Evening Star Newspaper, May 8, 1925, Page 41

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FEATURES. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D, ., FRIDAY, MAY 1925. WOMAN’S PAGE. 41 Children Who Imitate Their Elders COLOR CUT-OUT o D t k D Mo Xy Neighbaor Says: [ ' BEAUTY CHATS sv sone xexr ronses ———————— - : Drastic fried, should be cooked gently BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. HANSEL AND GRETEL. Mpriats Oro y lx 3 This’ makes the difference bo- New Laws 2 tween crisp and hardened bacon. {Lopk ecritically at the hands of a [ If correctly cooked the fat must Well Kept Hands. {your friends; the perfect shape de To most children it is truie that “all| they are not behaving properly. Are | 3 be white when cold. Hands are an index of character; |scribed at such length infold-fashioned the world's a stage.” Imitation is|they not acting as they have seen ’Q 1 "1 o1 1 e THh A *a 1o When making turnback cuffs they indicate carele: £s or fas: novels is hardly ever to be found. As amonz their strongest characteristics | others act? Why should they be re- It’s a Crime to Permit Minors, Who Cannot Slb“ for a man’s shirt, sew the small- !n,::;: ";‘:"‘"t’,o '.‘l a ,"N',, lo to over.|@ Tace, we Americans have bad hands | I est sized snap on the cuff about and good feet: but r hands show one with its faults as well as its | buked? Rercd e g™ e i 5 . o o o (e n rtucs. Much of what children do | Aland Bosltien: Jusiness Documents, to Enter Most Sacred one inch from the edge and at | (C/Phasize the importance of keebin | paeacter if not beauts s the proper place on the sleeve o e Bl o of 0 an be traced to their tryir act | | : i J = . . sl A mother is often put in an ex-| > e 3 s ¢ | per | oY |they show up not only the character| grownaup. - Such clever lit- |, L 0 wiward position in correct and Binding Contract of All [ | &g vou will find this quite & | |6fthe woman horself, bue her mothed Sweet Pickled Apples o ] 41 ¢ vho has copied ctions 1 3 el ! no s with regret e | Ing a ehild who has copied the actions I | lave to be tacked after each pENTa W hat perkon e or ‘ahe | of another member of the family. For ‘ || i -, Good s show goo s ‘ = . = instance, how can she succes: v r "THE Russell Sage F 4 e 3 H it a 4 d blood amily of what, last ge nd are delicious to se wdying.” It becomes a e e 1155 Russell Saze Foundation. which has been making an exhaustive study ThiE ot L theoiios e | (Ee Rl e iy of et laat £en he has seen his father do? How can y of child marriage in the United States, reports that there are more than} | your hands when making pastry. | |men. Th S e i ot two-thirds of a million womeh in this country today who were less than | | Use a silver fork, which divides | | |ing like the mother? To draw the < {16 year: ze when they . and that the great majority of _:how-fli and mixes very quickly. This is i hands. ine GF Altintiion: WRICKHARL . contr; to popular belief tive whites or native parentage. Iurther-| | eacier than chopping lard inand | [pud, g e matte: vide the thing that Is correct for the more, that the number of these child-brides is increased each year by saves using chopping tray. b B0 e i thousunds of additional child marriages. e . In u number of the States the murriageable age for girls is set at 12 B mrions HEoo o vears, and 14 for boys. And in 14 States it is legally possible for a girl to : > I T D at an carlier age than that at which she s permitted to become a | | Beherated will Soon serd up biue | |them. Moderutely pointed, modetately | e appies in the at an early age, losee faith in parental a8 flames. But you must be more | [long nails will make fat Jittie fingers | W2t Lhey c& infailibility nor authority. | s . 3 3 careful of the fire during the em longer and therefore slir . | This pi Ji6 COL ReptICITFGUET IDG aae) weithe | _These will be startling facts to most persons. who hold up hands of day, as it will burn onut more 50 pointed nalls, however, will dwarf | POTK- R ilok i TOlioasase . Sinia ! [ horror when they hear of the child martiages of India and smugly believe | | quickiy. |the fingers; you must exper D = [that no such heathen practice could obtain in their own enlightened and e : s M sl cotourenycsy M. S Christian land, but my own observation bears out the truth of these findings. oS curetul when buying pillow | | fnd Just how to Cream Tapioca Wil e i ey il For among the tens of thousands of letters that I get from women living | SIS to allow the pillows to lip | |70, ; ; , "nalls| Soal three tablespoontuls of ta is likely, also, that the action reflects | i il Bomces stuffed, they will wear out very | [!8 well shaped sl cne t of boiling unpleasantly on others. y 13 yea i Qnickly. |set. i : e 2 I 1f the skin is kept smoot 1 Sea To Increase Respect. (QVER and over I get a letter that reads | e B v Mothers who reprove their children 5 s for several genera- | family, | These are somethi | Selec 1 be that, and yet work from a shaker to The gas thus | (done to & apparent shape of | = pon am a girl of 20, and have three children. When 1 married T thought 1 | nails : Sy together, ¢ such behavior must try to make loved my husband. but it was a child’s fancy, and now I have met the real nicely pe S will look | mixture, and let em have so much respect for their R b0 seiany miate and my HeartPib it e petwar 10ve ot Him and. lova] | WhatllomorrowMeansitbioui | {221, DR/ sned.: rdinar | flavor with vanil ther that they will think it permis of my children.” | |shape, That's as much as any one can | of four eggs to ble for him to do things which they Often and often they write: | BY MARY BLAKE. |do either toward improving bad hands | tablespox s of forbidden ‘I am 19 and have been married five years, and have two babies that tie lor making pretty ones still more When you get as big and know | me down at home. 1 am miserable because I want to go around and dance S e | Hiw auile’ exongh, nao much then you may do as | and have fun like other girls, and my husband quarrels and says I neglect | Tomorrow's planetery aspects are | 1 is a way of putting it that is ! the children |slightly adverse during the early hours fv the chilc . If the | of the morning, but shov speaks to the Often they write ey ston , Uphold the mother's action in | “Iam a girl of 16, and have a t nd it's sickly, and I'm sick most of | ¥ fnse totore some manner. Children must feel that | the time. My husband runs around at night with the boys and girls and has |18 maintained through the ain | parents have special privileges and Gretel Wins. a good time, and he finds fault with the cooking. and says I never give hnu;'\f the day, until, after dusk, the e respected e | ing fit to and I have to stay at home all the and work, anc i 5 i o : e Y- a little stable. Then she built a | TRE RUECES 5 |t | s e e No more pitiful or tragic human documents were ever written than these | and exhilarating. No decision of im find real satisfaction in from their children | qotCreq ICrES 15‘ do it said | letters. from girls who married too soon. and they make an indictment of our | portance should be taken during the | m.’ig“ 3 u‘n‘llfl:?; ‘nk:;‘\r‘;w':‘)i retel. “How shall T get i ‘]A‘Il‘:lfilflhl r]; mit such an iniquity as child ma se that is written in tears| pomnine as the indications denote | selves are larger and stronger is tc Staal AN hlood. 8 . that you fon will not be danger the authority which should | .potUPld goosel” eaid the old woman, It is a shame and a disgrace that any eivilized country should tolerate | {14t Your wielon will not be keen still be theirs when the children are 5 AN 3 2 child marriage and permit its boys and girls to wreck their lives by entering | * Jour. Jucsment .as. & natursk own |get in myself:” and she stooped down | ;15 ynions for which they are totally unfit in either mind, or body, or | consequence |is e to suffer, B. |and put her head in the oven’s mouth | b2 RS " it y i e PAEEN 7 77| Later on in the day aggressive and : Finding Flaws to Copy. to show Gretel. Immediately Grete o forceful action may be taken wtih 5 Children’s whims are often e: ANeRLar s SIAh Sua e e oo | And it is almost sardonically humorous that we should permit minors, | 8Very prospect of ultimate success. I traceable to a peculiarity in .\ume;‘f’:; “’_‘;‘o‘l‘::e aun ”‘f witch had made { who cannot make any other binding trade, to enter into the marriage] > "1‘“ 2 propitious occasion for : 810 member of the family or circle | f0F G contract, which is the most sacred t A aotuitles dnd oL apOrEsand mat o stance J was mo.| Then Gretel ran straight to Hansel ed and binding contract of al pastimes. P “Hansel, | { The t 1s brought H 3 "B, heneter & pictars. s (470 0poned he stabie doer. “HAmEL | N0 boy af 16 o 17 is permitied 1o andie his own property or mortgase a | 71 CHAG (8t fy brovnt nio the The flavor is rich, pure and en of one very pretty little girl, = - kil house and lot. but he can tak whofe future, his happiness, his i r per Snoa s oo . s - D D e &0 | witchEidesd siderable amount of sickness in its in. | oot Wiwals made i appear that B [ suceess or fafture. his ambitions wnd. gamile with them n the jnatrimonial | scrable amount of sickness n its in-| - Jelicious. Insist upon Salada. one cheek was swollen. The mother lottery. No girl of 15 is thought to have enough judgment to pick out her | 8 lly discovered that the child al.| . (Here is the wicked old witch. | °Uet¥. B0 £ 0 o 8 Ui 33 : noug S g Ylcan be avolded by ful nutrition | e i o Ao o | Color her dress green, her apron, cap | OWR ¢ but she can pick and unremitting vigilance. Tempera-| BlacK, Greem or Mixed Blends her mouth, with the object of trying |and scarf dark blue. Her crutches It is inevitable that the . 2 e. The|Tentally, it will be self-willed and| to look like her grandmother, who |Should be brown.) TP b ey e jtitlio heavy | o atlE: U8 personatity sulll be] had trouble with her artificial teeth! (Copyright, 1625.) burden that matrimony lays upon them. No g alitier tor | Sariclently. megnetlo | ve these| The mother explained that littl Siteh ot of Fanthiethoo: oaleanding ChErsolenisues ofiuyie re not made more beautiful by | o girl of 15, or 1 7 knos hat she is going to want in a husband | el s e tions, 11“:’.‘rlnKL‘::m:tz{‘l::r the | when she is u gro woman - v‘w"»(m in change \]inu a8 much as Tk stba i Parents ave indeed fortunate who ! - ear| Y B e e e iilalderbe fecs q have children who pick out the best | BY JEAN NEWTON. IEdR s s e e - ! [ comet oo nie d not the worst fe s of those ! einain in love with their husbanc 1 Gl th iito copy. UIL S oftenijtne i * T | infinitesimal. They w their girlish fancies. and then comes the heart- |\, L s e » let actions go unno-| Prince of Wales' Title. | breaking traged, \atur s the man she does fall in | . is realized that the chil. | We are so accustomed to the eldest blove with, er breaks in vain regret or else becomes one of | .} 5 t copring, just acting a|son of the sovereign of Great t- | the > fill the divor ou will onl, Their worlds change so rapidly |ain, the heir to the English throne ’ . e sten 1L Jomaro, h all the new things they discover | being called the *Prince Wales fe Sriie 17 bring e »f motherhood the |2I0nE in & rut created by e apt to change with |that we think no more of inquiring JarCrnrbherit Soo COMENTILG mUSLe = | about any one of his varlous Chris it 3 . @ ats to be dancing at night instead | g o BTl - H {names. Yet the title reve: ¢ i 5 R e o tAaaiar b little prayers. | €onhol » 0 y 3 J Ramble Around South AMEriCa | s eveor roearch w fuieroseing | “2King the colie and to be skylarking Instead of bearing litle prayere;| which are er it and i . e s s ble_ und disgontented and veevish, and in all the work | ion'o oo Givice of uihers g GOLD STRIPE | The title dles” wa 3 2 e 2 {1¢ you trust your own BY RIPLEY. oDt o TBOL b AT aa T oo e | T : » - | give, latitude to vo . 1 son, Prince Edward, rward Ed 4 St - i |ity and inherent tiv ult CHOCOLATES S ward 11, who was born at Car : e re £ the ell Sa 2 x | marriage should | your success Walss. Ihe Mistors. of Wil o | wake us all up to the dar t it ril that menaces |~ Your hum - | the reign of Edward I had been one | every household in whict ond - L _ {veloped. You enjoy r full pound 60c of resistance und struggle in the re- | Let us get laws passed children to m jamong your friends e fusal to recognize the sovereignty of | Then let us begin a plan of ¢ n our homes and in our schools that | spite of the fact England. Under Bdward I, however, | Will teach our youngsters that marriage is hazardous enough for grown people | 100 positive in vour “ngland finally conquered Wales and | and is a foolhardy risk not to be taken by children DOROTHY DIX. | Well known persons | it was for the purpose of placating the | fCoprriaht 4 still seething resentment of the little | | { country that Edward I named his son | Luscious Apple Pie. Strawberry-Pineapple. J vibrations are both stimulatir G ohela ek iTiien ibrations are both stimulatir For parents to ult it may seem - “Prince of Wales.” It was a matte; of history that this sufficiently satis. | n If a cupful of r and| Fresh strawberries are particulariy | {fied the pride of the Welsh to keep !t cupful of water on the |zood used fir and for a hundred | fire : three minut Cut four |apple. A apples in small pleces and cook in the | apple dessert by idea of making Wales a regu until transparent. Line a pie [halved strawberries, cubed pineapple appanage or endowment, now n with pastry. cover with half the | <h cocoanut. although the lat nal, of course, of the heir appa p nd some nut meats and dates. | ter may be omitted if preferred to the British throne ¢ ated with ke another layer of the remaind er should be nkled w Edward 11T, who invested his son | - apples, anc sre nuts dered sugar. Fr cherries and i Black Prince, with the princi using in ! If a cupfu pinea yrm another delicious frui From that time the title Prir | nuts and threefourths cupful of dates. |des nation. Pecan nuts may Wales has been born as a matte | Sprinkle with lemon juice, dot with |be e liked and the dessert course by the King's eldest son »ver the sirup. put,on a |sh sweetened 1o taste an (Copyrizht. 1925.) [ a » for 45 minutes. | chilled before servi Tee PAR(S oF SOUTH AMERICA Demonstration of the Forty-Seventh Day. hete when he sees an “author” ap- & 2 pr in BUENOS A r 2 ' | Why don’t I'write a good one, then? : 1 ter 102 | Tam glad you asked me. Simple. I The Children prefer Post decree de « can't 2 i Toasties. Make the Milk I am not an author. You knew 3 = Hieal I tere Sy ey or Cream Test for corn v up home with i I make my living drawing “Believe flakes flavor and crispmess. i and beautit y mst | It or Not” cartoons, and I hope you | 1 a | like them. I travel just for fun. Send for free Test package. and al-| It is fun listening to my friends ost meiting t of nice Charles King and Mado. Mado speaks . 2 white linen sui only French, but she can understand C = d S H . ’ i hite | Spanish. King can understand n t Reorari hnt o seaet o nnllE ¥ ome tn an ee ow 1 OTRS. > would | to her She answers in French, and | thes! The |l chime in with English—and so a pleases— | good time is had by all. must keep My Spanish is improving. T can ion mean | ask for a_“San Martin Secco” and get 3 the ther-|it. San Martin Secco is the popular nometer. - Aires man | drink in B. A, between 15 and 20 about town the stvles set | o'clock, as they tell time here, or 3 | by his P: v weather or |and § p.m. we reckon it at home. no. He may die of t but. at | The drink is named after San Martin o SRS namied tter the No wicks, no amoke. no =oot on drink. at as it may, it is quite v evident a greater honor hath no PARCIE=AD tric vacuum cleaners are used Blue-flame starter produces an Army mules. cooking heat in two (2) minutes. Intense clear-blue flame—hotter than any liquid fuel stove. the whim of ; L = & 2 5 .t.si‘w;n. . ] = ' . asked | week. i o || | CORN FLAKES h is a queer | Sides burner: light like gas; per- e ked away. Tt fect flame regulation. % - i red that South | f[f STedhes Soth Safe and Odorless | 1either | What a joy it is to written up by : Yanquis.”” And not without rea ‘ use Scissors that cut perhaps. 1 think there have | easilyandstaysharp! een more poor bouk tten about Sou America than any other coun- | Wiss Scissors are ‘ry on the globe. Men claiming to be | \ forged from the wuthors leave their trucks and dash | bl finest cutlery down here on a quic 3 steel. They cut and gallop back to the United States clear to the ®_completing the round trip and 2 points hook in 58 day ittle we r of the Latin American 3 i blades. nd writing 1 saic A double value in flavor and around the breakfast table. This RANGE IS EN- \ i crispness makes Post Toasties Post Toasties never become TIRELY DIFFERENT & AR (Double-Thick CornFlakes)the mushy or soggy in the milk or FROM ANY OTHER ; best you ever tasted. Whenyou cream. They stay crisp to the STOVE YOU EVER ’ : : | open the red and yellow, wax- last flake at the very bottom of aslfi‘?:;l:l:; ‘:2;{\ "?&l"fx; . wrapped package andthegolden the bowl. Insist on genuine no idea what a wonderful : [ brown, oven-crisp flakes come Double-Thick Corn Flakes cooker it is. { * tumbling out, eyes brighten all every time. A FACTORY EXPERT . : is here to show you its fea. POSTUM CERFAL COMPANY, Inc.; Batde Croek, Michigan. tures. Makers of: Post Toasties (Double-Thick Corn Flakes), Postum Cereal, Instant Postum, 5 Grape Nuts and Post's Bran Flakes day in ea R e SRR S R R AR SR RNNSS SIMS MALT-0-WHEAT THE BEST AND HEALTHIEST . FOOD MADE At Your Grocers S-inch Ladies’ St V " S “W. S. JENKS & SON Post Toasties et Exclusive Agents for D. C. and Suburbs Doublg- Flakes WIiSs : 723 7th St. N.W., Washington, D. C. . ‘Thick Com S , Phone M. 2002 .stilisdih stay crisp in cream 254 ® 6 00 6 0 @ ARARRARAR LARNRRNNNNNN BN ARERARAERALRNNRNNRRN N CANANENENARENNNNNENNNNNES |

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