Evening Star Newspaper, November 26, 1924, Page 15

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FEATURES. THE EVENING STAR, ‘WASHINGTOIN ‘D. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1924. WOMAN’S PAGE. 15 Hats Towering ngher and Higher —_— DO"O t hy Dix 4;;:':;}‘:%}14’ WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. gloves left too long unworn will be- | them into shape when they are partly come dried out and will have a tend- | ary ency to crack as you put them on.| Be sure you use tepld water on This is because leather needs oil: 50 | your chamoisetts gloves, and never the natural oil of the hand helps to |iron them. You can wash your cot- keep them in condition ton gloves just ould any In the same way, it is well to rul a | Other cotton sh _your bitiof some pure oil on heavy leather | Woolen gloves carefully in tepid wa- On Thanksgiving Day We Should Acknowledge Your Gloves blue paper helps to keep white gloves Clean Your non-washable leather | J21¢T #nd pressing the water out of NS . . How o f Nl e O iy | them, rather than wringing or twist Our Gratitude to Father and Mother, to Wife gm::n?‘on‘ can you wear a pair of | from becoming yellow. If your gloves | gloves in It you frequentiy find that|are at all moist from perspiration, let | spots with art gum or ether. Use | 178 them. BY MARY MARSHALL and Friends FEvery so often it becomes the fashlon for women to Wwear towering headdresses. There was the enor-| mous commode worn in the eighteenth that wade the fashionable move small o 11 : I you would own a pa'r of glove century z z your gloves “just split {n no time” | them dry before you put them away | lukewarm water, perferably soft, and | 1% ¥ou would own a pa'r of &lo Wotnen who wore it appear over a foot and Husband, to Kind Friends. and that you must, therefore, replen- |or before you wear them. kemarm water, pereanly St a1 |t Setat T AN PRl taller than they really were. And in {shbyotir supuly niors often than vou| Many women make|tne mistake of | er &loves:. Chio ashable leath- : 1he fifteenth century there w. the the next ones you buy. feel you should, perhaps your answer | putting their “best” glov .| 18 dependent on another question: | bringing them out only HE time has come once more when the President has set apart a day |what Kind of gare do you. Eive | casions, While, of away and | gloves may be washed in hot water, te oc- [ but they should be dried slowly in )t | natural current « high steeple headdress that tapered upward and backward for mnearly a e upon which the people are called upon to return thanks to the Giver| o 00 desirable to wear e Wash your s in luke-| A regular aerial express freight vard, with a flowing veil hanging of All Good for the manifold blessings that they have enjoyed during| "This is likely to be the case, partic- | gloves for rough “eve " wear, [ warm water, usin oap, and [service has been established between from the end. The story goes that| the last year. ., when your gloves are of |on the other hand, you will find that | pressing the This s well, for most of us are so busy pitying ourselves for our|jeapcr misfortunes that we entirely overlook our blessings, and so we need to be officially reminded of how much we have for which to be grateful. 1d putting ' London and Paris priests and friars preached against for leather gloves depend this exaggerated headdress, a cele- - both for their attractive appearance Lrated monk named Paradin taking x and their durability on the care that - : they get. Care in putting them on So it is good to go to church on Thanksgiving day and on our knees(ang' aking them off—by drawing humbly return thanks to Heaven for the mercles it has vouchsafted us.|them backward by the wrist—is the But why should we not extend the thanksgiving spirit & little farther and| frot" requirement for long-lived make it a day upon which we publicly acknowledge our gratitude to our| gigiee " Pull them gently into shape families and friends for all that they have done to make our lives haPpPy|atter you take them off and lay the and pleasant? right side out and carefully folded, Just as at Christmas we go about wishing every one a merry Christmas|nto a hox or drawer. If they are and hoping for a happy New Year for every one we meet, Why ON|jjgnt colored, it is well to proteet hanksgiving day should we not say “Thank you” for all the favors|{nem from dust by wrapping them in cived during the last 12 months upon himself the good eloquently did he preach » steeple that after listen- for some time the fash- n threw off their high | 1 mude a bonfire of them within slght of the puipit Fortunately the fashion for tall| not proceeded to such & the present time. But the the new hats are growing ahor - 3 of Paris is generally given or blume —for these ts. though other French have shown a tendency | t with & point of som the middle of the crown. Re- has made small hats puffed slightly at the top with three or four | Dlaced risht at the apex. Soft | work | | - ! There's father. Works like a dray horse from sun to sun. Never any holid: or little trips for him. erything he makes goes to the family. O extra 1 it work to send the boys and girls through college. FHe is always a little s rls have new party frocks and the boys the latest thing in kollege-kut clothes. Take constipation seriously; remove it promptly with a stiff dose of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin Nobody ever notices father any more than they would a battered old cash register that was only good for a touch when you needed it. Father has grown despendent and a little bitter. And as he looks at the children | | ) : ; e Llood 3 : hing in pes with decided peaks at the to whom he has mlven his very life blood and who glve him nothing L A : e ClioItE U e 1nioic return he wonders if it was worth while. ; : | i I I GlIeN St brArDeras sia s ne But he wouldn't wo He would feel gloriously justified if on N old faShloned notion Thanksgiving day his boys would come to him and tell him how grateful they are to him for the education he gave them that he never had himself nd tne doors of opporiunity he opened for them that were never opened for him. And he would purr like a eat if his girls would tell him how much < heiht with a fur pom- piaced right at the peak. Anather «lked fur.hat she with two persists that constipation is unavoidable, yet it is easily prevented | and may be easily relieved. The fact is that cer- tain foods do not agree with certain people, so ¥ ears are very popular 11 Tabbits' ears, but the new | they appreciate him, and love Lim, and thank him for keeping them soft avoid those which do not agree with you. It hats with the excess feolt| and warm and safe from a world that is hard on girls who have to fight crown of the hat drawn up their way alone ‘When you feel clogged up take a spoon- ful of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, and relief will come by morning. Many who are habitually con stipated take a dose regularly once a week as a ND therc's mother. Mother whose whole life is one eternal sacrifice to her children. Mother who watches by sick beds: who kisses hurt places | @nd makes them well; who sits up half the night making pretty clothes for twisted into two enormou: t of peakedness eans of a little bow middle of the top | the girls; whe does without a new hat so John may have a new-fangled | PR ecaution by of | sweater, such as the other boys are wearing: who stay home and cooks ) Iiiclars riiesiie w. Some-| g speciul meals when the voungsters go a-pleasuring. Mother, to whom they | There are, of course, many other rem edies that you can take besides Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Cathartics and physics in the form come with their troubles secure forgivenes es on a wore eld at the | their worries, their sins, their wrongdoing, to! comes and comfort The i i of pills and powders, however, are harsh and griping; | Nobody expects children to be grateinl to their mothers. Mother doesn’t | Syrup Pepsin is a liquid, a compound of Egyptian i | expect it herself. But just think how it would make her heart sing with{ senna and pepsin with pleasant aromatics, and it hat showing the | Above. red felt hat trimmed with red | joy if. on Thanksgiving Gay, her cnildren would tell her how humbly grateful acts gently and mildly but emphatically. The form- made of red felt| and brown pompons has peaked | they are to her for all she done for them, and that they feel like going | ula is on the package. S ST ot rhd) o crown. The other hat shows peaked | down on their knees and kissing the hem of her garments as they 5 = : other of brow crown on large shape. It is of biack | would a saint’s s - ik 5 Candy cathartics, which usually contain 1924.0 velvet with a satin bow. | And hasband, 't very gay for Lim. Just a treadmill back and Th' first thing th’ Prince o | phenolphtalein, a coal-tar drug, may cause skin erup i‘\‘\?-"h o 'vlillv“ s over f“‘l‘,""“f Ealn -\"; romunce, No ‘l':*”}l Wales said when he got home | tions, and salt waters are simply a purge that dries stipation, biliousness, dyspepsi £ S 1e gives agia matter of course and frets becanae it tsnitf - / erica o & up the saliva. You are therefore best off with Dr. burn, fevers and colds. "It cc ns no narcotics or Al T Al Al T ™ jmore. So far as he can see he is just the children’s father and a mey- | WUZ t t America wuz won \~, 's S : S , . ates 2 S safe a fa P PthOl\AL I‘ILJ\L']. H ER‘/ ]LE e i anaeat b Alimai 15 @bl wio lee\ls Hilmab 101706 LA SEEHTAE hin ol ho s dhe poor Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. It has been the standard lax opiates and is as safe for an infant as for you. slavery by marrying, he thinks ative of thousands of famiiies for more than 30 years, and over 10 million bottles are bought annually = jole overworked world’ll have t’ se on Thanksgiving day his wife poured out upon him the ! worry thro” a British run. | atitude. Suppose she told him that in her eyes no other h Th' only time a third party ' s the man who stnply stands at his post and does S Bt e cuts any ice is in a bunko game. People-who know will tell you that Syrup 2 2 Pepsin is a truly wonderful internal treatment, Every druggist sells it, and at so low @ which dispels all forms of intestinal poisons reslt price that an average dose costs ing from constipation and in less than a cent. Many att Free Sample Bottle Coupon digestion, disorders which ute the unbroken good health c 75 per cent of all the of their entire family tothe gen- There are people who very rightly prefer toirya more serious diseases. A tea- eral use of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup thing before they buy it. Let them clip this cou- BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. But suy flood of her g | was so shining « fig as Ul S ‘as husband and Linforms {1 him how she appreciated the o th fices that he gives to keep her » fluid t you know that it v 4 change Occupational Poisoning por through in i through the skin iv. But since ather and citizen ye fter y Suppose she -ending work, the never-ending S 3 AR i Shildven sate in the Lome nest:| <Artic Small went t* th’ in the world for husband? Tt would glid | ternal revenue office t'day t' s 100 harmful substances to which workers in vari > ] spoonful when you are_fever- - accupations oibe [ his chiains and make his labor seem worth while ! how much his wife would git if Pepsin, as Mrs. Allie Graham, PorPio ek pame and sddeess to it and send it 15 or feel 2 cold coming on Sk o ! Bre-lof reasonable doubt in this {vaiss GrowhmIdalE-AEsd and tat, ‘Dlsgtuntied: Déwn Kearted and] her father died: Handley, Tex., and Mr. A, F. 3(oncicello, llinols, and a free sample boule of May ward off an illness and use LY the NeW | Carbon Lisulphid is used in A Tieed king meals that are gobbled up without a word of | \lj Myrtie Purviar is Schmit, 1517 Detroit Ave., To- Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin will be sent them Save you time, money and in- 3 artment of Labor. | traction of fats and oils, viles et “W..',‘,?,‘,‘ ,'.'.‘n'.}'.”}.':-ir:i;:r.‘r o sl liss .‘1 € et £l ]l h ledo, Ohio. They use it for con- postpaid by mail. Do notinclose postage. Itisfree. Convenience. H and o Rl e fdmx L '{f ruliber. pur fomort ’I‘ wway. Discouraged witi dressing herself up for a man who never notices | qUite a catch. She's a dandy Bod o oS oy | DvEmn and e g Eiextny | how she looks. Disillusioned with matrimony. bridge player. excels on th But suppose on Thanksgiving dav her husband sald “Thank vou"| . e | Suppose he told hier how grateful he was to her for the work that made | P1AIICr 1l dEagLdy k [ him a comfortable home, and for the thrift that made it possible for him{ They're cutting a street thro to prosper in business' Suppose he iold her how he appreciated her devotion. [ o 1- RaT Rt IR e e S e e S T Moots LaniuEts make : ! “h & wife! Don’t you know it would work a miracle | corner fer a fillin’ station, o s the by tl ation of vapor. fumes, gas of | ¢ o DR. CALDWELL'S SYRUFP PEPSIN Hydr acid. u ext of gold, in photogra- phy. dyeing cloth, printin plating and other industr absor (pruss electro- may be anual, life for giving I . . ti nd as a| again? v koo - , P that would n her voung and by ul again? It would make every meal , 5 'Hl mlll, Lax h e | mem meal| \Ve read th’ other day that e Ia alive red joy and it would set the star in her heaven one ho = ‘| Bryan gave a talk, but we don’t nurd; mysteries. But I should And our friends. Those who give us companionship; who give us sympathy | hefieve 1t i eiuiiiissastiesiseiiininenaes ] g feel i 1 eucoun cred < |in our joys and our sorrows; who reach out helping hands in times of (Coprright, John F. Dille o) | 4 ) hel e gt eIl b i trouble, who do a_thousand acts of kindness to us. Surely on Thanksgiving s King. namely o vou b ! we iiht well express to ‘them our gratitude and appre Auid. medica - tion of their | T Ted thr the Kidness to us and our nnderstanding of how fine and wonderful they are. | s e i So let's make Thanksgiving day a real Thanksgiving day by going , 8 Ye N of explosives and phar- | 3TQENE SETRR e i i : 5 manufactusees handle thank you, Reader DOROTHY DIX. | il enter the body in | may be absorbed v or as a T | this rex \way iganilin. Anilin | fuid through the skin manual | < ungent fluid used in A B | '““r cture, ¢ “‘"‘1' the victi throbbing head- - o | lithography, colored | yohe, but there is no «vidence tha BEAUTY LHATS 7_ e el beoeape i e o | BY EDNA KENT FORBES. $oouter the budy | sorbed through the <kin. Tnhalation | re tion of the vapor or by S etlieioleining | - - - absorption through the Noiw her © poison i The Hands. jan antiqus mahogany jewel box Saturated elot et fon e e | that Delonged to my grandmother. phor or even « through 1o, aceording to | Manicure necessities, in addition 1o 5 quaint, decorative piece that sits| absorbed frou scissors, file, emery hoards, orange- ' the manual w1 hydrazin, a | on a table within reach of the dres (sometimes th browuish, punzer «uid, used | wood sticks and am to tint the |1np taple and conceals within it all| but not throu by antipyri « a lakers, | nails while keeping them soft, in- | ¢,on ygiy things as files and cotton | war of the budy dyers. It produ dermatitis (sk clude a bleach for staina that 604D | 5n4 pottles of bleach, { camphor, which a: | 5 eults swallow. |and _water won't remove. Your | %0 G e80T Dledh 1 vapor. There to i malaise, diarrhe biood | druggist will mak weak S0-|polishing paste or powder. At first ine that anil from clo Rerddion N (. faligrn= [0t of oxalic you can ! e ploady “by [do your nails twice d: me it has | mak yourself bleach DY | takes time. byt it doesn' i With the |Straining the juice of a lemon through | of entrance so handy? | & cloth and Kepping it in a little bot- pyright. 16240 3 [tle. 1f vou want a whitener to go & [vmd.-r the n: (sometines hard, dirty work s s them so you must —1 know it ing saturate cu anilin oil oc- il take much. In the morning. polish vigorously | with the powder, wash off with soap, ! | water and a scrubbing brush. Rub a| {little tinted cream around the edges, | push back the cuticle, wipe off -the | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | [, pam arvacians: mis o ton | tirpias croarn Snd poilsn witn s | jdrops of ammonla with some 1aun-|cean buffer. At night remove stains jdry starch, and add a few drobs of | ith the jiquid and the paste bleach, erin, using enough starch topolish with tie powder, wash it ali | a thick paste. Keep in a tin¥ | o, rub_in tinted cream, and polish again. First shape the edges with an! he way, buy Yourself Some |emery board. imitation ceiluloid pots for g i ms, polishing powder and such.| Eva—Lines under the eyes at 22! hey needn’'t be pretty, and you can |years merely show that you are a bit | eep them and all your manicure lrun down, possibly underweight. ings out of sight the dressing | Build yourself up again and massage able drawer or in a big box. I use|with a nourishing cream. Carbon b bon disulfid) iled car- absorbed as va- BY WILLIAM BRADY. M. D. Noted Physiclan and Author The Labor of Sitting. the desigr N nothing ing and building of chaire A t all compared with Much labor has been expended on the | the' energy that is spent in just sit. | struction of chairs. Much thouzht |y ehairs Sp b o | { | i 3 |t d enericy have been applied to the | the incalculable amount of power |t i | Signing of seats. The chair builder | 1y, Zning hat is expended opelling rock- requires thres th for success in ! g ing chairs. A r = chair isn't a , recommenda- | Jhair, anywas: : i chair, anvway: i a means tions from the po control com- e oy nd every itten of the American So v | Kind of o s the Control of feW [ swivel chair to the most luxurious nd ends - folk ap i ant ¢ down 1. And some insist on chairs that oune can neither sit noy , Just a little of both. 4 The chair and seat ubt, ar Peasy chair. demands some degrae of | muscular action if you sit in it. The | nost comfortable you may se leet uses up so: cle energy. | lie in, but| phe r; of metabolism s alwavs | considerably higher when the indi- | | e chairs to sit airs they can s ilders, no | hard put to it to piease vidual sits in a chair than it is when | | the individual lies in bed and that us all as re the «lm[ _\'H-Hl"r'»* Here | js why physicians will not allow cer- n few years Sgecmn ' s d 1o | tain patients, who feel able, to sit in Tors, cas about for something 10} 4 chalr. You cam't fully relax, you | correct, hit upon shoes. We con- | =] sec, unless vou assume the horizontal | posture. Complete relaxation is com- | plete rest. and thiseis essential, with most people, for sleep, aala | The chair builders n|:<"lllr | demands of the publie, turn out a lot ! {of weird contraptions these days which are a_cross between seats and beds. The things are odd and some- times beautiful at first sight; and if you have a brief try at one you may imagine it is wonderfully comfortable and order it sent up to the house then and there (if vou have the amount of the first installment with 3 | you). But think twice, I warn you, MOTHERS | for after you get the thing home and | ready for occupancy you'll find it is AND THEIR © DRENY. | of little use, for you seldom feel tired | ducted “surve thing, until v »ite conclusi kind of shoes people ought to wear, and we | persuaded the shoemaker the shoes according to our sions. which were that th should have either a straight inside sole line or an inward flare or an | outward flare. So that settied the | shoe question. Now let us straighten | out the chair evil. v The labor that has been put into | | | of | ne defi- all that bedeviled by the ducing, which are being worn so suc- cessfully, stimulate excessive body- moisture. That is natural. And it is the only healthy way to reduce. enough to slump down in it until you - 5 are o sleepy you have to go to bed. i Controlling Noise. | Tt just takes up room and becomes ily. w0 eyesore like the what-not. But knitted underwear that is as daintily finished Tie wise plan. perhaps, is,to keep ¥ from irs as much as possi- U as any of the lighter fabrics, absorbs quickly and G . Excessive perspiration is not absorbed e: hey are at best poor compro- comfortably —and will not bind or wrinkle, be- inise with the rest posture, which is - 3, H {Horlsontal. It sowes & selntass cause of its elastic-fit. It is the natural garment to | person_and feel you must do a lot | i : en i ; follow- " of reading at night, get into bed and Trea e mreduc g Cocach s han most So 0&“0“5 ills that may and, usually, ¢ infections- ) | pead where your miscles, bones and Meérode knit underwear is cut and tailored by More t more se nuisance with throat " our are relaxed and at rest. band. Mérode garments fit you just like your very ! tendance: y, sore- roat Is 2 start % -ou and 3 Of course you must arrange the light ECT record of d he cold, blustery» Sore th ¢ troubles that st will put you PERF. v 5 the f othe tic jt. Ic has | so that you will not overtax y I z say during nal of antiseptic ithout dves. But for ordiaary een Fotk "t . . little folks can say he brings home- S'gL's{enne, the safcd So do not be W he circular that reading in bed is unobjectionable— ‘WearMérode while reducing. You are sureof days of winter. hat report card he 13 on the safe st | described on ¢ Pharmacal and in the horizontal posture you the fit—and you can pick out the style and weight throat {' he's proud of tha 1l; family on her uses al e.— Lambert have Old Man Gravity temporarily fe @ Natura! ly, he s, hich after ally ens of othe each bott! checkmated upester: : AL 3 his mother 15, 100 1o 3 secret—Wal doz aroun 4 n Skinny Winnie, | Please tell me if olive oil and raw AT eggs and milk are good to take. 1 |am an awful Skinny Winnie and would like to gain some if possible— s | ' nswer—If you like olive oil and raw eggs and milk, they're good food. e | But ag a rule cod liver oil is better i . knlt underwcar When my three children become too | than olive oil to gain weight on. And is knittad and basd-tailorsd at Hirvard Mills, in the Toon of excited and noisy, instead of “sh-ing” | cooked eggs are better than raw Wakefield, Mass, by Tt s pastoin of thé s ‘hisper a| e88S. Milk is indifferent—you must y fass., . 5 e e as than ten minutes | drink at least two quarts of pure fresh Jiomof Winship, BoitcI Co.,andiseeldonlyetrepreseatative stors. L] Both mother and St Tir ol lec the childre eptics a5 One Mother Sa Listerine is made only by the Lambert Pharmacal Company. " To_ avoid possible fraudulent substitution, insist upon obtain- ing this antideptic in the original brown package—14 ounce, 7 ounce, 3 ounce. they are calmed down to proper voice|raw milk daily besides your ordinary n it diet to gain. Send a stamped self- limitations without my having t0 D38 | jgrepsed envelope for further sugges- at them. tions for putting on weight. (Copyright, 1924.)

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