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WOMAN'S PAGE Mannish Attire and the Pendulum BY MARY MARSHALL. This is not the first time that wom- frills and rufes and curls and ultra- #n have amused themselves in wear- | feminine devices. tng mannish attire or that many of [ Take the case of short hair. So the smartest fashions have heen bor-|long as our bobs and shingles re- owed from the costumery of men.|main In a measure feminine they ha history of <% shows muny |might continue. But when they ap- Wch spasms. 1 also shows that the|proach too closely the fashion of men's hair cuts, then the penduluym swings back. The redeeming fea- | ture of the shingle has been the fact that although the hair was cropped rather close at the back a certain length remained over the ears. Now we are told that the very smartest | cut dispenses with these earlocks Abroad it ix known as the Eton shingle, named, of course. in honor | of the famous English public school Just this hair cut has not pade Its way across the Atlantic as yet, but | daring women have appeared with side hair cut quite close, the only re- deeming feature being a little bang at the front e are geotting very ! near to the swinging point of the| penduium There seems to be’ in some quar ters evidences that the pendilum has |already begun to swing. French Women, some of them, who cling to the hair shingled at the back instead of having their earlocks cropped close, are letting them grow lonk | enough so that they can be arranged [in soft curls on either cheek | The lower sketch shows this ar- | rangement—also the new lons ear rings which have been given place of honor among earrings in Paris We shall soon see them over here ‘They look like long, pliable ribbons strewn with diamonds or rhingstones. To Serve With Salad. Cheese balls to serve with salad |are made of cream cheese to which | has been added the juice of one onion | one sprig of finely chopped celery, six | | | olives, a teaspoonful of finely ground almonds, salt, pepper and enough whipped cream and cheese to make the balls the right consistency to roll | The balls should be about the size of hazel nyts. Serve three to each in- HAIR WORN ..l dividual salad portion FRONT AND AND WORN HEAD IN SOFT CURLS EARS | French Sandwiches. Stamp out thin slices of white bread with & cooky cutter. Spread ceds to the point|half with cream cheese and currant \ as there | jelly blended to a pink cream. On o mas- | the top of this spread a second round own ! of bread lightly buttered and spread finély chopped pistachio nuts. mimicry of real imitat real danger ne the never As so f becoming um, all of its again back toward ! with How Can Young Couple Stop Habit of Arguing Over Trifles? — How Can “Twenty -one” (et Rid of Girl \Who Wants to Marry? narried just ene year and my husband's < everything that is possible to cause trouble between us. She that 1 am unkind to her, that I gossip about him, all sorts of untrue things, and is attempting to run me out of my home Do xou think that 1 should put up with this? 1 love my husband dearly, | But when I tell him how she does he only says h, well, she's old,” an that he only child, and ¢ i< o one else to take care of her MRS, L. 0. W, 1 JDEAR MISS DIX: T kave been mother lives with us. She d tells Answer: The mother-in-law problem, my dear, causes more tears, more heartaches, and misery than any other one in the world. It is the most inscrutable. for it has a thousand different angles, and the wise way to solve it is generally the way it can't be solved No two women. and especially no two women who love the same man, ©ught ever to undertake to live in the same house together. They are simply inviting trouble to come in and camp on their hearthstone when they do. They hring together all sorts of jealousies. and sex antagonism, and different wayve of housckeeping, and when these collide the home becomes an under- atudy of a Kilkenny cat fight Thercfore, & man does a wrong and foolish thing when he asks a girl to marey him when his mother must live with him, and a woman takes a fool- hardy risk on her happiness when she accepts him, but it is often & question ©f no wedding bells or mother Then, if a woman has accepted the situation and married 2 man, knowing | #he must live with his it scems to me that she is only playing the | game if she all of ner fo and patience to enduring whatever #he has to put up with. and using all the tact and diplomaey of which she is apable in getting along with the old woman. and if she shuts her teeth on r complaints and docs nol make her husband miserable by running to him with complaints of his mother. tituge This fsn't to do. 1 Pappiness. For it takes two 1o m Jf vou do not answer back when criticism will fall flat 1t is literally true there are very few perse After all, the friend of her know: but it can be done. and it will pay in ke a quarrel, even with a mother-in-law. mother-in-law finds fault with you her that the soft answer turns away wrath, and that s that you cannot get around with a littie jollying way to handle a mother-in-law is by making & Your hushand's defense can be said on the sul) T \is mother, “Oh. she is old.” sums up all that e old make always a call upon the patience of the young. for they are almost invariably querulous, and nagging, and fault- finding. But the young should forgive this because they are so pitiful and 80 helpless We should find it easier 1o bear with the weaknesses of age, because &nma time the young must be patient and forbearing with us, and we should Ehow 1o our mothere-in-law the consideration that some dav we shail pray a daughter-in-law to show DOROTHY DI JDFAR MISS DIX: My wife and I have been married 13 months argued from the first, but loved each other just the same. But now we find that we are quarreling all the time over trifies, and we are less and less guarded about what we sayv to each other, and I am afraid that it is going to wreck our happiness. What do you think? A F.N. We Answer I think there is no other such first-aid to divorce as the ATEUINg habit. and that any two persons who indulge in this vicious practice are sure to come to hate each other in the end. There can be no peace and harmony in a homé where ever® statement brings on a dispute and where n‘;fiv'\(hws one does, or leaves undone, calls for eri ism and endless discussion 5 . The people we like and whose society we enjoy are those who agree Jeith us, not those who antagonize us and who différ with us en every subject from politics to pie Bit why argue? No one is ever convinced by an argument. @ver changes his point of view because of anvthing vou sa why should vou wish to make every one think as you @o? even husbands and dielikes. T should certainly advise vou and vour wife to agree on this one point— not to argue. If she savs black is white, let it go at thaf. If she says that Chicago is the capital of Oklahoma, permit the statement to stand uncon- tradicted. 7'ry 1o get her 1o he equally fair to you. And if she still persists in a ing don’t answer back, and she will be forced into silence, because You can’t argue with any one who won't argue ®ack. DOROTHY DIX. JDEAR MISS DIX: How ean I et rid of a girl who Wants 1o marry me and whom I don't want tp. marrs? 1 don't want to marry anybody, for | am only 21, and | have a good home, and money, and lots of companionship, so why ghould 1 tie mysaif down with a wife? But this girl is determined to have me. 1 have tried in every way to show her that T am not in love with her and don't want to marry her, but she pursues me, and what to do is a eross-word puzzle I can't solve. . IN TOUGH. No ene Furthermore, Other persons, and wives, have a perfect right to their own opinion and likes | Answer: You hayve my svmpathy, son. You certainly are in danger, for when a girl is that determined to have & man she generally gets him. But 1 should say that the gnswer to vour cross-word puzsle is in two words, the first of four letters and the second of two letters, which mean a get-away DOROTHY DI Copyright.) Orange Pekoe Tea Ask for Tetley’s in the hand- scme oriental caddy. No extra charge, but a big extra value. Makes good tea a certainty { anuw WAS FOUNDED BY LORD BALTIMORE AS A HAVEN OF REFUGE FOR NIS CATHOLIC BRETHREN WHO WER Iv:usmm.p 1N ENGLAND, BUY HE ALSO INVITED SETTLERS OF JOTHER RELIGIONS O COME TO HIS PROVINCE ASSURING THEM| oF ABSOLUTE QRLIGIOUS LIBERTY — FOR A LONG TIME CATHO: ll-|6$ ANDPROTESTANTS LINED TOGETHER IN HARMONY. © McClure Newspaper Syndicate The Daily Cross-Word Pflzzle (Copyright.) Acroms. Checkered 6. Defensive ditches. 11, Artery 12 Mass of cast metal. 13. Meeting 14. Farinaceous 15. Period of time.. 16. Before. 17. Ailing. 18, Ecclesiastical council |20, Meaning. 22, Water carriers 26. Insects. 30. Boy 31. To make fast 32. Foot of an animal 33. Ascend. 36. To let. 37. Loop with running knot, 38. Concise 30, To Ko in 40. Hail and rain. Down. i. Top of the head (plural) 2. Four-wheeler platform wagon 3. Parent language of Indo-Eure- pean. family. Answer to Yesterday r}?uzilr. [4 g@ [HIATTTE | Aloe IoPlalL[S] B [SIAlle Il 1 [5[T] H8E B3 SEER hredded Wheat “Its.All in the Shreds” . Wriggly fish . [257 HAD BEa THE inTENTION OF LORD BAITIMORE 10 AY mmnmnmuw:m1u?w O ot o C oL eV SHOWE A D TO GOVERN' AND BALTIMORE WISELY PER- TO MAKE THEIR OWN LAWS. WHEN Kitchen Curtains. 10w iat o ianyinoman 1is | considered a waste of money and time | to hang curtains at the kitchen win- dow, and vet, when we stop to think about it, isn’t this room, even though it be but a kitchenette, the one room of all the house in which the house- wife must spend a great portion of her day? And that, too, at work which in itself offers the least poesi- ble opportunity for mental and spir- itual expansion. It is, therefore, im- portant that the surroundings be made s cheerful and attractive as possible, and eurtains do help con- siderably in giving an air of charm |and delightfulness to this very room. Above all, the curtains should be of a material that looks fresh and |crisp, and launders well. To be suit- ahle for the kitchen it is also essen- tial that & curtain be able to hold up under the incessant atream of vapors that are inevitable in every kitchen To select from there are curtains| of firm scrim, marquisette, voile, fin gingham, unbleached muslin, dimity. |lawns and crepes. A good quality of {cheesecloth is highly satisfactory, and has the advantage of being a very |chean curtaining. Dimity launders well and is very prim and pretty in |its stiff, crisp folds, but being corded | oods, tends to wear out along the | “When all are considered. few things | have the crisp, frésh-looking appear- ance of dotted swiss, which is an ideal curtain for the kitchen. These| can be ruffed, or trimmed in rickrack Pronoun Marked with a timae. Buffoons. Number Once more Charges foy transportation Mode. Lubricant eventh letter of Greek alphabet. Flat surface. Biblical name Person of low-grade mentality, To guide one’s course. Flogs severely Additional Past the prime. Agreeable to the Point of compass taste. Bani An oily, shiny skin is now unnecessary. For now a new and harmless treatment banishes large, course pores and shiny, oily noses. is amazing new discovery is ufle, ;ur;.h :::I :\;‘o utel; mfleu.l W 1 muac] ey by gl Thechancieroffhashin & Tened. and fabby tisues are tightened. All sge | signs disappear. Stai his erful treat- ment now—todsy. Ak for Golden Peacock As- wingens. Usless chis harmlcss new ‘discovery | i s Youe monty wil be sladly refunded. Al good drug and department stores ch as— Feoples Drug Stores. O'Donnell's Drug Store, Gilman's Drug Store. Christiani BAKIN G ! artment stores and dru POWDER I Bodily warmth that will resist cold comes from the food you eat, not from the clothing you wear. Fortify yourself against cold by eating Shredded ‘Wheat, a food that makes red blood and good muscle. Two biscuits with hot milk supply all the energy you need for MITTEDTHEM TO HAVE AN ASSEMBLY WITH THE POWER. FEATURES. —By J.' CARROLL MANSFIELD f Z 4 S A PHE VIRGINIANS RESENTED THE PLANTING OF A NEW COLONY '\.n.ll‘ARNG THAT CLAIBORNE WAS INCITING LAND THAT HAD ONCE BELONGED TO THEM AND BEGAN TO MAKE TROUBLE . KENT ISLAND IN MARYIAND WATERS AND WHEN GOVERNOR. LVERIT ASKED THAT HE SUBMIT JO THE AUTHORITY OF MARY - SWORE. JO FIGHT FOR M!S RIGHTS « WD,CLAI8 WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. brald, ®r simply hemstitched in eolors to carry out the color scheme of the room. . An aceomplishment of the modern day is the rubl izing of fabrics with the idea of making kitchen and bath- room curtains resistant to vapors or water, and therefore practical as wejl as colorful. Such treatment is said to add immeasurably to the life and value of the curtains. Perhaps the most satisfactory treatment of a kitchen window is to hang the curtains straight from a rod at the top of the window to the sill. This permits of removing the curtains easily when thev must be laundered, and is alwavs the method followed when the window is small, or placed high over some kitchen equipment, as, for instance, the aink. When the window is of regular size, having poth an upper and a lower sash, it'ix quite customary to hang the curtains from the middla sash over only the lower part. In cas where the light admitted in this way is too strong. or when for any other reason it is advisable to cover the up- per part of the window as well, most women prefer to have two sefs of curtains rather than one long pair, and to hang one set from the top to the middl sh, and the other from the middle sash to the sill. Thorium, the principal material in the composition of the incandescent gas mantle, is a rare earth found in very few places. Almost the whole of the world’s supply comes from Brazil WHITE THE INDIANS TO ATTACK THE MARYLAND SETTLE MENTS, THE MARYLANDERS SEIZED ONE OF HIS A VIRGINIAN NAMED CLAIBORNE HAD A TRADING POSY ON | | BOATS AND SOLD THE CARGO OF FURS - THIS ACT BROLGHT ON'CLAIBORNE'S WAR ” TOMORROW-CiAIBORNES WAR . 1aw, owteh T neerly broke a finger inale then, confound it. Sam Crosses cuzzin is a officer on & ship in the navy, and yestidday he was at Sams house and he showed us fellows how to tie diffrent knotts, and last nite I was practicing some of them on a peece of string up in our getting room wile pop was smok- ing and thinking, and I sed, Hay pop, are you bizay? Yes, Im bilding imported cassles in the air over this domestic clgar, wat do you wunt, pop sed Can you untie these 2 d. I doubt it, if theres one thing 1 hate to do, its untying knotts, but I sip- pose its my duty as a father to help you through lifes bitter trials, let me see the knotts, pop sed. These, I sed, and I handed him the peece of string and he started to undo the top knott, saying, Yee gods this fs wat the ancient Greeks use to refer to a corker, owing to their custom of putting them in bot- tles and corking them up to display a8 hopeliss cases And he werked at it about nits and got it undid. saying, Wow, tawk about the labors of Hercules, dont mention them, Im ixhausted. How about the other one, pop, thats ony one, 1 sed Theres no rest for the weery, pop sed. And he started to undo the 2nd one saying, if the other one was a mugt be its mother in knotts? 1 | xed, 5 min- | DWINELL-WRIGHT COMPANY BOSTON ~ CHICAGO ~ PORTSMOUTH,VA. Say, wat govd peece of string he to you after [ get the knotts out? he and 1 sed, No good, its jest a 1ooxe peece of string Then wy the doore are you ruinin my hole evening if dont wunt the atring in the ferst place? pop sed amd 1 sed, I jert wunted to see If you could get the knoots out, Sam Cromses cuzzin belongs in the na and he showed me how to tie them You take this peece of string and get that knott out if it takes you till youre a old man, pop sed. Wich it ony took me about 2 half 2 hour but it seemed longer on aceount of taking knotts out being more mon- ctoniss than putting them in b= Pl S The Quebec government will create & commission {0 put inte effect the act passed some years ago providi for the establishment of minimu wages for women emploved ir will this dinky | ufacting industrie. Now you can tint your dainty silk things and keep the lace snowy white. Glorient, the new tint, re- stores lovely color, sheen and body to any real silk We absolutely guarantee it Jeaves Jace White No beiling. No staining hands or basin. Quickly used. 18 captivatingshades, all fadeless-ta-light. At Drug and Department Stores GLORIENT, Inc. 30 Church St. New York Calgfornia sunshine— — Jor your winter menus There's stored-up sunshine in this raisin bread— the sweetness and fine fruit flavor of grapes that have ripened "neath California’s smiling skie: - ‘Bring it to your table Serve my raisin bread every uently this winter. ‘ednesday. Ipre- pare it specially for Wednesday — wonderful loaves, generously filled with large, plump Sun. de P isins. It's inexpensive. a standing order with your baker or grover, Ask him to deliver or reserve a loaf of this special rsisin bread every: Wednesday. * Phone him todsy. . Endorsed by bakers everywhere, including the American Bakers’ tion and the Retail Bakers’ Associstion of Americs ; | Pla.cc a standing Wednesday order withynurBakefo:Gmw A