Evening Star Newspaper, January 29, 1925, Page 34

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FEATURES. THE EVENING STAR, VVASHINGTON'. B0 HIGH LIGHTS OF HISTORY— THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1925. WOMAN’'S PAGE (.ARROLL MANSFIELD Colors Used Even in Mannish Garb BY MARY Among the very newest clothes both here and:in France there is more of color to be:seen than has been the ¢ase at any time since before the war. At no time since war days has there been less black, though, of eourse, black street costumes are still che COLOR COMBINATIONS. AT LEFT, CLOUD GRAY GEORGETTE, TRIM- ) WITH BANDS OF JADE GREE} JRGETTE AND NARROW GREE! SILVER EMBROIDERY RIGHT, GOLDEN BROWN CR DE CHINE, COMBINED WITH P! nartest in the women season presents not only a certain preference in colors, but a ference In color combinations. Ande now we have brown and pink, which, the judgment of many, really*do not ether at all well. However, millin sure us that brown and coral »ing to be offered in Spring hats with every assurance of favor- estimation® of many MARSHALL. able reception, and there are frocks showing the same effect. In the sketch you may see a new frock af golden brown crepe de chine, trim- med with the same materfal in pink. Beside this is a frock of cloud gray georgette with bands of jade green georgette, with embroidery in green and silver. Of pink shades. coral seems to be most in favor. But there is hardly a tone of the reddish sort that would not be in the picture. Vermillion, flame, Pompeiian, salmon, peach, apri- cot, lacquer red, Castilllan red and ber- ry red, hydrangea pink, rose, fuchsia, rose-henna—these are some of the rosy tones one sees. The tendency to boyish and mannish effects in women's clothes which is s0 apparent and sometimes sd much decried at present has, fortunately, not affected the matter of color. Per- haps if women really did go into the sort of half mourning that men of the Occident have adopted ever since the French Revolution the men them- selves would take to gay colors in self-defense. As it is, they go their own dull-hued way, depending on women to offer the much-needed touch of color to-daily life. Now the most mannish of tailored frocks and suits are presented in clear, bright, sometimes light colors. And«—not that this has anything to do with mannish clothes—did you know that in Paris smart women are going back to stockings of a real flesh tint—having glven up for eve- or orchid Abe Martin gays: shades? Why does a moyie audience allus save its applaud fer a de- feated Democrat? It's our understandin’ saloons wuz wiped out t’ save our feller man, an’ t'day it's “let him drink it if he hain’t got no more sense. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright.) > IIE// ACROSS by winding. period er measure -for k poet cloth Gr, Disturbance Large body of water Metal vi Focusing crystal Conjunction. Crooked F carnivorous ed or lame Wickedness. Freed from obstructions - O Arswer to Yesterday's Puzzle. BOEZamaEnR LiK nLLE = & o] E A L N o{m ©/0[X »|n|- mz|=[o|»[> o[>0 <D=+ M HE fish cakes that make New England fa- mous. They're the original ready-to- fry fish cakes. Made from fa mous Gorton's Cod Fish—No Bones. Look for the cheerful blue- and-yellow can. L) %HI!7%/H am 7 N ‘a II%III%WHHI ST /B dum (7 ammzm NN JENEN7 36. Short letter. 39. Before. 40. Reflected sound . Payable. Aromatic Egyptian plant Allow. Standing. . To adjust by a line. . Also . Border. . Common aromatic . Lay church official DOWN. herb. Acid fruit . Wrath - Game of chance . Alienate. . Poorl) . Cut a thin plece. . Clayey rock . Outlets. Short song. Period of fasting. . Forefront. Army supply store Stick: . Interval. . Newly wed woman. ntirely. . Woman mentioned in Genesis. . South American mountain range . Dry and unprofitable. . Registers a choice. . Posses adjective. Hard bony appendages. . Region. . Domestic fowl . Small particle . Title of nobility. Demure. ning at least the browner and pinker | that th’| n BPHE coLoniZATION OF MAINE AND NEW HAMP— SHIRE BEGAN WITH THE APPEARANCE OF TINY FISH— ING VILLAGES ALONG THE COAST.~ THESE WERE CONTROLLED BY EMTHER FERDINANDO GORGES OR = | TO MASS ACHUSI XPLORED AND DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Should He Give Up Unfaithful Wife or Keep Her for Children’s Sake?—Father Wants Her to Have a “Steady.” EAR MISS DIX: I have been married two little girls. About a year ago my wife met a man with whom she became infatuated, and our once happy home suffered. I forgave her, and took her back on her promise to give her lover up, but she has not kept her word, and now wants me to her a divorce. e says that if 1 do not do this she will take the children and leave anyw 1 still love her, and have been very good to her, and have always given her all of my earnings. What shall T do? Give her up to the man she loves, or keep on trying to persuade her to stay with me and the children? DADDY. 11 years, and am the father of Answer: 1 should think you would gladly divorce, and speed her on her evil way, and that you would do this not only for your own sake, but for that of your little girls. Certainly, If you have any sense of a father's obligation to protect his children, you will not let her have them, for she is not fit to bring them up. Girls reared by a loose-living mother, who had no principles that held her to the straight and narrow path herself, would inevitably have the same low ideals of morality inculcated in them that she has Sometimes, in order to keep a home together, and that the children may be properly takem care of, it Ix well for a wife to overlook her husband's unfaithfulness, but in such cases the taint of immorality is not brought into the home, nor is yice flaunted under the.children's s, and they have the benefit of the mother's guldance, the mother's teaching and influence. give vour unfaithful wife a But when the woman is leading the double life She sets up unholy altars on her own hearthstone., Sk evil. Ehe polsons the minds of her children, ahd Wrong ‘un the daughters will be wrong ‘uns. 1t You have been good and kind and loving to vour wife, ceased to love you and fallen in love with another man, trying to hold her- Give her her divorce and let children. . it is another matter poisons the alr with if the mother is a and she there is no use her t DORC has in keep your SB s HY DIX. EAR DOROTHY DIX:" 1 am a girl of 19, and my father and I have many arguments on this subject: My father thinks that it is not respeetable for a girl to go out with one man at a time; that she should have a “steady,” and only have him come to see her and only g0 to places of amusement with him. I think that as long as a girl is not engaged to a man she should have the privilege of going about with a number of men. What do vou think? YOUNG GIRL. Answer T think that you are right, and that father is entirely wrong. I think the “keeping steady company” custom is a pernicious one for girls, for in it the girl has everything to lose, and nothing to gain. 1t & young woman -is engaged to bo married. it is all right for her flance to monopolize her time and attention, but the man who has never anked a girl and who probably has no intention of ever asking her to marry him, should have no-such privilege. It Is outrageously unfair to & girl that a‘man should keep all other men away until her beauty fades and her youth goes, and she gets shopworn and unattractive, and then that he sheuld be able to cast her aside like a toy of which he is tired. But that is what h# @110 Ughy. 1617} Proposifion, Then how iis every day to girls who have been foolish down to one man. Surely, just as a business ould be able to see how silly a thing it is can a girl make a wise choice of a hushand it she knows only one n She wouldn't go into a store and buy the first dress she sees, espec d” if she expected to have to woaar it the balance of her life. She \\nuld *-hl;p around-all over town, and get an idea of every sort of design and goods and lor, And that is the way she should pick out her husband. She should give as many men as possible the once-over before she takes one for keeps. It is only after ypu have known many men, and can compare one With the other, that you can be sure of the type you really prefer, DOROTHY DIX. SAR MISS DIX men bachelors? At what age are women considered old maids, and A READER. Answer: A woman used to be considered an old maid at 30. \o\\udd\\ she is @ girl until she is 35. She is a bachelor girl until she is 60, and even | at 60 she doesn't give up hope and become a real old maid under 70, Men are still cn and just getting really eligible in fifties, and they don't e confirmed bachelorhood under 65. Tha E but in reality age has nothing to do with it There are women who ar d maids in the cradle, and debutantes at 90, and no man is safe from matrignony anywhere betweén the timu he.puts on long trousers and a shroud DOROTHY DIX. their Vegetable Mulligatawny. Wash, peel and cut into dice one onion, one carrot, some celery or celery tops. Add a bunch of herbs Melt two ounces.of fat and fry the | vegetables pale brown, stirring often. | Add two ounces of flour and one dessertspoonful of curry powder and fry for five minutes. Remove the pan from the fire and add one quart of any stock or water,. graduaily | mixing the flour smoothly before adding all the stock. HBring to a boil, stirring all the time. Add a diced apple. one teaspoonful of meat extract, and a little salt. Simmer gently for three-fourths of an hour | with the cover on the pan. Stir often. When the vegetables are soft, add more salt if necessary and one teaspoonful of lemon juice and serve. Serve boiled rice with this. If too thick, add more water or stock, or | pour one gill of boiling water onto | one and one-ha)f tablespoonfuls of | desiccated cocoanut, let it etand for 15 minutes, then strain into the soup. Do Not Emphasize Gray Hau Present day styles make no allowance for gray hair. " Short hair emphasizes tven'a thread of siiver.” Keep i young iooking with Brownatone. Easy to a 1 in_action—no waiting for y, faded, streaked or bleached hair finted to any shade of rmn. blonde or varying_shades of rown’ or black. Two sizes—S0c and Tro o e T to {’udmm brows, dark_brown to lack. Sold and recommended by P00 drug and department stores. Send 10c. for bottle. Indicate color wanted: The Kenton' Phormers Co., 1510 Coppin Bidg., Covington, Ky, GUARANTEED HARMLESS BROWNATONE TINTS GRAY MAIR ANY SHAD® Broiled Lamb Chopx Trim and flatten some lamb chops. rub with salt and white pepper and | broil over a clear fire until done Melt together four tablespoonfuls of | lard if there are eight chops and a | small tumblerful of mint jelly. Add| some chopped parsley and a few drops of lemon juice and pour this over the | chops just as they are to be served. | Aunt Jemima's AUNT JEMIMA PANCAKE FLOUR Maine and New Hampflhire PMASSACHUSKETYS OSTN BAY CAPE COD '”"i;:, PLyMoU MIHE BOUNDARIES OF THESE GRANTS WERE ANNOYING EYTS,BECAUSE THE PURITANS IN THEIR. RTER HAD BEEN GIVEN ALL THE LAND TO A LINE THREE [MILES NORTH OF THE SOURCE OF THE MERRIMAC RIVER . WHEN THE GRANT WASMADE THE RIVER HAD NOT BEEN WAS THOUSHT TO RUN DUE WEST INSTEAD OF CURVING SHARPLY 70 THE NORTH. What Today Means to You BY MARY BLAKE Aquarius. The planetary aspects of today, while not very favorable for any terprise of far-reaching dimensions, are not adverse to efforts of a con- servative and minor oharacter. The vibrations also indicate a stimulating atmosphere for all work demanding research and study. In short, it is a good opportunity for the working out of plans, but a poor occasion for putting them into operation. This i¥ a day demanding great will power in order to avoid “contretemps.” Your desire will be to become excessively outspoken, and any indulgence of this mood will inevitably bring about that which you most earnestly wish to avoid. In order to get through the day without a “setback” you must be ective, conservative and deliber- ate, A child born today will at birth possess every symptom of physical perfection. With regular nutrition and proper care, it will, in all proba- bility, escape most of the ills to which infants are subje It will, however, need more attention, once it i passed the stage of babyhood, as this, it proper vigilance ix not exercised. is the period when it will be prone to suffer from a serious illness. Its disposition will he cheerful and con- siderate of others. It ls liable to shine in“any one of the professions related to art, and any Indications it may show amlong these lines should be sedulously cultivated. In order to make its life a sure success it should marry youns. If today s your very vivaclous, and of fun humor, when and ¢ thday at all times, you are full o keen, in fact, that at times serfousness s both cxpected manded it proves to be a "hoo- 00" rather than a “mascot” You are witty and entertaining, and this reates for you a very wide circle of ial friends. -In business, however, many ate serious, and your pungent wit provokes and does net-propitiste. In your affections you aré vers constant and.faithful, and there are few jars or differences fn vour life as |a result of your optimietic outlook | and your attitude, in the face of dia- aster, of alwavs persuading one and all that “it might have been worse." You are very fond of children and make life happler for them and for yourself - by your aesoelation. -with fthem. You aiways find some ground of common understanding with them, and your conversation with voung- sters i not confined to the one word, “Don't.” Well known persons born on this date are Thomas Paine, author; John D. Champlin, author; William Me- Kinley, twenty-fifth President; Sarah C. Woolsey, author; Arthur Woods, ex-New York police commissioner; Duke of Abruzzi, commander-in- chief of Italian navy. (Copyright, 1025.) At Last. From London Punch. While looking In a shop window at Southall two women were injured by a falling street sign. Husbands have for years been warning their wives abnut the danger of looking in shop windows, F WASHING v.LiACNINL:ANn STERILIZINC REMGVE AS IT WASHES NOT totade NOTt You possess a keen sense of | BN SPITE OF THIS DISAGRIFEMENT OVER THE BOUND-| ARY LINE THERE WAS NO SERIOUS TROUBLE, AND PURITANS CAME PREELY FROM MASSACHUSETTS 10 SETTLE IN MAINE AND NEW HAMPSHIRE - THESE PURITAN SETTLERS WERE NOT FISHERMEN, BUT FARMERS AMin TR Soom DEVELOPED AGRICULTURAL UNITIES. WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. was first basis about the started a vommercial ar 1850, but did not achieve any tyal importance until the first American firm opened In Funchal in 1909, Sometimes in the cheaper grades it will be found that the edge of the work has been done by machinery. By looking closely it is very easy to detect the difference In true Madeira embroidery P tern 18 Wsually placed in rmer Madeira Embroidery. Madeira embroldery is always more or less fashionable. We are accus- tomed to secing it on tea napkins tray cloths, dollies, doille sets and emall table cloths, where its delicacy of design and appearance of clean freshness, coupled with its remarka- ble reasonableness of price, never fail to recommend it to the housewifely soul. We are so used Madeira embroidery is made by e * that we afe surprised to learn while this is true, it is dene Apple Bread. in factories, for the most part. I for| wWork nts one quart of one, had pictured in fancy the primi- | bread dough a rounded tablesp tive women stitching away at the|of pygter. and roll to half an inch endless ecrolls and stems. sitting | in “thiskmess. - Lay <moothly: and crouched on the ground before their evenly In & pan amd let it Yllfl-hgih‘ huts or tents—or whatever the do- | While -4t i« becAmiiz Mght. pare, mestic architecture may be in the|quarter and core soma tart, easily. land where Madeira embroldery 18 |cooked apples. Cut tach q done Thus does romance give way|two or, if very lar, thre before the march of industrialism! and when the dough it light The center of the industry is in| 1o bake lay these closely over Funchal, capital of the Madeira Into a cupful rolled crac Islands, off the west e t of Africa,|crumbs rub one teaspoonful of butter, where it is sald that there are about | three tablespoonfuls of sugar and 50,000 women who make thelr IIVIng |scant teaspoonful of nutmeg by embroidering. Until recently, &t |the dough evenly with this least. whatever the conditions may|and moisten thoroughly with water be today, they did this work under|Bake for half an hour. Stewed conditions that would scem very|apples may be used If preferred strange to us here in America, plying their needles incessantly through all | the hours of daylight, and at a very poor rate of pay. Several new factories have rec A>nl|\ been completed, however, and all are kept working at top speed. Altogeth- er there are about 38 facttories ene gaged in this business, of which something like half a under the control of Byro-Americans, Before the war the Germans controlled the trade There are two ways in which the prodact of the.workers is purchased by e United " States, It ix—efther bought eutright feem 2 localsupply concern, Or an_ag¥nt purchases the linen cloth and eontracts for the em- broidering By far the greater proportion of the output finds its way to the United States. where the demand seems to be increasing rather than falling off. However, large quantities are also sent regularly to Great Britain and to France. The making of embroidery by hand DEEP-SEATED Freckles Nead attention maAy Tremain | Winter. Usa the old and tnservrind Posrated {restment that has given sagis{action te mile lions of women for over 16 years, aad rid ywnoll of these Romely spots. Ask for Othine—Double Strength We recommend Othine Complexion Seap for use with Othine. At all Druggists and Department Stores Othine Laboratories, Inc., Buffalo, to hearing that ntul mixture Lemon Meringue Pie. Boil one cupful anhe tablespoonful of stir it in Boll until pour on one cupful butter the size of cocl, add the juice of one lemon and the yolks of two eggs, and pour into a pie plate lined with any kind of pastry preferred Bake in a hot oven. having the greatest heat at the bottom of the aven. When nearly d . cover with &. meringue made fr the whites of two eggs and two teaspoonfuls of granulated sugar, and return the oven to brown. Wet ch and clear, then of sugar and egs. When and grated rind of water nsta Not necessary or Just put clothes in warm water with DUZ. Does not humfabna leaves the hands soft and velvety and does not run fast colors. of the cloth and the edge is scalloped. | raised | | !_‘,{Iowm ATTHE DEATH OF GORGE'S AND MASON, THE PURITANS SPEEDILY OBTAINED CON- TROL OF THE MAINE AND NEW HAMPSHIRE SETTLE- MENTS BY OFFERING PROTECTION IN RETURN FOR THEIR ALLEGIANCE TO MASSACHUSETTS. TOMORROW — IKING PHILIPS WAR . cannot live calmly 2 well-ordered life. I'm ecstatic or else Im despairing— Perheps I should like ™y emotional randge But at times bn;s a little 1t wear: i ] - BAKING comes out, RIGHT wlth BAKING "POWDER «Abundant Suds in hard water” «No washboard rubbing any more! takes out all stains and yellowness 4 F r ee packagé of DUZ SENSATIONAL discovery. Takes out stains.and yellowness and sterilizes clothes as it washes. out of wash day. No rubbing. to boil clothes. No sousing stains in milk with ldnon]umbefoteyou start your wash. Takes the Youwmmlygu.:hfinmzofwuhdaywhen you first try DUZ. Coupons, good for-freepachge ofDUZ at your grocer’s, will be left at your door. But you will want to . try DUZ right away. Don’t wait for the coupon. Buy nmund whmthceouponamvflgetyout (2 THE DUZ COMPANY : Lacorporsted _ New York Chicage

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