Evening Star Newspaper, March 3, 1925, Page 34

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WOMAN’S PAGE. ‘Je{iéler.s Help on New Spring Hats BY MARY MARSHALL. Butterflies, bess, lizards, frogs, birds, elephants and monkeys may be ween these days posed comfortably on the front or’side ¢f a woman's hat. To 'Bé sute ‘they are rather small creatures, usually made of gold or BLACK AND WHITE § WITH ORNAMENT GALALITH AND RHIN AMBER KNITTI) N WITH SILVER TOP STUCK BEIGE FELT HAT. RED CELLU- LOID QUILL, RHINESTONE AND PEARL FOW KNOT AND OR) OF RHINESTC AND R, ALL FOR HAT TRIM- gilt. Sometimes the hat is a plain straw shape and may show. mo other trimming. More often the hat is of silk of some sort. Never was there a wider variety of millinery jewelry to choose from, and | BEAUTY CHATS Pedicuring: Many ple canfiot-get odist with any 'sort of When opportunityand_mon T would suggest a monthly Visit to a good chiropodist, ~ or, - pedicurist, as some of them call themselwves, for the returns in ymfort and. good looks will be great. Pretty feet ajways look cared for, for.bad joints and | bunions, limp® from -badly fitting | shoes c: %0 woman's attracti e But if ot ség_& régular chi- ropodist, learn howto'freat your own feet. Assumin@igou have omly the usual troubles th&-greatmyent should be as follows . Soak the t im.a basin 'of hot soapy er or else starf your-treat- nent as n us you are out of hot bath. Better soak the feet: they | should be immersed about 20 minutes to soften the hard skin that makes corns. Bath saits or rheumatism salt soften the water and make the treat- | ment more effective. Put little pleces | of cotton soaked in the water over | ach corn to’ Eéeh” each soff: while ‘ou work over other parts of the foot. | Scrape off yellow callous skin with | 2 plece.of manicure emery board or.a l.envelope for the formula I will be| regular corg file, then cut 9ff.as much ' The Daily Cros these little ornaments are a boon to the woman who trims her own hats or who wants to make over a lasc season’s hat. Quite new are the pearl ornaments. A large plak pearl with a white pearl and a gun metal pearl are mounted on & little bar to form a trimming that proves very attrac- tive on the satin hat or the grace- ful capelin of black lace, Knitting needles are used to make charming trimming on some of the little Spring hats. This consists of -rather short, stout knitting needles with large top of silver or rhine- stones. The needle is then thrust through the folds of the felt or straw hat at any jaunty angle. For the side or front of a hat there are in- teresting pendants that may be sewed in place or attached by means of a pin at the end. Some of chese pendants consist of anyx and rhine- stones. A new one is of painted galalith with a long black silk tassel, Ornaments in the shape of small horseshoes are made of galalith or metal. They are very easily thrust into the front of a hat by means of the pin to which they are attached. | Small pieces of colored glass are put | together i a small design in_some- what the effect of a stained-glass window in an oval ornament used by a French milliner to trim a little round-topped feit hat. Some of these pendants look for all the world like claborate drop earrings. One of them consists of a rhinestone from which hangs a silver chain holding a big crystal drop, Silver cut-outs consisting of rather “laborate designs or Chinese or Japa- nese mottoes are placed over ribbon or silk, which is then twrapped around the crown of the hat. —e Frosted Jam A jam Sandwiches. be quickly frosting. Crush frosting sugar Put this into a thick, smooth cold water. any flavoring should also be added and coloring if liked. Spread the frosting over the top of the sandwich with a knife which has been dipped in hot water, decorate with candied cherries and walnuts and leave in a cool place until set. Two or even three jam sandwiches placed on top of another with a different kind of jam spread Dbetween each layer and frosted over the top and sides with frosting make an attractive cake for a children’s party. sandwic an 1 with wa pound lumps mix to a a little esser or from and BY EDNA KENT FORBES. dead skin of the corn ith cither a regular corn knife, or a safety razor blade. But be sure you know how to use these, and do not cut the live skin of your foot. If you do by any chance, treat the cut as a real wound, make it anti- septic and bind it with white muslin 50 the stocking does not touch it. Having pared down the corns and scraped off the callouses, touch the places with a little collodion, which heals and takes out soreness. Keep a little cotton strapped over the corns with a bit of adhesive tape for a day or so, having first put a little cold cre or s ofly stuff over the corr Phyl deal of hair it shows that your scalp {needs treatment; or possibly you are a bit run down in health. In any case, massage the scalp every day until it glows from the quickened circulation, nd do not mind the falling hair, as all loose hairs must come out so that new ones can take their place. The pilocarpine tonic. often men- tioned in the “Chats” would be help- ful in toning your scalp. If you wish it and send a stamped, self-addressed glad to mail it to you. -Word Puzzle (Copyright.) Number. -~ Objects worshipped. Goddess of karvest, Amount of surface’ (pliir: Expression of the EFsalmisi To beseech. To request Deep mud. Conjunction. TLocations. Mystic ejaculations of the Hin- dus > Title of address Until (poetic) ar of charges nickname. decomposition Title of respect. 3 Root used as a vegetable. Unit of length (obsolete) Afternoon repast. Color. ; Indeed Man's nickname. Compound of iron. Note of“diatonic sodfe. Compensated, Conjunction. Lubricants. (plural). Assault, . Brood, s of pheasants Down. Strike lightly Mistake ose to. Exists To eject. Steamship (abbr.) Miscellaneous collection Province of Italy Personal pronoun. Affirmative. Printer's measure. Is ill. County of England. Wrong act. Large body of water. Kind of tree. A medieval playing card. Attempted. Line with running noose. Companion. Negative. Particular thing—legal, Colléction of facts. Reared. Snakelike fish. To depart. Briny. Regulated course of eating. Limits. 5 Ferocious beast. Animal's foot. Abbreviation for a profesaional man. Weight unit. (abbr.). Observe. Accordingly. , Refers to location. Hs—If you are losing a great| HAD ITS ECHO IN AMERICA, THE FRENCH AND ENGLISH COLONIES TAKING UPARMS IN THE CAUS! (OF THEIR MOTHER COUNTRIES. . IN1689 WHEN WILLIAM OFORANGE CAME 10 THE ENGLISH THRONE, THE FRENCH,WHO HAD FAVORED I THE STUART KINGS, DECLARED WAR ON ENGLAND DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Girl Whose Fiance Wants a Home After Marriage Instead of “Good Times”—Can a Girl Reform a Slouchy, Untidy Man? EAR DOROTHY DIX: T am engaged to a very fine man, who can give me. a good home, and T think we would be very happy if we could agree on one point, and that is this: I like good times, but he thinks only home. We broke our engagement aboyt five years ago, because wa agree on some things. Now we have renewed it, but we still about the good times I want and he doesn’t. What shall we do? J Answ. r: T should thini ment altogethe that vou would be wise to break the engage- | , for if five § estrangement has not lessened your desire | for good times, nor taught him more tolerance, and if neither one of you | has learned to give 4n to the other and compromise on differences of opinion, then you never will. . After marriage your attitude toward life and toward each other will be still more antagonistic, intensified on your part by the feeling that the man is using his position husband to thwart you, and keep you from doing the things you want to do, and on his part by the belief that you are not doing your duty. You will fight like cat and dog, and marriage will bring you nothing but wretchedness. Don't marry a man who is settled in his wa. with his ways. Don't marry at all until yc is what matrimony implies, and as long as a man chief interest and amusement and desire outside of the they should stay single s you are in sympathy to settle down. That d a woman find their home, instead of in it, But what do you » v “good times? Do you mean running with a wild ecrowd? Do you m rides and drinking parties and orgies that last all night> Do you mean going continually €0 czbarets and dance hall | If these are your idea of & good time, you will certainly do well not to marry | a sober, respectable man, who is home-loving and d. | But if you like the good times that consist in knowing pleasant people, going to see good ,pl and pictures, and out to taurants to dinner now and then, and drawing about You & group of using and entertaining { friends, that should not flict with making a happy home nor be objec- | tionable to any reasonable man. DOROTHY DIX. s e . extie JEAR MISS DIX: Iam a young girl 19 years old, and am engaged to mar; a young man of fine character, who is a good business man. I love him, but there is one thing about him that repulses me, and that is the way he dresses. He always looks mussy. His trousers are not pressed, his coat looks as if he had slept in etimes even his collar is soiled and his handkerchief isn't clean. Do you think that if I married hi if I could stand looking at a 2 I could change him?* T don't foel as | man the balance of my life, | BROWN EYES. It is a curio that n and one that § bout the way women look so0 1lttle attention to how the < to women. They know that women et far more value on appearances than they do, and vet it seems not to to them that a woman can be more ecasily disgusted by untidiness in a man than they would be in enlinese in & woma Nothing would disillusion a man more quickly than to see a girl in curl papers, with cold cream on her face and wearing & dirty kimono and sloppy slippers. He would fall out of love with ler on the.dot. But he expects her to see in him a romantic hero, even if he hus a three-day stubble of beard on his face, and trousers that bag at the kned,-and wearing the general appear- ance of something thet has just been fished out of the rag bag. a perpetual | arvel to Nothing else in the world except laziness and a dislike of taking trouble | accounts for a young man looking mussy. Any man can shave. He can black his shoes, and press his clothes, and takes the Epots out of themi and 17 he doesn't do it, it is a very good indication that he lacks energy, and that he will be a slacker who will never get along. I should certainly adv clothes before she marries hin tip ‘on whether he-will be i boots, or one of the slacker. You can't refo: slou are warried to him by cle his sofled linen is taken aws worth doing this for. - It-is a girl to take a very long look at a man's| His appearance will give her a valuable | -getter who Will eventually wear handmade | who will always be run down at the heel. | man, but You can save your eyes after you | ing and pressing his clothes, and seeing that | y ®0 that he has to use clean. Perhaps he is| for you to decide. DOROTHY DIX. | % el p EAR DOROTHY DIX: Is it improper tof tell a young man that I have been kissed? Is wrong for a girl to call a young man up on the telephone, if she has no phone and he has¥ BETTY. Answer: It is perfectly proper to tell'a young man that you have been kissed, but utterly unnecessary. Little as yoy may think it, he has sus- pected it, for an unkissed girl in these days is as rare as a white blackbird. Never call a young man up on the telephone unless he has specifically asked you to do so about some particular thing and has named the hour at which he wishes to be called. Let him take the initiative. If there is an thing on earth that gets a man's goat and makes him hate a girl, it is for her to call him up in_ business ho It gets him in bad with his employer, and I have known young men who lost good jobs because girls kept dragging them away from their work to talk foolishness owver the wire. Don't do it. So shall men rise up and call you blessed. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright.) Lovely collars of fur for Spring| are of this sort: a band of softest| white fur just big enough t6 go| about the throat, high encugh to“fil | the epace between ears and shoul- ders, between chin and chest; and fastened at the stde with a big pink silk rose; or, if you choose, some and the purest cane TheFlavor is Roasted In! "WHITE | HOUSE COFFEE | DWINELL-WRIGHT COMPANY BOSTON - R/ ECEERN 1O @rRonTENac, GovERNOR OF NEW FRANCE, SENT HIS SAVAGE INDIAN ALLIES TOATIACK THE NEW ENGLAND BORDER SETTLEMENYS.~ IN 1690 A FORCE OF FRENCH AND INDIANS ATYACKED SCHENECTADY, NEW YORK AND MASSACRED THE SETTLERS Snow-White looked about the little had run for Every- but quite In the middle stood house into which ehe shelter from fhe dark forest thing secmed very small neat and dainty. A 7O REMOVE ANY FURTHER DANGER. OF FRENCH AND TNDIAN ATTACKS — © A BODY OF MASSACHUSETTS MEN LAID SIEGE 70 QUEBEC BUT FAILED TO TAKE THE TOWN. she trembled with hide behind a clos fright, t door Here's the strange-looking dwarf ‘ Snow-White glimpsed through the window. Color his sult and cap brown ’nnd bis little jacket bright green, | with a red and green scarf and black | | beara | H (Copyrigbe, 1925.) 1 i The Way With Fish. | Fish is not used enough in most | households. Both from the point of | view of providing a substitute for meat, and from the point of view of economy, if is a good thing. To be ! sure, some women disltke cooking fish very strongly—that is, they dis- ! like washing up tho cooking utensils after cooking it. But plenty of good | | soap and hot water ought to make this consideration unimportant. i The thing to do is to watch the | { markets and cheap. The catc | sometimes becaus | large influx of a ce; in the city markets, son - cause of a catch of local fish in the gmaller towns, there will be real fisl bargains. Keep fish always | in a covered | enameled or ol that { it cold. FEATURES. | 7oncn.ncw' il sem EDMuND i} A l" i il LT b [0 e TREATY oF RySwick (1697)BR0u6HT PPACE BETEsN| FRANGE AND ENGLAND BUT THE BORDER RAIDS CONTINUED., THAY SAME YEAQ A FORCE OF FRENCH AND ThOISNS caP- TURED HAVERHILL T AMONG THE CAPTIVE'S CARRIED OFF 7O CANADA WAS HANNAH DUSTIN.— WAITING FOR M8R. CHAMCE SHE KILLED HER GUARDS AND ESCAPED . HER. BRAVERY WAS AN INSPIRATION TO'ALL FRONTIER WOMEN . or stone keep it i let it stand ware dish | an hour 5 trigerator Keep | immediately even|cold closet. Degendable Quality "SALADA T E A Always possesses a fresh and wuni- formly delicious flavor. Accept no substitut. Insist upon SALADA. is, don't Don't for p Ut are chosen with Critical care — a little table with a white cover over | it, and seven little plates and seven little mugs upon it. Against the wall were seven little beds ranged in a row. Suddenly shs heard steps outs‘.delf and through the window she caught a | glimpse of some one coming. At once DAVIS BAKING POWDER You eat sugar at practically every meal. You can be certain of absolute cleanliness and highest quality by asking always for Domino Package Sugars. The convenient packages protect against exposure toinsects, dirt or handling. They ensure full weight— sugar. Ametican Bugar Refining Company “Sweeten it with Domino” Grasulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, Brown: Domino Syrup: Molasses Moreand more of Washington’s critical hestesses daily select Rice’s umasnal loaf and richness. s finished loaf.. IN storeand market many of Washing- ton’s capable hostesses personally choose the food that will be served on their tables. K Fine bread they insist on for their families and guests. And now one unusual loaf is satisfy ing all their requirements. More and more Rice’s bread is being selected daily by the critical hostesses of Wash- ington. F Made with the verylingredients they know are used in their own kitchens. And tested daily at City Baking Institute. Alwaysrich, fine flavored, beautifully baked. Order thisunusual loaf from your grocer today. Tested Daily 1, Evéry ingredient is tested by | City Baking Institute for purity 2 The processes .of blending, mixing and baking are checked for. uniformity so that there can never be any variation in the The finished loaf is tested for richness, moisture, fineness. of Connoisseurs of finefood, Washington Bostesses take pride in serving Rice's with thety carefully planned meals

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