Evening Star Newspaper, March 4, 1925, Page 35

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¢ Role of Stockings in the Wardrobe BY MARY Never have stockings been more important than they are at the pres- ent time. . Stockin shoes and gloves—hut especially stockings—are and will be so important, in the opinion of keen observers, that the woman who dresses on a small al- Inwance is going to have & hard time of it trying to save enough money wherewith to buy frocks, w hats. You simply can't | WOMAN'’S about PAGE. MARSHALL, gin with, but rolled stockings never looked so trim as those that were supported in some other way. Hence the present vogue for garters. There are now hose supporters hanging from a belt for the woman who doesn't like round garters and who | doesn’t wear a corset Don’t be surprised if colored stock- | ings are worn this Spring and Sum- mer. Not bright colors, but soft pas- tel tones, which must be worn to match the tone predominant in the costume. For instance, if you wear sport frock of white with narrow leather belt and a green hat, your stockings should be of a green. If vou have violet | on your frock, then your s should be of a pastel tone &reen then pastel trimmin stockin of violet i The present vogue of the so-called blonde satin slipper has brought a demgand for bionde-toned stockings to match. The black stock- ing has become o much a thing of | the past that the other day when a| well known motion picture actres arrived from Kurope wearing them the event was treated as news. It| was as sensational as if she had car- ried & chimpanzee or a tame duck for | a pet. These black stockings, how- ever, were so sheer as to show the flesh tones very distinctly. (Copyright.) ittle Benny « Note Book _— Y THE EVENING STAR, \DorothyDix Parents Who Are Shocked at Modern Customs and Try to Protect Daughters by Keeping Them Ignorant of World. WASHINGTON, Says Igno- rance of the World Isw't Innocence The “Good 0ld Days’— and Now T YOUNG girl writes me that her parents have become so obsessed by what they call “the evil of the times” that they will not let her go to any place of amusement or associate with any young men. She Is not permitted to stir from the house without mother by her side to guard and protect her. She is not even permitted to read a paper or a book until it has been carefully censored. This is hard on the girl, and you do not wonder that she thinks she Is ill treated. She is just as much a prisoner as if she had committed a crime and was locked up in a cell, although her only offense 1s being 18 instead of 80. She is being denied all the pleasures that belong to girlhood and which she sces other girls enjoying. Worst of all, she is being doomed to a drab spinsterhood because her father and mother are cutting her off from every opportunity of love and marriage. Of course, the parents have only their daughter's good at heart, and they are taking these drastic measures to protect her against what they belleve Is a great danger. But their attitude is not only wrong but foolish. It is wrong because it is such a cruel thing to deprive a girl of her playtime of life, which is so short at best, and it is foolish to think that you cun keep her shut away from the world into which she has been born, and in which she must live. Sooner or later she must come to grips with life as it is today, not as it was in her father's time or her grandfather's time. And how is she to meet it if she knows nothing of it? How Is she to judge men If they are as unknown to her as if they were inhabitants of the planet Mars? How is she to stand alone on her own feet if she has always been held by the hand and never suffered to take a step on her own initiative? PR GNORANCE is not innocence. Indeed the less ignorant a girl is the more apt she is to stay innocent the country city, who know their way about.. Therefore it seems to me that the way to protect a girl is not to put blinders on her, but to open her eves to all the dangers that lie along her pathway, and to point out to her all the halrpin curves and dangerous turns on which she must slow down and put on her brakes, or else she is likely to skid over the brink | and ma | sampels of Willyum, the erly next week Pop was smoking to himsel was looking at some Roods, saving, O dear, dressmaker is coming and 1 havent decided wich of these | 3 colors to select, my goodniss I can't put it off eny longer | My goodnis no, pop sed | Well I wunt you to help me decide, | yum, ma sed All rife, Im good at that sort of thing. Im good at enything, ask me enything you wunt to know, pop sed. | Well 1 dont wunt to know eny- | thing speshil, that is T wunt to kno wich of these 3 colors is the best.| thats wat I wunt to know, and Ive | thawt about it and thawt about it till | I can hardly tell one from the other, and now I jest think 11l leave it to| you, wichever you say, ma sed. | Well thats easy, take the blue one, | w IGHT, FLESH- KINC 1- | tHINESTONES, | OF VELVET, | TONE-CENTERED | MATCH FINE STOCKINGS, WITH LAC CLOX, AND GOLD MESH {INGS WITH GARTERS OF GOLD CLOTH EDGED WITH LACE. | SLOW, LEFT, PINK AND BROWN STRIPED SILK STOCK- IN WITH STRIPED RIBBON GARTERS IN SAME COLOR, AND, RIGHT, GARTERS WORN AROUND | WAIST | COLORED SILK BROIDERED IN WITH RTERS WITH RHIN FLOWERS 1 OPENWORK well shod and This demands | 0od material n and tint suited | dressed without be well stockinged stockings that are of &nd that are of desig to the with which they are| worn must fit perfectly, which, of rursge, means that they must be well held up by garters or | hose rters. The custom of roll- | ing the is a flap- | » waning dia » be- | They be sup| stockir vich rhaps ick that seem rat It to her devilish 1 Snow-White in Hiding. Snow-White stood trembling with fear behind the closet door as she heard some one step into the room.| There was a moment's silence. Then again the door opened and some one | else came in ‘Somebody has been in the house,” saild a strange, rumbling voice. “Look! Some one has taken a drink out of my mug.” And some one has taken a bite off my plate!” cried the other. This was true, for Snow-White had been very hungry and thirsty when che entered. Whoever hroke in here.” said the first one around.” Snow-White ath as they may still be “Let's look was nearly scared to d started their search. | Color the second dwarf’s suit gray, with a dark blve jacket which has a lighter blue collar. His beard is brown (Copyright, 1925.) Tamale Pie. Spread a layer of yellow cornmeal mush about an inch thick on a dinner plate and set aside to cool. Use three-fourths of a pound of good steak made into small cakes, which are dipped in flour and fried brown in two tablespoonfuls of hot fat. Fry brown in the same fat one medium sized onion cut fine, Pour into this two large cupfuls of canned tomatoes, season with salt, butter and bits of red pepper skin and a few seeds Canned red pepper should be used sparingly Let this combination sim- mer for about half an hour, then add the meat, cook for about 10 minutes, then pour into a granite baking dish. Cover with cornmeal mush. Dot with butter and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Bake in a moderate oven | this brown, wen in doubt choose blue, thats the | motto that has guided me through | life and Im considered the 3rd best dressed man at the office, pop sed. Now 1 think thats very sensible ad- vice, and yet this gray appeels to me too, theres somethin about gray that izzent ixactly common and yet izzent precisely too mutch out of the ordnerry, I like this gray, dont you Willyum, ma sed Wy ves, pop sed. Blue is blue and gray is gray and never the twain shall meet, and yet their both good it you know wat I mean, he sed. Well Im glad you seleeted it be- cause Ive practically decided on it, the ony thing that holds me back is I must confess I do_like this brown, don’t you? ma sed. O ves, I like the brown all O yes, pop sed Well then 1 think Ill take it, Im so glad it struck your fancy, after all a mans judgment is wat a woman needs in these matters, after all, ma sed. Im so glad 1 called on you, Willyum, she sed Holp aid, pop sed. And he got behind the sporting page and stayed there | | rite, What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Pisces. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are very favorable until about noon, and | counsel prosecution of the efforts that are initiated under today’'s benign auspices. Later on in the day condi- | tions change, and, although they do| not become definitely adverse. they | indicate that a partial relaxation of | effort will prove beneficial. It is an | ideal occasion for reviewing what has | already been accomplished and as- | certaining by careful deliberation and | thought what mistakes, if any, have been made, or what is the next best step to insure unqualified success The vibrations are not very stimulat- ing, but they indicate a general sens of contentment and freedom from worry and anxiety. They will i greater satisfaction with one's than with one’s surrounding: A child born tomorrow w mally healthy, and its little ailments | at no time need cause either misgiv- ings or worry. With good environ- ment, it will, without any special care or attention, develop in a very sati factory manner, so far as physi conditions are concerned. Its disposi- tion will be rather unruly, and it will*show very little inclination to be guided my ordinary discipline. Stern and decided corrective measures will have to be emploved. Its character will be self-willed and masterful “without being dominating. In other words, it will always want its own way, regardless of the merits of that way. It will be very determined, and only uplifting influences in its early days will make of this child a lov- able and a loving character. If tomorrow is your birthday an- niversary, you possess very strong convictions, but would rather agree with those expressing opinions dia- metrically opposed to yours than risk the chance of giving offense. It is neither desirable nor politic to utter your own ideas and dogmas in sea- son and out of season. Neither is it morally right to acquiesce, even though silently, in views that you Know are wrong. You are very affectionate, as well as demonstrative, and are unduly sen- sitive to the absence of outward show of affection in others. Owing to your lack of moral courage and your super-sensi eness, you do not get out of life that happiness of mind to which you, with your many engaging traits, are entitled Well known persons born on this date are Frederick Cozzens, humor- ist; Isaac I. Hayes, Arctic explorer; Hans Balatka, musician: Howard Pyle, artist and author; Arthur Foote, composer, and Richard K. Munkit- trick. author. al | are many histories,” says Tallevrand | a | believe he | work is done on time, trouble waits| | experienced sailor on a full sized sea. As for the so-called “evils of the time,” they are greatly exaggerated, and a girl is in no mors danger now than her mother was in her day. “There “but only one human nature, hasn't changed from generation to generation There has always been the same old stock line of temptations. Each age has dressed them up in different guises, but they have been the same old allure of passion and drink and gambling. Not a new vice has been invented And always the weak and wicked have fallen, and the strong and steadfast have stood upright. There has never been a woman from Eve down who hasn't found the serpent when she looked for it, nor one who couldn't have gotten away from the snake in the grass if she had wanted to and had run. As for girls being in more danger from men now than they used to be. that theory has not a leg to stand on time or grandmother's day. They are not so easily deceived majority of young women labor side by side with men in offices and shops and factories, and they get a working knowledge of the masculine sex that is an understudy of their guardian angel when It comes to protecting their virtue 5 . HE bobbed-haired little flapper proposition, who knows how to look after herself: and while she looks if she was headed straight for disaster, the casualty list is no greater in her ranks than it was among the prunes and prisms misses in the Victorian era. Secondly, girls are in less danger from men now be in former times, because men have more respect for used to, and a new comradeship exists between the sexes than they used to women than' they The belief that every employer casts an amorous eve on his pretty stenographer and that she is in continual deadly peril of her honor is utter nonsense. Evil men there are and alw respect the girl who is trying to make an honest living, and they try to help | her instead of seeking her downfall. As for the little things that seem horrified at the things its children did. But after all why is an automobile more immoral than a side-bar buggy with a fast trotter? Or why is the two-step worse than the three-step? What advantage had hoop skirts over short skirts? Modesty is in the eye of the beholder, and conventions are right or wrong, just as they seem to us. And, anyway, the world as it is 1= the world we have got to live in not teach girls to make the best of it? DORC THY DIX. (Copyright.) Qur Children—By Angelo Patri tightening it at the wrong time. The adolescent simply must have a bit of freedom to expand the self that is in him, or he will be distorted much as the bud that is held too tightly in its sheathing. A little slack, please. 5o shocking, every age has been so why A Little Slack. When the child 1= very little and entirely dependent upon those about him for his protection and happiness, his guardians have full opportunity to direct him toward the way they should go. Then is the time to do it, not when he is hegln-l ning to discover his self and all its| possibiliti Childhood is the period for impress- ing the code that is to be the ruling | principle of the individual for the re- mainder of his life. It is then that a child may be taught to love, honor and serve goodness. To that end. his conduct, his manners, his education in general are bent. Unless that Mr. Patri will give personal attention to inquiries from parents and achool teachers on the care and development of children. Write him in care of this paper, iaclosing self-ad dressed, stamped earelope for reply. Vegetable Salad. One of the tea rooms in a big city makes a specialty of this vegetable salad: Lettuce as a foundation. In one lettuce cup a big spoonful of po- tato salad mixed with mayonnaise; in another a pile of diced pickled beets. Then a slice of tomato, a spoonful of string beans and two stalks of asparagus. The whole is dressed with French dressing. just around the corner. When childhood merges into youth there arises in the soul and mind of a child a sort of choppy sea, such as one meets between the headlands on a high and windy day. Hither and thither the child is tossed, a most in- Mae Allison Divorced. LOS ANGELES, Calif, March 4— Mae Allison, moving picture actress of Hollywood and New York, was He has within him the proud knowl- edge that he is master of the craft Honor and dignity demand that he It is the unsophisticated little girls from | who stumble oftener Into the pit than the wise Janes of the | and that In the first place, girls are far more | able to protect themselves against evil men than they used to be in mother's The great | is, in the slang of the day, a hard-boiled | | s have been, but 939 men out of 1,000 granted a divorce from Robert Ellis Reel, a character actor, yesterday She charged desertion. weather the storm under his own power. He will even forget the threatening disaster and fight for his personality if his right Is disputed Don't dispute it. When he starts out on his venture tie a good stout line and a life pre- server to him when he is not looking. Then let out the slack. You have to do so, though your knees shake and your teeth chatter for fear. He must have the experience of facing and conquering the difficulties and the | dangers. He has to have the feel of personal triumph when he rides on the crest. Stay back and wish him well. Cheer him on and keep an eye on your life line. Only when he is going down for the third time or throws up his hands do vou pull in the slack and haul him ashore for repairs. Once they are made, launch him again When vour boy or girl is changing his attitude toward you and the life about him, you become only & symbol to him. So just summon your memo- ries. Review honestly your early youth and remind yourself that one person differs very little from an- other In the way of his growth. All that you have done this child will do with a difference. But that differ- ence s not fundamental; it is just characteristic, which is another mat- ., ter entirely. Put your trust in the teaching he has had and in the in- heritance which is his. Comfort your- self with the truth that each gen- eration is more Intelligent than the last, and let out the slack. Children must make mistakes be- cause they were not born full sized, either spiritually or physically. They have the right to make mistakes and | the rigat to have them corrected, | gently and wisely. Try to let go your hold a little instead of frantically Freshness Preserved “SALADA" T E A ismorerichdrawing & delicious than ordinary freshness is until thoroughly heated and nearly browned. air-tight S reserved in the ILADA pacKet. meatless menus. savoriness your fér more! mezo tea since the more delicious flavor in a satisfying Lenten dish How frequently you turn to cheese for the substantial dish in this season of Recipesnew and enticing tempt you. But have you noticed the special when it’s the richer and creamier cheese that goes to make them? * Try Phenix loaf cheese, tender, creamy, savory, for your most t:amous cheese dish. See how the family ask A new way of mellowing developed A Phenix CHEESE Made by the makers of “Philadelphia” Cream Cheese D. ¢, WEDNESDAY, MARCH % - L\l the animals in this one are wild, but onel Find them! CAN YOuU TELL ME WH IT'5 A BIG BUG WHAT STARST UP IN FRONT ANP SITS prnt POWN IN BACK . eoryminT 92T VERTICATL, | -A BIRY WiTH A rep | DORTIONT BREAST. [Puzzle A5 2 -NEAR To 3-A BIG, CLUMSY ANIMAL 4 - PRONOUN. S-A REPTILE 8 - Large AUSTRALAN BIXY 9-A G 13- MONEY WITH WHICH TO RUN THE GOVERNMT (8 14-CONSUMED | HORIZONTAL ) -5mall, HARE-LIKE animals. 6-UNTIL NOw. 7-TS EXIST. 9-EXCLAMATION °f Surprise. 10-SUFFIX MEANING IN 11-CORRELT (AB) 1Z-FRUIT WITHIN A SHELL. 14:MO OF YEARS one has hved 15-A SCIENCE 16°A SLY ANIMAL IT-KINV OF LARGE DEER HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. The Wedding Ring. On with your wedding ring, my | feminist sister, who with tears in vour eyes stamped your little foot E Pkl This arbor just outside the kitchen door is a most delightful feature that might added to any small home where the kitchen door opens on the ground level. It is huilt over a little bricked terrace, and there is a com- | fortable seat on either side. A heavy| Dutchman’s pipe vine, trained over it, makes a perfect screen, and along the and said: “For the cause! I will be no maa's chattel’” while You ten- derly tied it around under your neck and tucked the ribbon ben blouse! For wher the marriage ring is you do not choose to make it | %0, a sign of bondage. It does not| signify your subjection, whether your husband wears one or not. And according to its original significance you might prefer that it remain a | one-sided tradition The use of the ring was intro- duced by the Egyptians. It implied | the endowment upon the bride of all the husband's possessions. and gave to the Egyptian woman the right to ue commands with the same authority as her spouse | | The ring. as a symbol. has at all times had a dignified and noble con- | notation. By its form it signified | | eternity, and its use in the wedding service is not without this thought As a pledge the ring dates back to the ancients. when its delivery signi- fied a transfer of authority and car- ried with it the power of the donor. “And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, ‘See. of Egypt “And Pharaoh took off his from his hand and put it Joseph's hand."—Gen., xii, 41, 42 The ring as a marriage token today ring upon outar edges a climbing Dorothy Per- kins rose promises June delights | 1acks none of these sentiments, but| It makes a pleasant place to rest|to the Egyptians we owe the custom | during a lull in kitchen duties or to] and its significance do a bit of needlework on a 1azy | ————m—mmm—— Spring afterncon. There is a lisht| Ryined By Ruu or Ink. No, indeed! Rust and ink stains are little folding table in the kitchen | that can be brought out to convert| the arbor into an outdoor dining |mow as easily removed as dirt. Just | room. And when’ day is dons it IS|dip the Erusticator Pencil (an old such a peaceful, pretty place to rest|product in new form) into water, | and enjoy the quiet garden. | moisten the rust stain and it disappears | (Copsright.) before your eyes. Rinse in clear water | and the stain is gone forever. ERUSTI. ana i CATOR eats rust but B na Almond Pnddmg. has absolutely no harmful Prepare an English almond cream | effect on any fabric or on by blanching one pint of almonds,|fast colors. One Erusti- pounding them fine and mixing them | cator Pencil lasts several with one pint of cream slightly |seasons. At the principal sweetened. Peel six ripe bananas and | grug and dry goods stores pulp them. Add the puree to the al-|of washington. mond cream, with one teaspoonful of 2 freezer can. Freeze to a soft mush and serve with whipped cream. SHIRRED EGgs 6 very thin slic Phenix Club Cheese 3 ths. ch, CheeyPPed Club 2ths. cream milke 2 ths. butter X teasy or top Cheese of a by the Phenix Cheese Corporation, for generations makers of fine table cheeses gives this cheese its delicate savor and creamy richness. Get a pound of it today. You wili find in it a flavor you never hoped for in the familiar American, Swiss or Pimiento! 1In half-pound and pound packages as well as in five-pound loaves. At grocers and delicatessens everywhere. favorite dishes have » » “Delicious Cheese Recipes” Send for it FREE. New and appetizing suggestions for hot dishes, salads and sandwiches. Dept. E, The Phenix Cheese Corporation, 345 Greenwich Street, New York City. I have set thee over all the land | FEATUR ES. SPRINGTIME BY D. C. PEATTIE. The Hepatica. Watch for hepaticas these There is a prize awaiting finds the first one. The prize is some- thing quite as good ay gold—the joy of finding something blooming in the woods at this time. Except for one or two trees, it can probably lay claim to being the ver. first thing fo bloom around Washing- ton. The first warm davs, when the sun, beating down through leafless trees, quickly warms up the black loam in which hepaticas like to grow are likely to bring out the delicate blossoms on their hairy stems. They are really not compared with garden crocus and snowdrop, aped the eyes of men and %o who are busy with m problems. | But the schoolchild generally sees the first hepatica. He is more watchful of the little things, and without other preoccupations time to for these frail treasures that grow in | by-paths and on cross-lot sho The easlest way to find the hepatica is to watch for the leathery, ever- green, three-lobed leaf, beside which the blossoms rise. In olden days the three lobes were thought to symbol- e the three-lobed liver, and hepatica very showy flowers, like and they often uts | was used by superstitious physicians s a medicine STEAMSHIPS. BELGENLAND Apr. 21 LAPLAND Apr. 28 Regularly Thereafter PLYMOUTH CHERBOURG { ANTWERP Intermediate Season Rates RED STAR LINE International Mercantile Marine Company To R. M. Hicks, Manager, 1205 F St. N.W., Wash., D. C., or any authorized Steamship Agent The flowers are most sometimes they monest shade, and again they be rose-purple. More rarely finds them nearly white. As number of petals, or, more sepals, which hepatica has, there may be only but if you look widely you will find them or even up to 12 ~ EDUCATIONA variable, for are blue, the com- may still one for t exactly 5 Strayer College “For Business Training” 721 13th St Main 3430 1828883228888838221 gt ACE INSTITUT Accountancy and Business Administration Graduates of the Institute where n profession (C.P. A) and ness. Lateafier are availabie Telephone Main 8260 for Bulletin Transportation Building, 17th and H Btreets, N.W.. Washington. D. C. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION WASHINGTON CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC 1408 New Hampshire Ave. Adjeining No. 1 Dupont Cirele VIOLIN—PIANO—VOICE AND 35 OTHER DEPARTMENTS EDGAR T. PAUL—Voice (Now Teaching as a Member of Our aculty SPECIAL CHILDEEN'S DEPARTMENT MAIN 7858 YEAR BOOK MAILED PIANO, SAXOPHONE, BANJO Rag, Jazz, Popular Music in 20 lessoms. Free lessons if you buy instruments here. Bend_for free booklet. 1322 G st mow. M; m re found evers- | countancy practics ecutive o s o Bus; won and early-evening cl " Personally Conducted All Expense EUROPEAN TOUR July 2nd to August 30th Ask for Itinera: OBER’S Steamship and Tourist Agency {‘2“ H fl. \.\‘ Main 3347 STEAMSHIPS. INAUGURAL VISITORS— Will Enjoy a SIDE TRIP Bv Water to HISTORIC EASTERN VIRGINIA POTOM \l"l'l’;\ ER AND CHESAPEAKE BAY OLD POINT COMFORT NORFOLK VIRGINIA BEACH Modern Steel Palace Steamers Daily 6:30 P.M. 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Total of 17 days, TEXAS LINE Direct and Economical Way to Southwestern Cities Albuquerque. .. $95.15 Austin 70.73 Beaumont 64.80 Dallas. 73.34 ElPaso____ 79.55 Fort Worth. Galveston.._ Houston... Los Angeles. Oklahoma City 79.58 Phoenix San Antonio.__ San Diego... San Francisco.. Tucson oo $73.34 63.00 . 64.80 . 107.27 —— $95.22 7237 107.27 108.90 90.86 The above one-way fares from New York include stateroom accommodations and meals on steamer. Steamners call at Key West, Fla., th “American Gibralter”, affording the following optional interesting side trip: ‘To Havana and return from Key West. To Tampa and return from Key West ___ ‘To Miami and return from Key West . To Palm Beach and return from Key West... $30.00 - 30.70 14.36 . 19.76 Fast-Through Package Car Freight Service to all Southwestern points. Apply at Any Local Ticket Agency, or Write to A. W. PYE, Passenger Traffic Manager, Pier 36, North River, New York

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