Evening Star Newspaper, May 18, 1925, Page 26

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WOoMA THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, MAY 18, FEATURES. |Dor0thyDix Man’s Chances for Happiness in a Second Mar- riage Greater Than They Were in First, For We Learn From [Experience D. C., MONDAY, Says Second Matrimonial Thoughts Are Best What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Is Man's second Love as Great as His First? Designs in Filet Crochet Revealed Ramble Around South America P = Ao BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. BY RIPLEY. Taurus. Tomorrow's planetary quite favorable, and vibrations become very stimulating, and are hound to exercise a very po tent effect on the emotions. The signs | > not denote any great success for new enterprises, but very clearly indi cate a clearness of mind and keenness of judgn t which will materially help the solution of those problems that are already in hand, and that have “hung hecause of <ome unexpected snag. evening promises well for those who are in love. The s dren bre aspects are after dusk, the Mrs, Hews and Mrs. Shepperd came to see ma this afternoon, both being fat ladies, and they tawking to ma in the parler and ma sed, [ have a | little serprize for you ladies, in a wey ¢(CAN a man love a second time? Ts there any love like the first love? ‘ Can a man who was happlly married, but whose wife died after three brief vears of wedlock, be happy if he marries again?” asks a man. ‘o which T would reply that a man can love not only a second, bui a [jts u plezzant serprize snd in a wa third and a fourth and a hundredth time, as the occasion demands. He may | jts posserbly not, to put a long story | rently favor all chil- | ot alw love in the same way, nor for the same reason, but he can repeat [in a nutshell, the intire 3 of us arej ht into the world tomorrow. | the emotional experience ad infinitum. |overweight and we're forever tawking They promise, from a physical stand § - lubout dieting, so this afternoon I| point, to enjoy excellent health, and Otherwise, this would be a sad old world, full of broken hearts, instead | havent pervided a single thing to eat| little ailments from which they | Of hearts that have been merely dented, and that bob up as good as new after | except a little froot for appeerance suffer will be only transitory in | €Very sentimental episode, ready to do business again at the old stand. There | ke, seter. Temperamentally, they | iS N0 question but what a man can love two wives equally well, and for | \ell thats a very good ideer, be- be nervous, energetic and some- | €ntirely different reasons, leause we'll never stop eating unless its what excitable, and will, possibly, lack He may have loved Maud because she was fair and gentle and artless | forced down our throats, so to speak, singleness of pu frequently | 4nd clinging, and he may love Beatrice -ause she is dark and capable and | Mys, Hews sed. identified with ultim; “They | S0phisticated and strong. For a man many sides to his ure, and Yes, theres no will want fresh | difTe t qualities in women appeal to u.ierent needs in him. Also as a | Mrs, Potts acted very Wi | task before ae. | man grows older and develops his tastes change, and the man of 35 is lured | (nally Im very gratefill to her, Mrs. | complished. by other charms in women than those which set his pulses throbbing at Shepperd sed. 1 know perfeckly well | influenced ' that if there had bin a lot of pastry | They will possess a keen sense of heer Id of eaten it in spite of all my humor, and their personality will al- resolution: d espeshilly the pastry ove attractive and pleasing. from that little shop erround the cor ¥ 19 your birthday? " If so, the ner ware Mrs. Potts allways gets her have indeed been kind you deliclous pastry, I jest passed there on only charm and intelli my way heer and they had some creem ce, but have a personality all your puffs in the window that positivels own and wh dears you to P . looked as If they were made by angels fond of the real pleasuves of A A - " ! And their Napoleon tarts, O my s e L S LI " | (QCCASIONALLY, of course, there is a_one-woman wan. who spends his{ e their enuff to make Napoleon lacking a little in self-confidence, whole heart on his first love so completely that he has nothing left o} ern’ in his grave, with plezzure I ABIahe how Q08 Dot Betiact ey glve another woman. but such men are very rare. The great majority (jeen, Mrs. Hews sed. of men can give to their first wives an honest, true and loyal affection, and | ir general cliveness. { Yes, its a wonderfill little shop, the Your chief asset, however, is your | SUll nl:m- just as honest and true and loyal an affection to give to their | nane name is Schultz but 1 E - second wive, loyalty to you lo 0 : he’s Frentch descent, ma sed. Im sure| ot i D i d. they generally give the Lest that they bave in them (o their | (jiat nohody without at leest a = Tonse You were born (o inenire o Jove | %econd wife. because the mature man is capable of u greater passion than | (aring of Frenteh blood in their vanes sl gt s el i £ Yoy There is no more ardent lover than the widower on whose | (it make Frenten crullers like that | manana and if it has not vet touched vou, 1 hearthstone the fire of love is lighted a second time. mans Frentch crullers, she sed. O|had been ely will or later. Lucky | deer, 1 gess I better send Benny er-!is so unus 511116 G whom you love/and to whor | round for some now that we've ail got | naturally i you have proven the inspiration! ! our appetite aroused, she sed. | feel a litte You are patient and forebearin Wich she did, and they each ate sof Certainly question about it ely and per-| te to embark the one They mu to “carry success. on some mind i t be taught and to the end. a first love has a halo of romance about It that no other er has. It is a thing made up of star dust and dawn mists, and dreams and fancies and all perishable things, and when these are brushed | laway they fade into nothingness and can never be brought back again 0 other woman ever looks the angel to a man that his first sweetheart does. No man ever believes a second time thut he will perish if he doesn’t get the woman with whom he is in love, because he has had tangible evidence in his own person that you cannot only survive a blighted love, but come. to h ot love cours PIRATES oF SANTO S Fifty-Fifth Day. SANTOS, Bra March 21 place! 1 should i1 those they \ South that ithene Americi to expect. But that it person nervot os did not is th, led Ally dolent bit it s sooner ¥ ma in's chances of happiness in a second marriage, they are far | they were in the first. For one thing, he picks out a wife tion. A boy falls in love with a girl and marries her because As for a greater than with more dise comfort in time of trouble, and @ cheery “pal” in times of prosperity she has a pretty doll face, bec a looks when she uestions cute rol use her step matches his in th her Is _dance, becau left | mutch there wasent enything for ks him ¢ Gl me but one Frenteh cruller ar f eyes up ut him fro heart ergetic tie in the sea, lving, as it d hanks of tidul river, i1 of a Napoleon tart. fon the w | which etcl me think of our own FI and Santos are about eq the line—and 1 tho or two that we wer | watian harbor as 1 {the palms and ban: shore and green piles c ats passing befo uses that be the town. The illusion soon faded into a fev rush and energy that culminated you must kn the quar Well- known persons born on this date are hns Hopkins, philan- thropist: Georze W. Whistler, civil en zineer; Felix K. Zollicoffer, journalist; | .| Henry W. Ravenel, botanist; Richard TO | 1. Dodge, soldier and author Then, when a few faded; when life vears have gone by, and the prettiness of youth has is no longer a dance, Lut @ hard march over stony ground: | when ignorance is no longer cute, but is just plain stupidity; when the boy | has grown up to be an intelligent man and the girl has stayed still the simple child she was. why, then, love lies dead between them, starved | because it had nothing to feed upon. LANARNY o EVAN GE. LI E. e W 2 tl ey [ % made Miami A FINE THREAT AND S MAKE DELICATE DE: g I¢ IN L1. CROCHET FILET CROCH HOOK COMBINE S Little Cinderella. but nearly always The success of filet crochet depends , makes it especlally desirable for cer on several things. The work must be | tain uses. It will withstand continued | % s ‘e | launderings and “wear like cloth.” | O e i o0 cven lemsion. The|Tnerefore, its adaptabliity to towels,| meshes must be square and even, and | peq Jinens and, in fine form, to table the design must be carefully developed. | Po0 178 and. In fine form, to table i To bring out the design in a ) RG0S, 513 ALY ReCaRRIZN0. hen ’ - — ot : used on lingerie it should be made | like effect that is as filmy as possible | (5 O liNEerie 6 should be tmal o fine thread is essential. This will | % Ly flne Colnn, (X1t Wil ne e e ot - his Wil rather heavy. Lingerie today is light | than when a heavy thread is used. | jveiony, 20d sometimes actually flmy but it also reveals the beauty of the | 267 TO YeS Beavy face and H work to advantage. H R chooses his second wife with his head as well as his heart. Perhaps he h been through the disillusioning experience of having had a child wife; perhaps he knows how tired a man can get who is married o the beautiful but dumb. | At any rate, he has the inestimable advantage of having come to himself, of having his taste formed, and of knowing what he wants in a wife. ! So if his first wife represented his romantic ideal, the second wife sdies his mature judgment. She is the woman he picked out for a and a4 companion and a real soul mate. JCOND marriages are apt to be happier than first marriages, because the widower understands the techniGue of matrimony and knows how to A striking example of the dash and | treat a wife, and the unmarried man does not. A young man thinks because The letters, “C” and “D,” in the |originality with which professional in-| he loves the girl he marries thyt that makes him u good husband. Nothing Filet crochet is one of the rather|gothic alphabet in filet crochet appear | terior decorators handle colors is fur- | could be farther from the tru substantial laces. There are no long today. | nished by this living room done i strands of chain stitch connecting mo- | modern manner. The furniture is sim- | tifs to set them off with greater dis. ple and comfortable with a sofa % tness. We find thes in other laces, and they add much to the filmi ness of the texture. We do not have motifs accented in any way other than by the solid post stitch. You will re- | member that each division of squares in filet crochet is formed by what some designers call doubl crochet stitch | wc), or which other designers term triple stitch—tr or trc), which form | “posts."” tle pink Santos, sreatest | pass brown beans world’s consump! machine driven s laden w thousund pourin the 1 Y port per Cross Stitch. Lose isu't ahvavs Kind. It fsmt always generous and forbearing, Often It 1s well to remember that by work PR s e he most grinding tyranny and closes i disciter, f:*” duitiile can bg | T { The man who has never been married knows nothing of women. Ile it M g decoration i carried | jolly, and when to stand fir He is nearly alwa overbearing and Crten piieD et ma S0l dictatorial and horrified over the expense of running a home. Hence there a border to towels. On sheets and s . 5 . and , . are bickerings and quarreling in the homes of the young, and many a first pillow slips the letters should be in ARG Shae. i1 Alater On white. On napkins and tablecloths - b white should be used, except where the But the man who has been married has learned about women from his napery has color introduced in the first wife. He does not expect the impossible of her or of matrimony. He is weave or in other needlework, such, wiser, kinder, more generous, and his second marriage is often happier than ships, hoth harbor the dock ptain who had “United States to chat Yessir!” he drawl the called, the thread is thrown over the needle but once, and that is just before the needle with a loop already on it is put through the two strands of the stitch in the previous row. The thread caught up is drawn through two loops, then caught up again and drawn through two more, leaving one loop on the crochet needle. Filling in the space with extra stitches between posts in a square makes them solid and is the method of developing de signs. It is the closeness of the stitches and the evenness of them in the solld work that brings out the beauty of patterns in contrast to the more open squares. The very sturdiness of filet crochet BEDTIME STORIES An 0ld Trick. Who seeks suspicion to allay OI1 gels resulis toe otner way. Tne’ Billy Po; Cac, Billy Possum chuckled to him- =elf us he started on out of the alders to the shore of the Smiling Pool. *“If m Brer,Rabbit hadn't talked about aiggs | 1o his self, and if Ah hadn’t happened to overhear him, Ah wouldn't have thought of aiges this mo'ning. he. “But now Ab do think of ai; *AH RECKONS AH IS TOO OL’ TO BE FOOLED BY TRICKS AS THAT, TER,” SAID HE, reems lak Ah caint think of anything but afg Brer Rabbit done been n her d ¥ Rabbit done s those aizgs were pretty, and over ler is Teeter the Sandpiper, Ah re adding all thos ther nows who Bre saw ymewhere around here Teeter sitting on those Mrs Teeter had flown te of warnin off with a shary the very instant he w Une’ Billy Possum, and U Billy new that that warning was intended r Mrs. Teeter. He only grinned Parking With Pegg S ——xf\ HRANST LY S| By whichever name they are | | for example, as in a blanket stitch berder, or a picot crocheted edge. Designs Free. The little lady strolling in her gar- den makes a square nearly large enough, when done in not too fine cot- | ton, to form a plate doily. It should | have extra rows of squares added on | leach side to make the measurements | desired. A double border of blocks may be used near the outer edge. Sep- | |arate each row of the borders with | |one or two rows of spaces. F may |add that any readers who would like | this design czn have it free by sending a self-addressed and stamped envelope | to me with the request. Direct care of this paper. several chairs of the overstuffed type jbut the color scheme is sufficiently daring to make the room seem highly | individual The walls are pale blue.green, the | glass curtains golden yellow gauze and the overdrapes green-blue taffeta. The chair’s slip cover is linen printed in dull green, soft vellow d red Jlue damask was used on the sofa, with bright vellow satin cushions. The rug is a dark putty loved Wilton, | Lamps made from old blue some- | BY THORNTON . BURGESS | more broadly and craftil |and continued ,on his way Suddenly right in front of Unc’ Billy | appeared « little futtering bird tum bling along over the pebbles as i e ith thing was very wrong with h und‘“,1"\;‘_’\'“""“‘, ithuzicoalo) she couldn't fly. She was giving little | *P24€S COMPlete Lhe picture ries of distress and fright. Unc Billy v stopped for a moment to look 4t her | and grin even more broadly than be fore. “Ah reckons Ah is too ol to be! fooled by such an ol trick ‘as that, | | Sister Teeter,” said he. “Yo' oughi | to know yo' cain’t fool Unc' Billy in any such way as that. Yo' cert'nly | does it nicely, but Ah knows, and yo' | {knows Ab knows, that there isn't a| thing in the world -the matter with | yo'. ~ Yo' ’pears to me to be too| anxious, Sister Teeter. Ah reckon | that nest yo' don’t want me to find is | right near here. If it wasn't wouldn't be anxious to lead me away So Une’ Billy paid no more attention to frantic little Mrs. Teeter. She flut- | tered almost under his nose. She act- | |ed as if a wing was broken, :nd | dragged it along the ground. She dia | everything she could think of to get | Unc” Billy to try to catch her, for thus | she hoped to lead him away. But, as | Une’ Billy said, it was too old a trick to fool him. He knew exactly what she was doing and the more anxlous | | she became the more sure he was that | he was close to that nest and those | eggs. That old trick wouldn’t work | He didn’t make so much as one try to | |cateh her, although ‘she almost | i than before, plum Chinese Women Bank Clerks. Thirty irl students have graduated from “a school of banking™ established in Peking, China. 2 years azo. and will Le appointed to posts as clerks in the Peking Women’s Commercial and Sav ings Banl Gossip shall not cramp my life . Boldly through the. world T'll walk — Id rather far be talkea 2bout Than one of 1 those who merely talk brushed his nose with one wing. | _Now Mrs. Teeter was smarter than | Une’ Billy thought. In this case there was a trick within a trick. She knew that he knew all about the old trick | of pretending to be hurt so as to lead |an enemy away, and she also knew | that he knew that usually the more | anxious 4 mother became the nearer | {at hand are the things she is anxious | about. In this case she had flown to | | meet Unc' Billy as soon as she had | heard Teeter's warning, so that nest | with those precious eggs was not so | | very near after all. But she acted just {as if it was, and us if she was worried almost to death. She acted for all the {world as Unc’ Billy had more than | once seen a mother bird act when he | was close to her nest. | So smart, clever old Unc’ Billy Pos- | sum wasn't fooled in one way, and in | another he was completely fooled. He hadn’t a doubt, not a doubt, that those lrggs were right close by. | (Copyright, 1925, by T. W. Burgess.) When putting coats away for the Summer in a long moth- proof bag, hang the coat on a hanger then tie a piece of rope the lensth of the bag to the top of the coat hanger and pull the rope through the top of the bag until the handle of the hanger comes out of the small hole at top. Al keep the door of the ice chamber i n your refrigerator closed tightly. Opening the door of the chamber where ice is kept to put in milk, butter, etc., causes rapid meiting of ice and carries a rush of warm air into the other compartments, thus raising the temperature. Don't pack dishes into the dishpan before washing them. Silver and glass should first be washed, then china. Packing all dishes into the dishpan at the same time makes it difficult to wash dishes as they should be | | washed and is frequently the | | reason for handleless cups. | Kippered Salmon. Make a thin cream sauce. Shred a | three-inch square of kippered salmon into fine flakes, add to the cream auce, and also add a quart of cold hoiled potatoes cut in thick slices. Prepare in the morning, put in a deep baking dish, or casserole, and set aside. Half an hour before supper- time slide the bowl of prepared salmon into a quick oven. Bake until browned. ~ Decorate with parsiey Serve with toast or plain bread and butter. Have a plate of fresh fruit| ready for dessert. Instead of the kip- | pered salmon, canned or smoked | salmon may be used, or buked white | fish nicely shredded and separated | from skin' and bone, may be substi- | tuted. i When using paint remover don't be too anxious to have it remove paint quickly. Apply with a brush and give it time to do'its work. When the paint forms in a putty-like mass re- move it with a Knife. Keep a small pair of scissors in the drawer with your knives. They will trim the edges of pie crust much more quickly and more neatly than a knife. Also thes convenient in prepar hust action who tailir s an il nto us eliuri, i § \ | | i vlored taffeta | | | | i | is first For we learn from experience, even in love. (Copstight DOROTHY DIX. 1925.) The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle ,f Across. The capital of the Department of France. produced Basses . Resinous India Pyrenees substan A city of ancient Egypt: the seat | s Neith of worship of the Godde Important period of time. . The whole. A term formerly applied both to lizards and newts. . At the present time. One of the Seven Sages of Greece child English | . The last name of the firs born in America of parents. Any quadrumanous animal belong- ing to the Old World Serpent. A color. . Great epic. Comrade. 24. Portuguese coin (Copyright, 1925.) i A touch of the fairy’s wand and the lizards were changed into two hand some footmen. “And now,” she said, “everything is iy, and no one ever h finer h in which to go to a But, godmother,” Cinderella pro tested, “my rags! I could never go to {a ball in rags, no matter how fine the 4 mint m not done The godmother touched Cindere] rags with her wand and immediately | s dressed in the loveliest gown i ever seen. In place of her old work shoes, Leautiful little glass slip pers twinkled on her feet 1 “Now, my child, you can go to the| 1id the godmother. “But re this: My fairy charm can! until midnight. At the last £ 12 this fine coach will again | become a pumpkin, the horses will be- {come mice, the coachman a rat, and | {the footmen lizards, as they were be- | {fore. Your beautiful dress will become | | rags once m So by 12 you must be | { home again | Cinderella gladly promised to obey. Then, thanking the fairy godmother, | | she stepped into the coach and rolled | way to the ball. | When she reached the palace the| music_was sounding and the prince | I was about to choose a partner for the dance. Ali the beautiful ladies waited | nxiously, each hoping she would be | member last only | stroke heraldry, one of the charges known as ordinaries. 28. A planetoid discovered by Witt o Berlin, in 1898. i An_ artificial closed channel, or conduit. . A tattered cloth Request. = Tear. { his choi . A protuberance. . Limits. . Placed. . Matter in Color this footman's (Copy in the aeriform state. Down. . The name of an illustrious Byzan- tine family. . A city of the Canaanites, 12 miles north of Jerusalem. | . Emfploy. . Rent. % . ¥rench unit of land measure. Small finches. mifluid form of clay {Iistory of Pour Name| BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. WALLER RACIAL ORIGIN—English. used in Answers to Yesterd. 's Puzzles. glazing pottery. . An ulcer. An Arabian garment Those who complain. Marry. City in Scotland. Greek letter. By means of. A large salt lake of Asia. A sacred bull worshiped at Mem- phis. (See Egypt.) A textile fabric having a corded surface. Able. Barrel. Myself. | 37. A continent (abbr.) — Eggplant and Peppers. Wash and pare a rather small egg- SOURCE—Personal description. You might easily assume that, since | the Taylors were originally tailors, the | Ropers makers of rope, the Cutlers | makers of cutlery, the Wheelers | makers of wheels and the Porters | carriers of burdens or the keepers of | gates or ports, the Wallers were orig- | inally makes of walls. As’it happens, however, the family name of Waller is not evolved from a surname that was ever descriptive of | « trade or occupation. In the medieval | ages the builders of walls might have been known as masons or stone cut- {ter or fitters, but they were {known as “‘wallers.” | The word “waller” is of Anglo-Saxon origin, and in the speech of this race, prior o the invasion of the Normans and for some time subsequent to the not { plant and cut in onedinch dice. Peel four onions, four tomatoes and cut in slices. Chop two green peppers, pre- {viously parboiled, and the insides re- | moved. Heat in an agate pan one- fourth cupful of butter or fat, and in amalgamation of tongues on which modern English is founded, it meant “foreigner” or “stranger.” 3 Thus, at a period when the rapidly growing and shifting population made necessary @ surname in addition to the {this cook the sliced onions and pep- given name, it was quite natural that | pers until the onion is a pale yellow. a stranger settling in a given com- Add sliced tomatoes and diced egg. plant, cover, and simmer for 20 min- utes or half an hour over a very slow fire, keeping closely covered. Add at e last two tablespoonfuls of flour mixed with one-half a_teaspoonful of salt. Stir until the whole is slightly creamy, and serve hot in a covered dish. munity would be known as “Alfred the | | Stranger” or Alfred Waller. In the | majority of cases, perhaps, it did not stick. But in some it did, and long | enough to become a family name, its original descriptive meaning being lost | sight of in time. i (Copyright, \ Prices realized on Swift & Comgnny sales of carcnse beef in Washington, ) Tor week ‘endine Saturday, May 14, 1025, o | Vipuients <ol out, ranced from 11,00 cents | 13 13,00 Ceuts por jound wud @ craged 16.61 cents per pound.—Advertisement. : 1925.) | In 1890 only five in every l{vm«lwuni married women worked, but in j9° it had risen to nine in every hundred. lving out there for t waitin® a chance to dock 47 ships out there awaitin’ too. I sailed delphia more than two and I'm anxious to get back on B street ag’in that's out there her. Look Sure enough, slowly and id ing and unfolding in the lazy was the Stars and Stripes—a rare but lovely sight in any foreign port IN THE GARDEN The Dilatory Gardener. Are there any other bulbous plants Burbank, that should be planted before we go on to pere innals?” T asked, “You have left out 1 one, T think,” said Mr. Bu though they are not really I plants; vet they ought to this time. They be propagated either by seed or division of the roc and if a clump is well established all it needs litde .r m to Mr. now, an bank, in be by is a may be und it and I be able to enlarge h ar may 1t thrive cither su blooms in June and July Now,” T said. “first we will go over the list of perennials which were planted early under protection and which ought to be starting out now | ‘on their. And dilatory gardeners,” served Mr. Burbank, “or those who could not raise their plants from seed, must buy voung plants from a reliable y. Very often these adopted children are @ source of much pleasure and pride as those born and bred on the home grounds. Read aloud the list, ples % “Delphiniums, spurs, asters called garden and the va gloves, sr olds, petunias, verbenas, zinnius. cel sias and gaillardias.’ | These will all bloom from e first vear,” said Mr. Burbank, “ifl satrted early enough, and there could the lark- dianthus (commonly pinks). forget-me-not | us coreopsis—the pdragons, cosmos, including fox mari | knows what jing What! But I equal WITH BURBANK had w trazi ) 10 ce forgotten that nd 1,000 reis ar we wolde n. g nust f this montl sp “Wha busy month—one ¥ “It will be best to begin by the perennials selected list, and also the vines ed in pots, such as clematis elopsis, and after hardening annuals already rotected boxes, they planted 1o the open 1 plant ound es this on a the little r ma «d the soil must b Press the earth and water a seedlings £t the paper or lightly few davs until they BY MARY MARSHALI I Prominent bird pleased over th floral trimmings them have even have vogue Some lovers present on been o of influence s to have taken place, anc becomes the popularity « 2 the 16 wom that th on their cater 4 flower trimmir seem tc wa hath aigrette and the osprey nificant in bits of plumag women like to w for the same reason that they like tc wear diamonds, because eve) knows that they cost a good deal « money. You may go to one of the foremost milliners in Paris and spend an absurdly high price for a little ha trimmed only with a rose or two or bow of ribbon, and no one but ti real expert who sees you weur that hat will pect its high price. Wit and aigrettes it is different. Al any one knows they require these spre: most a |large bank account. | nearest approach t | | | | | 515 IMITATION AIGREFTES MADE OF | WHITE OSTRICH TRIM THIS | BLACK STRAW HAT. they had of a fash la 7 sicad of feath ynable sort to popu- | ifictal flowe antime a ceunter- e use of < | of white Americans who share this these feathers, or the can legally g0 to them. And really there is some- thing smart this season, when flower trimmed hats are legion, in the sight of a bl hat trimmed with white feathers m: iitate the forbidder and most costly plumage. Of course, the imitation is neve perfect, but the effect is the same The sketch shows a very good-looking at of plack straw d with white and trimmed with a large ornament ch to imitate aigrette Sometimes this distinguished looking aigretted ostrich, as the milliners call it, is in black on black hat Peacock is likewise u aigrettes. Burnt hurnt goose— ar for ed to replace peacock—and _ever used In black against tats with excellent clfect. (Copyright. 1925.)

Other pages from this issue: