any importance in this world has been achieved without ex- meriencing during the period of hievement several rt-backs’; noth- ing worth while has been accom- | plished without frequent disappoint- ments, Not only does this hold good in business or professional life, but it also, with equal truth, applies to social and family successes. Your f; is not attributable to ance, but rather to an tmosphere of easy dis- gem “Well, if you don’t need any help, I do,” declared Dix. “I don't know what I'm going to wear to your Halloween party. Mother always rigs up things for me, but she's still away, you know.” Come on np in the att Betty. “I know just the very Wwe can fix up for you to wear Dix has roxy cheel ing a brown suit, tan hose and a light blue blouse. Mount him on cardboard and then cut him out to join your bix Cut-out family. wvited Te isx wear- Prices realized sales of carcass beef in VWashington, D. C., Tor week ending Saturday. Ociober 85, 1024, on shipments sold out, ranged from 7.00 centh To 20.00 cents per pound and averaged 13.21 cents per pound.— Advertisement. The crown of Emperor Theodore of Abysinnia, taken to England after the chpture of Magdala, and the death of Theodore in IS6S, is to be returned to its former home in Africa. It is a ponderous headpiece and curious in shape, in that it has a long pipe ex- tending up through it, apparently de- vised for ventilation. thing | m t, and vou have never yet zed that difficulties arise so that cnuity and steadfastness of can be overcome. Tem- . 1f you so will, can be erted into ultimate success. Be- cause you are forced to step back one rung on the ladder of life does not mean that you are forced to the und. | Well known persons born on this date are: Whitelaw Reid, journalist {and diplomat; John D. Long, once { Governor of Massachusetts; Eugene A. Smith, geologist; Kenyon Cox, artist; Theodore Roosevelt, 26th President} Edward M. Grout, lawyer and politician. e Baked Lemon Pudding Take one cupful of milk, two eggs, the rind and juice of one lemon, one nd a half cupfuls of bread crumbs and four tablespoonfuls of sugar. Heat the milk and pour it onto the bread crumbs. Allow it to svak for a few minutes, add the srated lemon rind and juice, then stir in the sugar and the yolks of the eggs. Beat the | whites of the eggs to a stiff froth and stir lightly into the pudding. Pour into a buttered pudding dish and make for 20 minutes. matrimony is that there is too much of it Husbands and wives get overdoses of each other’s society, and get so fed up on each other that they lose their relish for each other and rush to other people for a change. If people were only married six months a vear instead of twelve they | would stay lovers till their golden wedding day. Absence never makes the heart grow so much fonder as when you are separated from the partner of your bosom. . . HEN you kiss John or Mary good-bye at the station you think him or her commonplace and uninteresting. But his or her virtues grow with every mile of distance and day of separation, until by the time you are 3,000 miles away and have been gone from home a month you are honestly believing you are married to the nero of your girlish dreams or the fairy maiden of your youtn. The terrible thing about domestic life is its lack of privacy. There are homes in which no one has an individual room; no one a drawer that others do not pry into; no one can get a letter others do not open; no one can think a thought or have an opinion that others do not discuss. Now, the decent soul shrinks from exposing itself to the public gaze. It is as repulsive to bare itself to other eyes as it would be to a modest man and woman to strip their bodies naked. If women would only bear this in mind, and remember that men are far more reticent about discussing their emotions than women, and if they would begin their married lives by giving their husbands privacy of thought and personal freedom; if they would make themselves the .dessert of life instead of the corned beef and cabbage they would save themselves many tears and hold their men to the end. For a woman cannot be all-in-all to her husband, but she can make herself the best thing of all in his life. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1934.) - S Snowdrift—for making cake, biscuit and pastry and for wholesome frying

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