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WOMAINN’S PAGE. BY MARY MARSWALL. This is a season of sets—sets con- | sisting of hat and scarf, hat and belt, hat and scarf and purse, hat and »ves, but chiefly hat and searf. It all part of the “present tendency | French dressmaker whose name carry out the ensemble idea in | most ganevally associated with the women's clothes. | idea of hstt* and scarf set. And mow Quite it 1s possthle fbr the woman who | trims her trucks at home to buy sets consisting «f scarf with material to | match suitalWle for trlmming the hat, | or otherwise garrying out the design | of the scarf. .\ good plan is to drape | the hat with Wee searf and then'use | the matching wmaterial to form the | lining of the @¢dat worn with the hat, of to use 'ie material for hat drapery and them use the searf at- tached to form the neck finish of the frock with which te hat is worn Scarf hats are a wovelty of the sea- son. With ‘them rather simple shape is chosen, and the scarf is at- | tache@uto it by meam’ of tiny snap- | pers. A charming set of hat and scarf consists of a blacis straw shape trimmed with red ribboy' and a scarf consisting of a black ritA»on trimmed with one bright red tMwer at the back. A charming clocn® shape is covered with hand-bloeh printed crepe in sunset tones, with a gener- {ous scarf of crepe, hand-thiocked in |the same tomes. 'A little pull-on | shape, made of woven blue ynd white | silk, has a belt also made of the same | woven silk. but yvhen the effect g wilan the set is seem wihth while. Jane Rianchot, it is so charm- worn it does seems, 4s the is in often this idea of selling a (Copyright.) Lamb Croquettes. Cook one-half a tablespoonfifi of finely chopped onion In two tiwble- spoonfuls of butter for five minut. s, stirring comstantly. Add one-fouw h | of a cupful of flour and stir until w w1 | blended, then pour on gradually, while stirring onstantly, one cupful, | of stock. Bring to the boiling peint |and add one cupful of cold | 1amb, cut in small cubes, and two- ! thirds of a cupful of small, cold boiled potato cubes. immer until the meat and potatees have absorbed the sauce. | | Ada one teaspoonful of finely chopped | parsley, and season with salt and | pepper. Spread on a shallow plate to | cool. Shape in the form of croquettes, {dip in bread crumbs and egg. and fry in deep fat and then drain. Serve with tomate sauce. Three things [ have for perfect bliss, Ne farther need I look : An open fire burhing bright, An apple and 2 book. fre SMART ACCF St SHOW S0 WOM THEIR F MATCHINC IN THE CH ARE A HAND-WOVEN AND HANDBAG W N SILK HAT AND SET, AND A PRINTED GETTE HAT AND SCARF THE HAT TRIMMED WITH MATERIAL OF THE. SCA JEOR.- SET, THE hat wrap and scarf or purse or belt or frock to match has begun as a clever stroke of the milliner to da more bu Having persuaded customer buy a certain hat. it is not very difficult further to per- suade her buy the scarf or purse other trifie that has been made go with it. Of course, it is not necessary 1o buy both-—oh, dear, nol Qur Children—By Angelo Patri older brother impose all the restric- tions you ever tmposed upon his little sister. You will see repeated every tone of your veice, every flash. of tem- per, every domineering action. He is sending out what he has taken in, and in very much the same spirit that he received it. The younger child is going to re- sent it exactly as the older one did, with this difference—the older one had to swallow it almest in wilence. You would mot permit him any argu- ment, any talking back. But the younger child is not gagged. can't boss me. You aren't mother.” And the fight is on. About the best thing to do Is sepa- rate them. They must not disturb the family peace with quarrels, and they must not lay up for themselves scarred mlemorles of their brothers and sisters. Separate thém for a period long enough to make them lonely for each other. If they fall to quarreling within 13 minutes, sepa- rate them again, and for a longer | time. Meantime, keep teaching them the ness Squabbling Children. What makes brothers and sisters squabble among- themselyes? Many causes, any one of them enough to set a group by the ears L In the first place. children are al-| ways mote or less under ordérk. ¢ is human nature to resist restraint, and children are very human. When- ever the regulations of school and home and society are too pressing. the chRdren rebsl—react against them, the psycholégist would say. Now, they cannot fight the adults and they cannot fight circumstances. All that is left is themselves, and they let all their frritation on each other. The fact that they are brothers and sisters does not hider them in the least. It frees them in- their own minds. “Isn’t he my own brother? Well, T can punch him if 1 want to.” “Sure he can,” stoutly assents brother, and I'll give it back to him good and | plenty : Don’t be shocked. -Just understand and provide some other outlet for the rebellion. Give them some interest- ing job that will use their surplus |duty and the beauty of family loyalt energy. You see, the home restric- | Teach them the stories of brotherly tions, the teachers’ mandates and the |love. Give them new omes, like the town ordinances have rather sub- | piccerilli brothers, the seven sculp- pressed that tremendous power, and {tors of New York, the Ringling it has to find a way out or something | brothers of the circus, and lots more will give away that will come to you. And the Dig- Then, too, children are great imifa- | ture of Cain and Abel in the back- tors. Every action they néte, every |ground will put depth into the idea. inflection of mood or voice or manner | Mr. Patri will give personsl attention to they record, every unexpected and | inquiries from parenty or schol teachecs o hr ives i | the care e 3 B e e ne U Wah Tk | A stamped envelope for repis. my { (Copyright. 1925.) SAY PICK , | HAVEN'T HEARP YOUR AUNT HELEN SINGING LATELY. —WHATS THE MATTER, 15 SHE SICK P MO, THE NEIGHBORS TOOK & UP A COLAECTION ARY F HORIZONTAL VERTICAL 1 -NOYFUL. | -A BEAUTIFWL QUEEN oF TROY.(Z - GIRL'S NAME 6 -TO WOR SHIP. 3 -REGARPVED (with off 7 -ONE WHO LAV'S PAVEMENTS. |4 - BEFORE. | very Vearly part of the day it iis advisable “You [ | selfishness. THE EVENING g?ns‘m:‘um WERE RENCE M) ! MOTHERS | AAD THEIR CI DREN. Lengthening Boys' Suits. One M mther Says: 1 of my little boy's suits in such v manner that they can easily be lengihened as the child grows. The littler Oliver Twist suits I make targe eno3y h at first so that the but- tons for t'm' pants can be set above the walstbiw d. These can be grad- ually lowered. Also, I put a little tuck on the @ 'ceve under the cuff and this ean be 1aken out later. Om the little overalis 1 make the straps somewhat lon;a'r than necessary and put the button ©on the strap instead of on the bib, :va that the straps can be lengthened gva dually (Copy: 18 bt, 1925.) What Tomorreve Means to You BY MARY B LAKE. sces. planetaid during the YA Tenoon, faverable thereaiwT. In Tomorrow's adverse aspects are but the to attend bnly to routine’.duties, and to give a final review to' any plans that should be lauched la fier on. In the afternoon, confidence And opti- mism will be in the atmos, ¥here, and aggressiveness and forcefu.'wess will reap their just veward. T e Signs denote that all matters re ‘Bted to | property or mining interests Wil be sucessful and remunerative. The good aspects continue during th¢ Test of the day, and not only favor husi- ness enterprise, but put the sewl of approval on social or family re- unions. 3 A child born tomorrow will poss ®.38 exceptional strength and physial prowess, as well as pulchrituda. G will be practically immune toail, ili'= ness, gnd its heaith will at no time: cause either worry or tgouble. Its isposition will, at times, be a little “bossy,” as a result of its srrength. The corners, however, can be rubbed aff by. intimate association with play- mates of a similar age, and by thus learning the principles of “give and take.” it will, at no ‘time, be very studious, but will learn enough to “get by.” Its principal ambition will be ‘to excel in sports and outdoor recrea- tions. Later on in life this chtid Should ba giver an occupation where | mental concentration is not needed,| and where an outlet caw always be found for its surplus energy. If tomerrow . is your birthday, You are gimple in your tastes, outspoker in your speech, and an enemy of false convention and hypocrisy. You, how- ever, by continually and comstantly harping on the “finicky” ways of others, and by your condemmation of | pretense, are becoming a bere to your friends. and a bore to those who do not know you well. It must always be borne in mind that convenmtion rules the world, and no ome is strong emough to ignore it. Nothing is gained by your per- sistent display of so-called inde- pendence, which is denounced by others as bad- form, and sometimes characterized as rudeness. Courtesy and culture are not the products of a disordered mind, but are virtues emanating from education and un- Well known persons born on this @ate are: George William Curtis, author; John Habberton, author; William Clark Russell, author; George Fred Handel, musical composer; Charles Lamb, essayist; Dautel Appie- ton, publisher. (Copyright, 1925.) Prices realized on Swift & Com- pany sales of earcass beef in Washington, D. & tor week ending Saturday, February cents to 16.00 1334 cents per pound.—Advertisement. Only about one-fifth of: the total fragrance. the back i wy fife s Tyrees Buchy snd Hyocysmus Lt w 2 wooderful medi- cine Tt 1w made of leag Buchy, Uvs Urn, Pareirs Brava, Hyowysmos, Hops, Acetsie of Posss, Asthereai Spirw of Niwe ard Hezamethy e 8 -NOT POWN 5 - COURAGE . 9°- VERY GOOPD. (AB) 11- TO POSSESS. 1Q - TO SING (Suddan chonges *f voice)|IZ - TO RECLINE. A SWISS MOUNTAIN CALL. 13- A ROMAN WEIGHT 15 - VOCAL ARTISTS. 14- YOU ANP 1. i T e —— o ant e e 3t o There 3 seshong rba o yem e e { | 21 | 1925, on shipmesis sold eut, ranged from 9.0 | nts per posnd and aversged | STAR, WASHINGTON * The Growth of New France. THE ONLY SERIOUS COMPETITORS OF THE ENGLISH IN THE PLANY-| ING OF SETTLEMENTS IN NORTH AMERICA . 1 SINCE THEIR DWN ATIEMPTS TO SETTLE ON THE ATLANTIC COAST HAD FAILED AND BECAUSE THE ENGLISH HAD A FIRM FOOTHOLD THERE, THE FRENCH TURNED THEIR ATTENTION TO BUILDING AN INLAND EMPIRE IN THE ST. LAW- 1SS1S31PPI AND OMIO VALLEYS . FRENCH EXPLORATION IN AMERICA, GULF OF MEX1CO |DorothyDix| Plant Early in Life Seed of a Real Friendship With Daughter and Let Her Grow Up in Sunshine of Real Home. Advises | Mothers on Care of Modern Girl Good Girls— and How to Rear Thew “I have four little girls. 1 want to rear them to be fine women. How shali [ do it? Well, if 1 had four little daughters to bring up, | should begin by winning their friendship. Not love. Virtuall | all girls love their mothers, but very few girls are friends with their mothers. | | And it is quite another thing to be on intimate terms with her MOTHER writes to me: Every mother looks forward to being chums with her daughters when {hey grow up, but few ever realize this dream. Instead. they find that their daughters are strangers with whom' they are less acquainted than they are with arny other women in the world, and they.complain bitterly that they ever know what their girls are doing This is because they bave never made friends with their children.| They never made companions of them when they were little. There were no jolly secrets between them, no habit of confidence established, no sure knowledge that mother would always understand, that she would always sympathize and always help, It 1 were my daughters’ most intimate friend, I would know that they | would not go far wrong, for I would be a sort of special providence watching over them, knowing what they were thinking of doing before they did it, in time to protect them from danger. 1 should teach my daughters self-control. It is the girls who have never | been taught to control their passions who recruit the sorrowful sisterhood | of the streets. It is the girls who have never been taught to control their | tempers who fill the divorce courts, and break up their homes, and orphan | | their ehildren. It is the girls who have never been taught to'curb their| | desire who ruin their husbands with their extravagance, and are'a curse to | | the men who marry them. SHOULD teach I my girl baby in her cradle to bite back her cries when she was hurt. 1 should teach her as soon as she could understand any- | thing to do without things she wanted without whining. I should teach her | to do the thing she didn’t want to do bccause it was her duty, and to have | the grit to carry on when it took sheer nerve to do it. And when I had| taught her courage and fortitude and persistence, I would know that I had | given her weapons that would never fail her with which to fight the battle | | of life. | I should give my daughters the best education that I could. and this | would include a therough and practical knowledge of all housewifely dutles, for no matter what else a woman needs to know In life she is dead sure to need to know how to cook and sew, and to be an expert in buying butcher's meat and darning stockings | 1 should to it that my daugiters were trained in some | occupation, by which they could support themselves if necessary. A good trade or profession is the best protection that any girl can hdve against making a foolish marriage, or having to endure a miserable one. The girl who can makesa good salary dees not have to marry for a home and a shopping ticket. The girl with a career does not have to marry to find an | interest in life, and an outlet for her ambitions. The woman Who can go back mdhlr old job any day does not have to stand a brutal and tyrannical usban see saintul | 1 should tell my daughters of all the dangers that beset the pathway of a girl. 1 should tell them why it s wrong to let men kiss them and fondle lh’!!l:l. and that a woman's peril is always more from within than it is from | without | 1 should tell them that they must watch themselves even more than they watch men. Ignorance is noi innocence, and the less igncrant a girl | is, the more apt she is to stay innocent. In these days every girl has practieally to be her own chaperon, and the only way she can protect herself is by being wise. [HE best saeguard thdt any girl can have s a sense of modesty and good moral principles, and if these have been bred in her from her infancy, if she has been taught to loathe vulgarity as she does something unclean, and 4 0 hold her honor above her life, mother does not have to lie awake at night wondering what she is doing. Those who have been brought up te run ;vraight seldom go crooked. ' 1 should try to meet the boy problem intelligently. I should know that trcym 14 to l]’( girls nrehp‘rlt‘lllclll.“ boy crazy, and whether they come through thi.% crucial time in their lives safely, or go to ruin, v Ly crucly o [ ruin, depends largely upon "t I would not be foolish enongh to tell my girls that they should not have w'ates, and that me boys should come to the house, for I would know | that when you loek a girl up in her room she is apt to climb out of the | winde w and elope with the first youth who comes along. and that if you will not letvathem receive their beaux in the parlor they mest them on the street | corner. % Theg fore, 1 should try to make my home the center of my daughter's | pleasuges.. 1 would give her such a good time she would be in no hurry to | get marrfe . And I would get acquainted with the boys she knew, and gently and. Dainlessly eliminate the unfit Is will listen a lot to mother | it they thii'k mother is playing the game with them. But they are deaf | to her enmy[} ands and warnings if they feel she is a spoilsport. | If I hadt daughters. I would pray God to give me the wisdom of the owl and the subt &>ty of the serpent, and an iron hand in a velvet glove in dealin, with them. @ o0r rearing a girl is one of the biggest jobs on earth & DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright.) Costs More ~—Worth It! Makes\ Better Bread There’s a rich, wholesome, real old-fashivioned flavor in every baking imade with GREEN-FISH COMP ANY Whetesale Distributirs - Qfi:'s-“'-_'_‘; . D. C., MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1925. ' FEATURES. —BY J. CARROLL MANSFIEL foiiad FORE ST RANGER) HE DEVELOPMENT OF NEW FRANCE,AS THE R [OF THE STLAWRENCE VALLEY AND THE GREAT LAKES WAS CALLED, WAS SLOW. rd o tfi-'azncn PROGRESS \N CANADA DATES FROM 1603 WHEN SAMUEL DE CHAMPLAIN , THERE WAS NO AGRICULTURE AND THE ONLY SETTLE-| |A NAVIGATOR AND SCIENTIST, FIRST CAME MENTS WERE WIDELY” SCATTERED TRADING POSTS - TOTHE STLAWRENCE . — WHILE VISITING THE ONLY SETTLERS WERE FUR TRADERS WHO ROAMED | [AMONG THE FUR TRADERS ME BECAME INGER: | THE FORESTS, LIVING THE WILD'LIFE OF THE INDIANS - STED IN COLONIZING THIS VAST TERRITORY. THESE LAWLESS MEN WERE CALLED COUREURS DE BOLS. TOMOoRROW= CHAMBLAIN. side. Tsn't |And the | spreads The person who smiles in the right ¥ passes along the wireless mes- e of good cheer. The woman who y net be beautiful according to fcal standards, but who smiles gets the credit of being good looking and the woman who possesses a phys- |ical beauty doubles it in the same | way. So smiles are as important as beauty treatments for the faces and as inspiring to the heart as cheerfu | words it fine? contagion A l Let's enjoy it of happiness Use of the Smile as Aid to Beauty BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Women's Faces Somber With Their|with the linex with their unquestion Anxlety to Look Handsome. Women want to be beautiful, and it certainly is a legitimate desire. The ways to attain this result are devious and many. “Beauty parlors”|&et the illuminating reflection. I flourish. Face powder (paint, too)|You wear a smiling face you will get and all sorts of cosmetics guaran-|a smiling response from almost every o e I e fair tg|one about you. There are smiles and Took upon are in high fa Why | 8miles, of course. Just turning up overlook one of the big aids? the corners of your mouth Especlally as it costs nothing. Not-than no attempts to lo withstanding the fact that there are | Put it isn't exactly prese 80 many epigrams and mottoes couch- | IR face. Behind th arfous phrases, but all to the|the masterful transfory ftect, that we should “wear a|4ull and uninteresting f this “harm | is|Winning and attractive one, T tebly lac lurks the hint of a secret. For- oK anont YUl simatel 1 th wherever you go, in trolley or train, | tunately 3 one_that:every one 4 T |may know. It merely recognizes the in the homes, or even at entertain- I mants, and you will recognize the|BEPDY side of life as being as truly ok real, as the reverse Of course, at a “roaring farce” or a comedy there are smiles aplenty, but the moment the amusing inci- dents or the jokes are over the faces relax into their usual lines of indif- ference, anxiety or uninterestedness.| The charm of a pleasant face that| brings Its response from others is far | too infrequent | s o oan - | Delicious e S Rt fl.’fi-l;;:;"]?l“;?‘fii} New England Fish Cakes is because the women are tense with in five - minutes bring a_smiling visage a smile But few have to go to the glass tol (Copyright, 1925.) Noodle Ring. Drain two cupfuls of noodles and mix them with one cup ful of grated cheese, one tablespoon- ful of Worcestershire sauce, one tablespoonful of tomato catsup, and one cupful of milk. Add the beaten volks of three eggs, with salt and pepper to tagte, fold in the last thing the stiffy-beaten whites of the eZgs and pour into a well greased mold Set this in a pan of hot water and bake in a moderate oven for aboyt |40 minutes. When done, turn out returning smile [onto a platter, fill the center witi as if the words | anything vou please, and serve witl has its pleasant |a savory tomato sauce. one or. into there it Smiles Reassuring. When it both xay as | were spoken wins a plainly “Life faces betray the emotion all too| clearly. You notice that mirrors are | constantly being consulted, lipsticks and powder are openly applied. But where Is the winning smile? Or. | again, you see a woman is so care- fully gowned and is made ready be- fore leaving home (an estimable idea) that she feels reasonably sure she is presentable as possible. If she would crown her efforts with gracious countenance instead of a sat- isfled look, her success would be far greater. Between these faclal expression there ix a whole gamut without once touching the| smiling. cheerful look, welcomed in | | a HOW would you like a breakfast of real fish cakes—but with none of the fuss and bother of soaking, picking, boiling, paring, mixing, etc.? Take home one of these blue- and-yellow cans of Gorton’s—the original ready-to-fry fish cakes--made from famous Gorton’s Cod Fish—No Bone two extremes of kind. and which is an open sesame of good-fellowship. Perhaps some of you are familiar W- & J- SLOANE 1508 H STREET Opposite The Shoreham WASHINGTON, D. C. FURNITURE ORIENTAL RUGS DOMESTIC RUGS CARPETS-LINOLEUMS Back of our local stock of fine quality Home Furnishings there is over $2,000,000 worth of actual merchandise in our New York Establishment comprising the careful selections of the greatest specialty house of its kind in America. All the knowledge and resources resulting from our 80 years of specialized en- deavor are at the service of our customers and our prices exact no premium for such_assistance. An interesting example of W. & J. Sloane value is listed below. SEAMLESS AXMINSTER RUGS - $55.00 Size, 9x 12 These heavy rugs are reproductions, as to color and design, of Persian, Chinese and Turkish Rugs. The assortment is especially large and attractive, the quality is unquestioned, ,and the price represents a most unusual value. We will "be glad to have you see them. STORE HOURS 8 A. M. TO 5:30 P. M. EVERY DAY INCLUDING SATURDAY FREIGET PAID TO ALL SHIPPING POINTS IN THE UNITED STATES Sloane Endorsed Merchandise Carries an Assurance of Satisfaction