Evening Star Newspaper, June 11, 1925, Page 35

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FEATURES. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, . €. THURSDAY. JUNE 11, 1925 WOMAN’S PAGE, 8o BEDTIME STORIES ‘775" FBistory of Pour Name T What TomorrowMeans fo You Wild Flowers That Need Prolection| Gold and Silver Leather Trimming BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. NEVILLE | BY RY BLAKE. BY MARY MARSHALL. Gemink Go to School Early. onilf the r- T moto was wointeq | VARIATION—Nevil, Neuville i Leather was of course used long, |them at present are counted among| The planctary aspects that ASSUME | arls to sehool is the way to lesin soifel S fonz before any sort of cloth for |the novellies of the season, and they |, “henin' chavdoter. tonight become | And s Disce o e ok 5t 'the” world to e Tt me- s umper, but {t | RACIAL ORIGIN—Anglo-Norman| 4 apparel and for decoration. | sed i ays seem to us . o 2 : = i . E:}:m.\od\l\?v.“:;,’. 'r'(:;».l.mf:,{hpd'., d'::fg:r; .',’“,‘1,—:3\5‘1,,,3{"- b ‘.:Ju":”“fl‘}a_ h. | decidedly favorable tomorrow, and o —Old Mother Nature. |ever, Reddy doesn't have to see. All| and French. | ed their leather coats and suede frocks | ionable bride recently went to the | presage success for any enterprise o e S ol Al Jionderl R SOURCE- Al iconlity; | fume thousand of yoars before they |altar in a conventional white wedding | undertaken at this tme, provided it| In all the Green Forest and on all| ful nose of his 1 1hu i One ot (e semiler thivas. about) had cver heard of the coarsest kind |gown trimmed with petallike adorn- |y 4 coq on conservative thought, and |(he Green Meadows there are few Nt- Straight toward, Mrs. Jumpse. She |fastiy safues 1o tha manner in which ©of fabric. Furs, we are told, were|ments of silver leather 5 bas ught, {tle people who go to school as early as | STl e D pdumper, | iaday atitham (@avélop:in onie conntt The sketch shows a new hejge|carried out with deliberative care.[the children of Jumper the Hare. Yes, |little Jumpers saw this and they won- [ many of umnI:l auslogone e int 2 Jenitted frack it ColiE Al helt (0 atatiors that have hithertollnan hasg: ik, (thit |lstafict. | Yousseol most|dSfed winL 1L was alfabout & | snalunter thel (Mfluence (ot one fion: f gold leather, The belge felt hat with | Ing fire, as u result of indecision and |bubles are for a while too helpless to| , At lst Reddy was so close 1o Mrs. | guuge, from place n | which the frock is worn is likewise |doubt, can be now successfully [do anything at all but eat, sleep and | D at she cared wait no longer. | countrle L trimmed with a gold leatner gardenta. | tackled, with the assurance that op-|Srow. Most of these ‘babies, if they | WIth & mighty hound away she went.| Yet upon second thought it s mot s As every one knows, gold or silver ) timiem will prevail and clear away the (are the bables of little people who|AWLY Went Reddy atter her. It was jatrange, when you consider the state) gardenias are counted amoung the|difficulties engendered by undue pes.|huve fur, are born in a hidden home 81l 50 sudden that Lwoiwers gone e iTttor mart ot tha middle deens. | newest buttonhole ornaments. simism. In the evening the aspects|where they are safe from the eyes of hefore the little Jumpers could have | the i I et el Dumay, a smart milliner of Paris, | become rather clouded, without being |enemies who chance along. e e I G T e i t0 na. has been making simple little black | definitely adverse, and a sense of dis-| But the baby Hares do not have|Sech one had learned a lesson. 'They |strong, were belng subord ms - of straw hats trimmed with gilded leath- | satisfaction with one's own efforts TR, that mother was ;u":l ®The migratory invasions of| er flowers, and black picot hats with |will have to be overcome, and a deter. N M e e R i | upturned brims faced with gold |mination reached to wrest a victory K i e L e S e B T b leather. Another French milliner has|out of an apparent defeat. tiShe fyo MIICH gredfentneason forjiclony HiTe laaaas ere ahing made small hats entirely covered with| The child born tomorrow will in-| DS 0 Peaatmall E ey hadjleamisd lnd ithe midnie tclitec iwere Lo overlapping _gold petals. Jean Mag-|spire contidence and beget hope in its sl sl i e L b S sl s TRl e D et oo confience/and |} et already they were beginuing to learn | were traveling from o 2t trimmed frocks with gold leather em- | ity lusty and Vigorous appearance. B v e copseae, whicn Gloiber G0 8 oe Ui (own 1o atl bossed in the guise of nail heads. Care should not, however, be over M ST S (Copyright, 1925.) looked, and a rugged maturity can ;“mm @ S SCSuT e only be attained by this child if st ihed: : receive in its infancy proper nutri- CSonyaiehl 10 SUMMERTIME | [}cigond Sty of frih atr, 1o die Burgess. ) . : \ ather) meant fled in ‘early youth, will be rather | name given to e overbearing and dominating, | | “Neuve Ville” was BY D. C. PEATTIE. its character will be more eas | ' There is no telling, se, whether it England as a family fluenced by strict methods those that savor of leniens te demonstrativene It will Honeysuckle. . er: and| {man form of “de Neuvillc’ Have you noticed how heavy with o Mgl st . time of illlam the ¢ o . i se es sho ; e cases it is known to| Derfumelare oo o moonlehe \tuated, while the weuknesses | e e aid | BY P. L. RICKEK, | size o cn apple and has « town so leafy as Washington, has |Should be suppressed. I 28, i cross to England with the conqueror. | President Wild Flower Preservation Societs. | ¢ the South it i CaNEht a WY of the magic odor of| JE tomorrow is your birthday. vou|AT LAST REDDY Was SO CLO: Sometimes it is very inconvenient | g% {0 Ensland & in [Eacss Sikivey < o the® Japanese honeysuckle s he|Possess a personality full of charm, TO MRS, JUMPER THAT SHE|to be hard up when buving furni-| o' e i | e ) as an atn - ed Some 0l Walied garden whero | DUL Iacking In strength, You ave al'l DARED WAIT NG LONGER ture—hut sometimes it is a happy cir- | Goncie English_speech which | White flow ch fs more or xious to make vour : cumstance in disguise. For instance, w by its sy light green vine trails over. The Japanese honeysuckle, with its vellow flowers, has often been called developed from the mixture of Nor-! man-French and Anglo-Saxon changed | it into Neville and Nevil, the prefixed | to th with whom you find lany such home. Tl n assoctation, and your con-|a he re never powerful enough to (baby re not born in e down in the ground, as are the Foxes and the baby Chucks and weus of the sider uncomplimentary names, such as “the | ke you cither voice or act them in |some other babies . Thes are horn in Gl mae etk tLessoll n devele | vellow peril,” on account of its match- | he face of opposition. You have not | little nest made on the surface of & (Copsright, 1025.) & reseml been r less powers of invading a garden and et-it” attributes that are in-[the ground. It would not be safe for ———— { wher e been eaten L} crowding out everything else. It mul- identified with great s them to rematn long in such a nest. | 5 | 1 and the nrn‘-k‘s \\'nh“an ulnbollt'\'ablf‘ mpidfllr 5. Your tastes are artistic, ra-|So old Mother Nature has seen to it i Brown Charlotte Pudding. | P that no native plant ever secms to|ther than practical, and you are more |that they do not have to stay long ishwhll & o = equal. But it has at least & propen-| sutistied with the little pleasures and |in this home. They can move about e o, Sornkle for covering over —unsightly|happinesses of life than ambitious for | when on old. | it e | , like railroad _embankments, lany of fts great pri This being so. they really have to go | bl e b e thickly buttered. Cut some good cook- ing apples into thin slices, and place them in the dish in layers with grate lemon peel, chopped citron peel, chop ped orange peel and a little sugar be- tween each layer of apples. When the dish is full, cover the top with a slice of bread previously soaked in a little warm water. Bake in _a mod- | erate oven for 30 minutes in | the dish it was cooked in n lots, dead trees, and ugly | Y u choose your friends with great | to school the v first day. Any one| fences, transforming them into a V- | discrimination, and are always seck-|who learns anything may be sald to ing mass of beauty. Ing, in the formation of friendships, | €0 to school. The little Hares learned | BEIGE KNITTED COAT FROCK| The flowers of the Japanese honey-lcuiture and refinement. The wotld |the things that it is important for WITH GOLD LE. suckle are not always vellow. They |calls you r ical, but, in | Hares to know, and they begin this always open in a dress of virglnal|spite of this, you have many admirers | learning almost soon as they draw white; not until moths, with their and are quite popt . t Lireath ¢ TRIMMING. {long curling tongues which reach| Wellknown pe didn’t hav into the tubular nectaries, have fer-|date: John the first of all clothing, and by the | tilized the flowers, do these turn vel-| George Bush, glmple process of wearing off the long | low, as if in signal to other bees that ver and fur, such garments became leather.|the nectary is empty and the seed is Roebling, ¢ n on this ‘mith, educator. \n; John Young man; John A.|she taught them w Janarius Mec- | not move wh to do in Je loft that | ¢ first thing | to squat low and he explained to them that | \‘\ hen the fur was worn with the soft|set. With its two colors ..rl flowe s Gahan, journalist; Fran E until their legs were long enough and Mushroom Soup. slde in, as it is to this day among the | the honeysuckle might well be called | Saltus, poet and author. stron: gh for them to depend on Fash a ) e five s o Eskimos, then the effect on the out-|the maid and matron vine e , them nust de yaAnand clh Mnounercunmuls of side was that of suede. Anthropolo-| Besides this invader from Japan, we e pend This they |if there had not been a shortage of | ushrooms. Cook in E tell us that furs and fe have a native hone: le blooming Were worn by men and women now in the wopds, with very naments long before they trumpets of scarlet thought of as protection, so doubt rious leaves that Was Jeather so used. In view of such clasp around the stem. cts one could hardly make the this georgeous creeper, nt that there wus anything very|across bushes, is one of the glory about leather trimming. sights of the June woods of Muryland leather trimmings as we use{and Virginia. N THE GARDEN WITH BURBANK As Reported by Elizabeth Urquhart and Fdited by Luther Burbank. d -|family funds we would never have|der, then press through a sleve. Melt | e ’;mk,{f,i,_...m. o the second-hand store to look | IOUr heaping tablespoonfuls of butter, rroundir for a dish rack for our lukeside cot.|add three tablespoonfuls of flour, stic | e tuge, and would mever have found|until smooth, then gradually add | sy this nice old pine cupboard. efght cupfuls of stock or water, and After cleaning it right down to the | C0oK for 10 minutes, stirring all the | od we painted the outside a warm |time. Then add the mushroom mix- | buff and the inside a hilaric ture, salt, pepper, one tablespoonful of blue to make a becoming settin mushroom catsup, a little celery salt, | our precious little collect of a daih of paprika. Reheat, and| (Copyright, 18 hot could ¢ per so much like the chance of which me tll, they nddenly | the sume | they notic | when she hes rd some arned that were onl wer gave she did th niy rd some one coming, or wsual sound. So they | nd squatied so st S Correct care demands S different shampoos for ard, Sunburst und Ophe Roses of Pedigree R szon Gy ’ 5 | Lady Ursula and many others.” “When were the “In what class do the Burban nk Nanta R roses belong 1 asked. “They were produced from the vhrid rly answered Ir. Burb: ted was | ne of the Bourbon r e e e o I poroduced cross between the | which was one of the ancestors of the Hi face vis by o i ea rose hybrid perpetual. | honid perpetual, and it wa much T e I azr his last 1 t of an accldental discovery e ‘He was trotiing 9 ury ago urbank potuto. h p .u)‘u“‘; 3 Hermosa, like many other | obihlsimmng s | _iToses whose stamens have been trans f—_— | Y | formed nto petals, sterite ——————————————— | | and very rarely bei ed, but on on | 1 berpetuat ind free blooming qu b ose. sm this hybrid oo r of the new re in compir rowers have jotf the plants I found about half “ | dozen pods which probably produced by ck u just the right recent times | jortilization, d hybridi-| ey, | lections sed roses from iscere crossed with otk to bees and the | to. rose. Bon clher new du Hosa roses, i | are of u beautiful shade of rose color ey srown | root cutting: bloomi e wdy, re and suituble for any climate and their Cold and thrive 2 | foliage is absolutely rust and mildew i awve long nd erect | proof and the plants universally re. for oxec eighly;years lose their foliage and be- | gistunt to attacks of insects.’ | 2 has relied upon Gour- * dormant i Some rep- | aud’s Oriental Cream hresentativ to keep the skin and re: Ame in complexion in perfeat minot, Ba condition through the f Morocco, Mr stress of the season’s evron and oth activities. White Flesh-Rachel. 4 1l been ringin > produc rid e June roses only in the Sprir 5 the Summer us rule varies with different been and lich are phosed A Mary Augustus Pauline Clementine CU\I“D.-,\[ siaé 1be 48 wti groomed, sie bac poise m ans itsation. Fler beastifully-kaps bhasr sbows tle care she gowes po bor por conal ot pearance ame is AVE you beenin " xomamru;/_.. 7:./ o‘:.d They are ¢ the habitoforder- EERR:TIBOSLRC or fom . some ten roses u tnore the hybrid ps sir growtk vigorous than th although they will thriv climates, but their ing just “mustard?” Really you have missed something. Today specify— Gouraud's Oriental Cream of prus ve A light lunch One of these three lonlax Shampoos will 2 France Care| and delicious cool drink ¢4 t}’ NCONSCIOUSLY, perhaps, are you running the risk of ruin- —-prepared_ in a moment ing your hair with the wrong shampoo for it? - = | Stop and think! The shampoo that helps oily hair can easil The tide of summer 4 DL{RING. the hot weather when you Vi - mnEe dry hair harsh and britdpe(.) The shamioo d);a( keeps norm& | ; rising, | 7 light digestible meal—or a cool refreshing hair thick and lustrous may be worthless in correcting oily or A green wave strong CREAM SALAD{ o drink between meals—that's no trouble at all | dry conditions. The shampoo that rightfully stimulates the oil ukd fh.rk,r e ‘ us to prepare— glands in 2 dry scalp only aggravates an abnormal condition in ! B"‘;l;s::\: o ! Mi.x.yourself a glass of Borden's Malted Milk i oy hur i y ! y e SeersBatareal taste-find —the improved kind. | Don't experiment with your hair any longer. You can easily do 4 > you will enjoy—in salad A - : it great harm. in the p’u‘k- ) dressings, on cold cuts All vou need is some cold milk—a few heaping 2 P s Rt CAm }‘? SR g A ks o teaspoonfuls of Borden’s Malted Milk—a quick stir of Begin today to use the wrrws Glorilox Shampoo for it. ¥ No other mustard has the spoon—and you've got a delightful summer drink ! There are three Glorilox formulas—the first and only sham, = such flavor. that is as nourishing as a light meal. | = _— ever made axpressly for different hair conditions. If you have i TM;;!« .»v;»é L:_adi i?l a aTnuthe, yet as satisfying and refreshing treat your kind Of hasr normal hair, get Glorilox N. If your hair is oily, use Glorilox O. e R.T. French Company as if it had taken hours to prepare—a perfect boon - ! o 5 If it is dry, Glorilox D. If you can not tell the exact condition of Rocescer, N. Y. | to the whole family in hot weather. iy ilel b ghick, gloc, wiche your hair from the desctip(iyon in the panel, consult the Glorilox Borden’s has the preference—because it is made by Glorilox N cleanses it gently and thoroughly chart at your nearest drug store, or write us. { a special process that gives it higher food vale, greater pshonc sl ectiogche secreiice ofGil TED { digestibility, better flavor than any other malted milk. [ Ollyass iz en =4 L e e PHYSICAL CULTURE PRODUCTS CORPORATION i Your dealer sells it in 7 and 15-0z. glass containers, | e e Dy ey sy i 1526/ Brosdway, New: York ) and 5-pound tins. Be sure you ask for the square pack- ! Geniloe O conecioily bk n.ndd',,“,%m‘“ e y squ secretion of oil and in removing d , opens up Bernarr Maciadden's famous $2.00 book, “Hair Culture™ Bas beea age. The Borden Company, Borden Building, 350 clogged porcs 80 they cap functioa properly. Dry hair is hash and brittle. It falls out rapidly without z}ual replacement with new hair. Usually it has dandruff and the scalp is likely to itch. Dry hair scems dull and lifeless. Glorilox D stimulates the secretion of oil to a normal flow. This prevents harshaess and checks abnormal falling ot hates and dsntours Free Trial Offer “Decide now what kind of hair you bave end write for & froe svial bostle of the corvesponding Glorilex Shampoo. Be sure yox specify the lettey—N, O or D. Don's put it off. Write us fodey. 3 | condensed into a 10-page booklet, **Hair Health'", which cot every Glorilox package. Thousands can testify to its valuc. © th’ also contains the full Glorilox course of treatme: tive hair culture in very simple form. g ylorilox {z/Shampoos Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. NEW. A richly decorated caddy filled with Tetley’s. Keeps this | ¢ L) perfect tea perfect. And costs | | ! no more! Ask for it. THE IMPROVED OnangePaioeTea | MALTED MILK_ k , e yEe) -in the square package SRR @%‘hsfig e 52

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