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WOMAN’S PAGE The Necktie in Women’s. Wardrobes BY MARY MARSHALL. The stralght four-in-hand tie is now an almost necessary accessory of avery woman's wardrobeé—cspecially If_she indulges in any sort of out- door sports, It Is a fact that many women do not realize that the well- tled four-in-land tie, worn with a apotlees, tailored blouss, s distinctly becoming to women becoming who are m warm Sout Ing Among the young women eting Spring half way at ern resorts and are wear- what the rest of American women will doubtiess be Wearing a few months hence there seems to be 4 fondness for the straight plain four- in-hand for golf. tennis and other outdoor aports you will be sure to find this type of neck accessory The sketch shows a sport type of frock, of the sort that is as much liked for general morning wi a8 for actual sport. It is of sand-colored kasha, and with it is worn a tie. There are three inverted pleats at the front, while the back is perfectly plain. The skirt section is joined to the & straight walst po tion by means of a narrow belt of the material Here and’ there you may see & woman who finds the pnventional four-in-hand hard to manipulate them there are bow ties like those worn by men: and others that are tied with two small loops and two long ends most Besides a Coprright ) Menu for a Day. BRIZAKFA Baked Apples with Cream Dry Cereal Top Milk Creamed Dried Beef Toast Griddle Cakes Coffee Maple Sirup LUNCHEON Chesse Soume Stewed Tomatoes Parker. House Roils Cookies Tea #d Corned Shoulder of Heef oiled Cabbage and Turnips Boiled Potatoes Buttered Beets Squash Pie Coffee GRIDDLE CAKES One pint of sour milk teaspoon of salt, one saltspoor of soda, one pint of flour. Mix the soda and salt with the flour and add the milk and beaten volks of two eggs, lastly the beaten whites. CHEESE SOUFFLE togethar in & saucepan tablespoons of butter the same of flour, and they are blended pour upon them a half pint of milk. Stir to a &mooth white sapce and mix into this two tablespoons of grated chaese and a_pinch each of paprika salt and bak- ing soda. Have ready four eggs. whites and volks bheaten separately. Remove the cheese mixture from the firs and grad- ually beat in the yolks of the egzs: finally fold in lightly the whites, beaten &tiff. Turn the mixtura into a greased pudding fun| | dish and bake in a steady oven : to a golden brown and serve SQUASH PIE half Cook when BAND-COLORED KASHA FROCK WITH PURPLE TIE. THERE | I8 A BELT OF THE MATERIAL ACRC THE FRONT. BUT THE| BACK IS PLAIN. can have just as selecting woma as a m in her neckties One disadvantage (o the ne that seemed to hold with many wom- 41 was that it seemed 10 be associated only with the high turnover collar, and, after having gone so long with nack unshackled, many women rebel against thie high coll Now, how- ever, as many women wear low turn« over collars neokties s collars of the And to the majority of womet v ate more ittle Benny's | » Note BooK || cups ot one cup of boiling haif a cup of sugar or one teaspoon of cinna- mon. & pinch of salt and ginger, one egg. slightly beaten. Stir all together weil, bake in one crust Une and a £quash millk, up, other sort Lo the davs small ta sk T‘wt very. best you can — Joy will 1] unaskea L come Y Ant lvzabel gave me a pair of wite nickers things 1 tioned if wunted for Crissmas, would had ssked me wat 1 and last Sunday morning ma sed, Benny, sippose vou put on your wite nickers wen vou go Out today heer it is way after Crissmas ahd you havent worn them once Well aw gosh, ma. G v agokes, 1 sed I dont see wi attitude about perfeckly lovely Well thers v « would 1 rd 1ol being one of the never of men- she | holey vou should take that them, ma sed. There wite nickers, she sed fest the trubble, ma roozalem, ma, how wawking out in the nickers on? 1 sed like eny ther boy cicers. ma sed, and T aed. | tho trubble, you awt to| th wite nickérs, there of he Kkind, 1 steet, ma HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON, The Canopy. some reason We associate can- th weddings. There {& romance ning-1ke arrangement, as in t which is spread over the he bride is to walk church one to utilize a | wor opies in the a | the red ca distance tering the course thé trubble, ma. d6 in en- I wunt to look sweet. £00d | jimminy crickits, G wizz, 1 need not canop: have a With T think | nlckers looks like little gentieman, ma sed jast the trubble,l sed ssh up with that craszy sfon, ma wed. Your Ant Tzzabel was hawtful enuff to give them to you vau AWL to be thawtful enuff to wear them, but of cofse it you b feal so strongly about it, you Naft to, she sed Wich jest then 1 looked out of the window and Who was wawking past Lut Mary Watkina with Puds Sin and wat did he Have on but wite nick- re and she was looking at him as f «he thawt he was grate, mé saying, Maybe 11l wear them after all, ma ves, 1 bleave T will, 1 think | bleave | 11l _e¢hange my mind Wall for land sakes vou sistent changeable Im ixhausted tr up with you, new hurry them on quick before vou change your mind agen and start wawking arround with them Lalf on and half off, she wed dont be S0 prejudiced & parrs Thats 0. h <pres- dont & 1he most boy 1 ever thg to keep | up and put MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN A Useful Hint, OLDSMOBILE - SIX | DIOK MURPAY, S MURBRY, Pad s SRy BISTRISUTORS 1835 14th St. Potomac 1000 One Mother Saye Adhesive tape m ov e trom the skin by soaking it in olive | sll. This is superior to alcohol or gasoline—especially for babies, since oem mot frritate the tender skin. ! (@orsright, 1925 jother every | passed over her and she was a million years old. {do. 1t ia not that we dp not wish to gathér them about u. , D. €, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY Takes Second Generation to Task Making a Goat of Mother |DorothyDix| Not Fair for Married Sons and Daughters to| Duritp Burdens on One Who Has Carried * Them for a Generation. and wherever women gather | MOTHER recantly sald to me: “Will you please write w...e\\nln: .bo'\’l‘v: i ; a N v e 10 for mother to cook | married children inviting themselves back home e - co0 @inner for every Sunday and every hollday? I have four as finé children a8 any woman has ever been blessed with, perfectly satisfaotory in-law - haif a dosen grandehildren that are infant phenomenons in my ‘eyes. I am devoted to each and every ona of them, and glad that they always wan to come back (o home and mother, but by (he time I huve prepared a com- pany dinner for my beloved family and cleaned up after It 1 am worn to a frazzle Sunday isn’t & day of rest for mé. 1t ix a day of nérvous prostration, | for It inkes Just as much fime and work snd worry to cook for vour| children as it does to cook for any one else. Perhaps it takes a little more, because John expects to have the souffle potatoes that he thinks that nohody can make like mother can, and Mary looks forward to getting her favorite| dessert, and Tom will be disappointed if he doesn’t have the fried chicken he has been crazy about ever since he was a boy, and Agnes will feel de- frauded if mother hasn't prepared her pet salad . { “Now, as | said beforé, 1 am devoted to my family, and | like to see them gathered about my table, und I know they enjoy meeting with h Sunday. but I think there should be a little reciprocity in these | matters and that mother shouldn't be left with the bag to hold all the time. | ‘ them that it is Just as much trouble and| big dinner as it Is for them? Why do they | would like to be invited out for Sunday | children, instead of their always coming to hér? Why don't they realize that mother would even like a quiet Sunday occasionally in which to loaf and Invite har soul. with even a grand- child to disturb hey | Why don't tliey understand that It is good manners to wait until vou are asked hefore you go to any one's house, even mother's, and that in these Aays of telephones she would have no difficulty in extending an invitation when it was eonvenlent for her to have a family party (¥ COURSE. my children don't mean to impose upon me. No more do the majority of other mothers’ children. But for wll of that, most of us find that our married children, and especially our married daughters, force a species of Kluvery upon us. They dump thelr burdens down o nour shoulders. They tutn our homes Into free restaurants and orphan asylums. They make us sick nurses and baby nurses, and instead of ouy cares and responsibilities being lightened by our children getting married, they are multiplied by just the number of new in-laivs and babies we acquire. i Why doesn’t it occur to for mother to get up « have a hunclisthat motner now and then to meet her labor never dinner When there is any sicknesa in run hot-fool for mother, bacause mother is about as good as a professional furse, ard she dossn't Lave to be pald. And, as in a big family ection there is'nearly always somebody ill, mother is pretty copstantly on the job, But her children never dream that they are putting any hardship upon her, or demanding any sacrifice from her, because thev are wccustomed to having mother nurse them when they are sick When John decides that e will take his wife and run over to Europe jaunt. they don't bother at all about what they will do with the chil- They simply tell mother that they are going to give her a treat by | her have their little datlings all to herself tor thres wonderful And John's wife laaves a volume of instructions about how tha baby is to be fed. and lustructs mother in all the latest new-fanzled theories about child rearing, and blithely deparis for her vacation, \chile spends & strenuous season wrestling with a 1ot of spoiled youngsters WMVARY and Agnes ave no ¥ oy mother's whenever they want to g0 to the matinee, or on a shopping orgy. or have w bridge date. Mother plays nursemaid. and has her neat housa clutterad up, and plays horse and rends storias until her tongue hangs out, and wears herself to a frazule trying to entertain children that she can't spank and make behave, as she used to her own childeen. And when Mars | and Agnes finally retrieve their kiddies, she fecls as if a stemroiler hag any of her children's families, they for a dren letting months. mother hesitancy in parking out their infanis at | Now, it [sn’'t that we niothers don't want to help our children We do Wa But we don't want lo be made a perpatual sacrifice to them youth. We have walked the colic with \ - We have spent weary nights watohing by | sick beds. We have sewed and mended and cooked for them while they were growing hoys and girls. We have gone shabby and done without the things we have wanted, to gand them to college and give them good clothes when they were young, ®id now that they are grown and have set up bomes of their own we PRink it is our time st S ime to have a little and We have given them all of ou thein whan they ware babies. thetr We think that brin€ing up one family for any woman. We think that our childrer children as we did of ours, and without expe think that they should occasionally cook dinners for us (ns i ug « k dinners for them. We even think that they should kl::: [:’Qip‘;lonr! ries and mnxieties to themselves a Ifttle, Instead of running to mother, wnd saddling her With troubles she canhot &hield them from. - “Tn a word, we think that mother should fiot Iw goat. What do vou think SRS made “The game,” 1 replied. What abdut i feonytig of childven is enough of a job should take care of their own oting us to do it for them. We tami DOROTHY DIX Such a patricidh possession in family, any elaborate social function is sufficient reason for calling it into requikition. To g0 Quite back to the actual in- spiration for the canopy, one would be compelled to say that (t originated | in the tent. But we have specifie kfiowledge of the earliest ancestor of the canopy as we know it today. That was the medieval “tit”" a name to be kure, derived from the Anglo-Saxon "geteld,” meaning tent but a cloth covering like the modern | canopy or awning. The tilt was con- lnrm--»fl first for use at the knights the tournament, .that important institu- tion of the days of chivalry which it has survived, retaining, however, its aristocratic and romantio flavor (Copyright ) Mock Sponge Cake. Beat two eggs thoroughly Add ofie cupful of sugar and one cupful {of flour and two teaspoontuls of { baking powder sifted together. lone teaspoonful of Navoring one-half a cupful of mlik to ;ho\llnx point and add that last | Folks Add for nitle Heat| 45 nothin the | caught that acolds the narrowness towns means they can't naughty without bain' (Copyright.) lany |straightrorward, pe; What Today Means to You BY MARY BLAKE Aquarius. rly part of the da: pects are very favor- indicate -sudcess in almost line of conservative. endeavor. Provided there be constructive ability and forceful energy. The signs par- ticularly enconrage deals in real es- tate, mining and meohanical fields. In the afternoon the vibrations de- note a lack of stimulation and braed A1 air of discouragement and depres- sion. Under such oircumstances it is politic to refrain from any excessive fforte and to take things culmly and With great deliberation. Your tem- pérament is liable to he affected and You should be very ofrcumspect in all things and maintuin poise by exer- During she the planatary able and | cising seif-restraint A child born today will réquire, during the infant period, more than erdinary care und attention. Its natal weakness nead not. howaver, eaute worry or anxfety. All {t wili need in orde: to attain physical norma will be careful nutrition Bnd wholesoma environment Once it has ceased to ba a baby its health will caugs no trouble, us ull its ail- ments will be of & very sight ohatr- acter. Its disposition wiil be very af- fectionate and trusting, fond of out- door sports and pastimes, while, at the same time, {1 will not neg Etudies. Brilliant things must not be expected from this child, but it will be at all times very happy and bring happiness and enjoyment fto thome with whom it azsociutes If today i# your birthday character is rather complex made up of good and bad equal proportions. Your conscience s no wmall, still voice, but a loud speaker, and every day you are WAgINg Internal confiicts with the WArring elements in your “make-up.” You are more than anxlous to be right and do the right thing, but the perversity of your tendencles often Impels you to do those things which ¥you ought not to do, and to leave un- done those things which vou ought to do. You your it 18 ate at times honeést and vering and con- sistent, On the other Mand, at other times you are more shrewd than honest mora circumlocutory than stralgh forward You are also occasionally Eubject to fits of laziness and become erratic Your affections are very deeply rooted, but you sometimes al- low your thoughts and act# t6 wal der from the “straight and narrow, much to your own discomfiture and remorse, If you could only allow your good Impulses to rule your life not only would you experience great- er happiness, but your life would ba more succeseful and your f{riends more numerou Well known sona born 6n this date are: Coleman Sellers, engineer and Inventor: , Edward W. Morle; chomift; Sir Henry M. Stanlay, ex plorer; Alexander Doyle, scuiptor, and Duniel Lorillard, financier (Copyright, 1923} Miss Louise Ackarman has the dis- tinction of belng the only woman in Louieville, Ky., who i» manager of a clgar and newestand. She has bullt up a lucrative business just from the sale of cigars and newspapers and periedicale. rs wegua with Occident Flour. in about | affectionate and considarate. | 28, 1925 The Daily Cmss-Word Puzzle CUBEEE NS AN 7 =fll \ HE NE NN\\H | 1 raen axis Cut with 4. Feminine pronous Exhilaration Bother. Pleased expression Member of a . Writing Instrumenis Worn. Btrong wind Well bred man Expire Deprive Flavored drink Turkish high . Reveal. Stagger Posta for Pertect | Purposé | Prefix meaning three | Emitting ravs of light Piquant Having fine corded | English nobleman " A number Tantaiize. . Make loving sounds Dispatched Crafty. Obiique on an o To ren Discern ‘The Whole Title of respect . Man's name. Female horses Intoxicated Ordinary academic Sacred image or p Distribute cards Small nail To give forth vivid Wonde Spawn of fiehe fraiernal order officia tying cables surface Dowa. Wholly absorbed or Lyric poem . Yearn. Struck lustily An incline. Purple-berried shrub Meager. . Wing of a house Extends or adds to Accustomed to sitt Coarse smock frock Pinch, 0. Washing instrument engrossed EATURES My Neighbor Says: Never ofl. Tt flames throw water on blazing will only spread Earth, flour or sand will extinguish the fire, but if these ars mot at hand, a thick rug or curtain should be thrown on the burning oil Use funcy-shaped cookie cu ters 1o cut bread for sandwiche In buying Kkitchenware, re member that enamel is easy to clean, but the saucepans should heve lids to match, not tin. Tin lids rust and need constant po! ishing When frying onfons. alwa Put @ saucepan lid over the tap of the frying pan to keep in the steam and flavor. It will also make the onions cook more quickly Butter molde and the little wooden paddles uted for ing butter scrubbed thoroughiy and ke frigerator wien no To remove paint from aprons soak the paint stains in a little paraflin and rubd thoroughly till the paint is removed, then wash in the ordinary wi insure well baked cake two cdke tins of t Put t should be rinsed with u brus e cake inte mest 1g in ga one and the rime s a sav 100% Value in every pacKet of "SALADA" TEA Pure, delicious & rich-drawing, Black, Green and Mixed Blends. L "W onderful Goodness Never Varies No matter how good your bakings are now, rantee that you canmake them better Better flavor, better texture, more wholesome, more satisfying. If Occident does not fulfill this guarantee we The original quick-cooking whole oat flakes are now quicker than ever. Yet they're still the same de- licious old-fashioned oats — the same Armour’s Oats. They’re WHOLE. They don’t mush up. The good flavor is tage that they cook perfectly in F.j-V-E minutes. y S Thinkof it—here's astempting a breskfast dish as you can im-. agine, with twicethenoutishment of eggs, four times that g pota- toes—andsoeasy tocook, it’sdone CROSS"WORD _Alss - Puzzle ..»- " ARMOUR'S QUICK OATS Made from the same fine lump oats used in Armour’ ole , butcut-up before roll- e brot Packane ot will cheerfully return your money. Let us send you a sack on trial. .You are the judge. FI ing. Delightful forflavor and ceok even mare quickly—3 minutes. Acm ST T Eiasde Fill in the 4lip contalned in eévery sack of OCCIDENT Floar and obtaln your copy of the Children's Party Book. AT ALL GROCERS GREEN-MISH COMPANY Wholesale Distributors Hibbs Bldg., Washington, D. C.