Evening Star Newspaper, July 29, 1925, Page 23

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WOMAN’S PAGE. THE EVENING STAR, - WASHINGTON, D. C., ’Dorothyl)ix Often a Cranky Mood May Be Jollied Away Instead of Cried Over, and Perhaps His Stingi- ness Just Hides Desire to Be Depended On. ‘WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1925. FEATURES. COLOR CUT-OUT Shows “Little- Boy” Motives Behind Men’s Actions Advice to Overserious Wives. Flaring Effect on a Dinner Frock The WATER-SPRITE. BY MARY MARSHALL. being deprived of the gravy for tk sake of the flavor of mint in the usual mint sauce. By having the herb com bined with the peas a solution of the difficulty is found whereby both may be enjoyed. Sprigs in Grapefruit. We are accustom of mint to bever mint with fruit, another matt Never since satin w; it gone completely out one ys wears a satin frock, and in every wardrobe there is always something made of satin. But some- times there seems to he a satin sea. son, just as there are taffeta seasons and crepe seasons. Just at present invented has of style. Some good advice, and help you select a | planning tumn we: satin Materials i | ways wait upon the tr They are determined t and the outline that |to strive | going to lend bely fls g Not want new some one you and seem f fashion. going Autumn is wel to ock 1re me Ma was imbroidering imbroidery ana Pop was smoking to himself and T was ving on the floor looking up at the ceeling, and ma sed to pop, Willyum, wat do you think, that berd has reel axually be n to tawk, tn S NO mis- take about it this Meening Napoleon her parrit, and pop s Wen I heer him say an Ing- lish sentence, or even one short werd, | 1l be willing to testify before a judge, and not before. Meening he doubted it, and ma sed, Well you jest wuit, now watch ..\l’\l she got up and went over t Napoleons cage and ted to taw! to him, saying, Pritty Napoleon, wont you tawk to mam st to show papa how smart you Napoleon jest {er her and going, Awk a There, did you hear for example, the matter of a man getting tired of his wife, which | 1 nt say he cou matrimonial bugbear of women who are approaching 40 and get- | parrit lane s T s ting to the place where their catty friends remind them that they are putting | tawk Ing » ht. Nine middle-aged women out ¢f ten suspect their husbands of | That was In n having ceased to love them because they are no longer young and beautiful [ 1 wu A wa possess willowy fizures. And nine men and 2 half out of ten still think |as da s they picked out the best of the lot ¢f women and wouldn't ex Yes nge them for any flapper ever created oy n viands, 1 to adding leaves it but to s & except take who hod of combining mi srapefruit. After the been cut in half, the pulp loosened and ish s stick a wee spray of in the center of each h where » Wi The decor most d the faint rance of that the leaves supply gives a piquancy to the grapefruit that is de cidedly refreshir " I could give one piece of advice to wives more earnest than another, it would be this: Don’t take your husbands too seriousl ‘That is the mistake that most wives make. They have he: 0 much about the mighty masculine intellect that they think their husbands are pro- found, thoughtful —human beings who mean every word they say and whos every act Is par 1 deeply considered plan of life. Whereas the truth is that men babble just as meaninglessly as women do, and are the creatures of impulse. | der in and fro a little mot new bi | almost k seem to | someth | crepe | effect gain in, the dull the contrasting bands in will of course It will be very the deep F of which strips of deep brow The ubiquitous par new deep bright blues, blue, seems a little satin. They all « of softer, less lus There a somber v frocks, however, for you | see that most of them v trimmed with bri pearing in the regions of cu lars, The sketch gown of black and white er bodice. T ing use of t is the Kk to make 1t still smart sing cre sat grapefruit core removed, | sugared, the cc be most Also, women are under the misapprehension that they have a monopoly ves, and that hysterics are the sole prerogative of the feminine sex »se beliefs make women attach a significance to the things that men | say and do to which they are not entitled, and it makes them, in the slar of the d t their husbands wrong” and break their hearts over crimes | that the poor, blundering men do not even know that they are committi fur pur penci mand a for ar ing his K awk ent back to ork ork. ma_sed tawk the he couldent and ma sed, goodniss, he sed, k, jest as plain that o be added her meat basket i sparingly Let me suggest to lamb sandwiches being made r but give the f soupcon Take along a few of mint They will be found weicome additions to soft drinks brought for the lunch eon bever Dip the leaves in icy )ld - water 1 wrap in paraffine paper before tucking into the lunch | basket. wh dic W be these ne b sed new a . h, take as plain as 12 o clock noon in n fog, pop sed Willyum your to lissen more closel he started to tawk to the parrit agen sayin, Wont Napoleon tawk s n for mamma, pritty berdy, say something | nice for ma prejudiced, try the women is that they take ma sed. And gallantry too serfously. They think their em, w the truth is that John is only working ily soft and comfortable that he hasn't any time for gallantry. He is indifferent. He is just busy. Besides. having once told his wife that loved her and married her to prove It, it no more occurs o him to keep making a great ado over it than it would to emit loud, glad cries of surprise every morning because the sun is shining their husbands’ Jjohns have ceased to love so hard to keep his “HE trouble with lack of th fa not he MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST upe h Cream his feathers and el « 1 p t understand tha I understood end you did- , mad sed, and pop perfeckly, he sed, is the for I good men to 10 the aid of the party sed B the k sutch things, other women have their lives ruined so to speak, too seriously. They are married to men who industrious and good providers, and who they know a But the men are fault-finding, and complaining, they come home they kick the cat and spank cross and irritable or grouchy and and sit down to the dinner they want to know if this is soup or as pla = 1 ibrow iter, and if that is bread or a segment of a tombstone. a sed DINNER 1. When 1 : ; | t In consequence whereof the W feslings are in a constant state ration, and she meets each nasty crack with a still nastier else ind salts her wounds down in the brine of her tears Now, no one will arzue that a human cyelone is a pleasant companion - would any sane woman pick out a man who is giving a n of the Day of Wrath to spend her evenings with. But, all make themselves unnecessarily miserable by taking their too serious! Many | home ma sober ity hard t bat they by taking their husbands’ me 3 little baking come He does he N moral s, devoted to them ive with. Whe TF e either LUNCHEON wat he Tom; Hashed Brown Potatoes Fig Cake know about Water-Sprite Castle. is s your sit pop sed et of, ' T sed m el Hamburger E yonnaise Potat s, Creamed one, see you later, pop sed nd’the sporting page . What TomorrowMeans to You Sliced Ct Raisin ( mbe Pud s ng cker APPLE CORNBREAD 1p whole e cup corn me poons ar, £ powder ‘hes that stab the wife to the soul are not prompted by k o are the reaction of nerves that have been frazzied by the worries the day at the off The frc | finds it so hard to endure is just sheer exhau | the woman who can just take her husband's 1 can make I g Ty fa nue s | save herself many a tearfest, but et £ 2l 5 her hand by feeding him and laughing at him and j it night, when they hecome quite| PINNER GOWN OF BLACK AND 2 SATIN TRIMMED WITH | i se. During the vou wil X 4Rty AND WHITE EMBROID: | dif- | | she 1 : BY MARY BLAKE. are oughly, tt raw n i iction grievous to be in the matrimonial his grum over bor sttery a tightwad husband is an 1 who d en she COURSE, unlucky is the mistake shallow it in moy wi dispropor all signposts point tow a satin son. With coming late S | mer vou will see more and more satin and by the time Autumn has come it | will be firmly estat | smartest tire f | for wr 1kes a w takes even hot Mahy a her va look not beca vu up to he her refuses to give his but becar hin ikes to feel she has to Rub one-t e from which all blessings flow e, us e alwavs telling about how its has to ha successful man the have him exT his idges et her for en- ng purposes He tha as a 1tion seks trimn ps or for hats. v a man who humiliates his wife by man who humili S e and how m wer. He is e 2 n to how well he pre BEAUTY CHATS Hair Tonics. ir, 30 grains; carbon d in - 1d eld ¢ iven ey will wrd the will distrust as and exerc order t mental slough DELICIOUS B OR MUT Al 5 So if re for a bit he o 1d_successfu intte w is Fold in sowder manner t of th: BY EDNA KENT FORBES. rup thread . sttt flavor w o simple d, a girl an £ hair do toni get is or nt to vour t cuke nhood well t ion CRACKER PUDDING ions Let week art it first with a comb, so not the scalp is exposed en when vou go bare bobbed hair. the sun the It is the the hair, that you bath. \fter nt w possible better They will both thoughtful . meditative rather n anot! hair but E nd with not reach ,, rather thar t with you n This time of th weekly washing an way through the week a 1 3 y. you Brush the hair well each day POSedt 10, taint sorms than to ma- : 4 woman, called in- charact it B vear, 1'd advise 2 s is a sham- v to dry in this| « the curative But it is the s best is an wir. It ne exc is to go >, M.—With ght blonde hair colors will be deep biue | You will need to strengthen you treatment. | oring to get the best effe iny weath ess in rich shades of any color, but tonte ntio 1 will be the best, rey will make your eves appear dark- Pilocarpine hyd: precipitated sul-|er and enrich the shade of your hair. blue gray eves be and b and om wns. tuition it will Ye s hasti ind e energy S0 aim to possess both and untiring perse. are more than ¥ to hich you have set before goal. The one featura gainst your success is p judgments. as not many test. Those staunch and very strongly vou are very | never allow any matter how al swerve you affection “for BY THORNTON W. BURGESS those as . Longlegs soon he struck angrily me near. “Why do sters mot t honest fish lost agai t them wheneve nds are nd up unde however Love of family developed in you, and nstrat You interests, no 1y be, eptional fow u ive teact the make " he neve Selection and Grafting. this ex: “If you de o NFATTIREQ e MODE MINIATURES e ted - 70 n wderlying principle of graft 5| retorted Rat T i ntal work, Mr. Burbank Y the ‘cambium.’ or inner | L | to everybody. Our csed plant wizardy | of tissue lying just beneath the | date j [as much right to fisk | bark of the twig, shall be brought in | N®er you great big robber. nalist and hu contact with the cambium of the tree i Poor Longlegs. He was qulte hel on which it is grafted. Through this|D0lds, ethnologist; Letti® s. He Knew he had been ve poet and author cambium the sap of the tree or plant James E. Kelly los temper, flows. and when the sap of the old |Eraver and sculptor; Henry Ford, au- wh e had his tree flows up into the graft it begins [ tomobile manufacturer. e had his dignity, and to grow and soon sends out buds and Heron without dignity is a sorry blossoms and bears fruit in from two looking bird. He spread his to four seasons. wings and flew “This fruit in turn undergoes selec- Be Soillug Fog tion and must come up to the severe id in required qualitie: The work of grafting should t place in the spring when the sap is high tide, and the amateur must re. member to graft only similar fruits; seed fruits on seed frults and pit fruits on pit fruits.’ next step in | your hor Well known persons born are: Georg Robert J on this Melville, engi- ) Burdette, jour Elmer R. Rey Across. Shines brilliantly. Rapid owth Pathet! Cover: Legal paper. Sprinkle. Mexican peasant. Kind of poem Capillary object Jaunty. Church officer. Part of the head. 15 we diseu Curved line. Gambol. Slight mistake. Male children. Be different. Originate. Give birth to. Ominous. At that place. mart. Forlorn Lump or piece. Solely. Misanthrope Nibble off. Roman author. Digging tool 3. Bone tissue Hard worker. . Trims one’s self Stringed instrument. Painful Internal. American author. Respiratory disease. Male parent Hold in Point of the compass. Attempt Grotesque sprite Sour ale. Trained In the company of. Gumbo. Single. A State Saw for two men Temporary shelter. Fatigue. Egypti Employ Thrown over itself. Unit of current. Body of water Monotonous sound. Direct Precious stone. Watch over Join together Mental picture. Personal pronoun. Free ICED TEA prepared from the fresh young leaves of* "SALADA" is the ideal drink for Summer. Cool, Refreshing, Delicious — Try it, mateur. king over the young seed- lings and selecting the one nearest to the of this chosen t are in turn planted and from| he young seedlings of the next gen- \ very few plants are chosen, to insure a large crop for fu- n. But in each zeneration least a very few, and hest are selected no seedlings are pro- less. o seeds tempe Mint-Ginger Punch. Mix together one cupful of sirup, {the juice of six lemons, the thin slices of three peeled lemons, two cup- e |2 of ice water, twelve sprigs of sreen mint, one quart of ginger ale and one quart of crushed ice. When you add the ginger ale pour it from height into punch bowl. This | will fill eight water glasses or twenty- ot 101 | four punch glasses. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. i "Bui in or at very many i Down. the Gives aid Deep noise ¥ selecting only th best of each generation for several years, a flower or will be produced which comes to the ideal of the worker. MOTHERS || : g it S for some AND THEIR CHILDREN. ally, after one up to pro- o 3 th thi: 11 other improve- 1 1IEN size, color or variation e ired long stems have been TTER. until the de “The work of development is has- and shortened by growing a| Dr. Alfred F. Hess, a child special- hhln\‘lflr |v[‘]‘hl""' Ul’ l‘hP sux‘n»‘h;h who has made scientific study |the ultra-violet rays in SI]flit‘XP"L! jes, and in the case of fruits by | o _ Bt i ol |amount to prevent rickets in rats {of the ultra-violet rays, suggests ths : b e | grafting cuttings from the young .nf‘l:\‘;s“::;‘;;;p‘(o;;:\-‘\\\‘(l o tie e |kept on a rickets-producing diet. plants ‘on old trees as already de.|quring the late Fall and milder {The rats in this experiment wers scribed inithe articled on'cherdlesiant gearidwintas to 4 kreater extent than|fenossd o the ultes violst light janie prunes. is the custom. He adds that there is| U @ day through September. | “Tt will be remember a limitation fo such ultra-violet ray| Whether sufficient ultra-violet light |T was given an \\)‘A.]f‘l for €| treatment and this is exaggerated by | May be obtained by the use of quartz ces to be delivered in nine months, | tha instinctive fear mothers and | Panes in place of g in the windows was enabled to fill it, first by plant-| nurces of exposing babies to the cold | of nurseries or hospital wards in the Ing almonds which sprouted. aulekly | ind " wind. |Jjinter time, Dr. Hess is undecided. |ana then by grafting p buds on | S : i | He reminds us that the magnitude of |the young almond seedlings, thus ““’r‘:;uf_':-*‘“){‘:'»‘h‘v"’"“l“ ‘»‘nfl“““‘m““‘j;,‘nw ultraviolet rays is limited in the shortening_ the .growth and _develop- | S¥DORUre to sunlisht has nof b | Winter m and that they are | ment of the prune trees by nearly two [ SITiClent. in the trinter time, 10 present for only a few hours in the vears. PEEseus lor-cure rickets, In. ’,‘ vy | e of the day and their intensity “With perience. There are so many daye in |, r;;ther weakened by reflection Rty ; the late Fall and Winter when there |13 B ; tree has been e pobfboad from the surface of the quartz pane ; : prce : is little or no sunshine in his climate | "TOM ; . are cut off and each little branch is| b li{tle or no sunshine in bis CHnate | go that jt seems doubtful whether the cut up into short piece: led ‘scions,’ | | iaq0 o 2 | eradication of rickets in children can £l about two inches long, bearing two or | "' %Y |be effected by the quartz pane solar- e mother say The ee three buds; this is to multiply the se.| It Seems that the direct suniight|jum. (Incidentally, the cost of quarts When our little daughter was re- e contains the greatest proportionite (panes is so great as to be prohibitive | covering from scarlet fever we found Stk . full.grown tree is selected as|amount of the ultra-violet (invisible)|except for endowed institutions.) a new way of amusing her. She cut| | T cut my Fxng‘er wit the ‘host’ tree for grafting the young | FiYS about midday, and the propor T dare muythie fallest Reaith gtvim | pictures from catalogues and maga Lo seedlings on, and its top and ,side|tion of these rays dwindles relatively | et "ot “the invisible or ultrawvioles |zines. We arranged and pasted them 2 knife . branches are removed. In the end of | early In the afternoon, long before the | {igit" Ji1g"he had in the average ) S |1 neither wept nor each branch the pieces of the branches | light of the sun seems lessened. This | NGy “American community. at no oxes. Tables, chairs, piano and e or scions from the little trees are|1S 4 fact which every amateur Dhotog- | cxpense at all if we could disabuse other piece "\urihll\nn1|[|;x9\ were, con: moaned nor swooned.| |placed. The host trees are used from "'“P;"’r"l ‘“"""’“ff"ffl by perience. \""29 { parents and ‘doctors of the catching- | structed fro read boxes. cu year to year as a nursery for the|invisible or ultra-violet rays are\the| ;) geiyg New York City, ae- | windows and_doors with sharp| |In fact the courage | |iitie scediing trees, and sometimes|rays which act on the photographic | co%, Gelysion. = Jew York City, ac- S |knife. Over these openings cretonne h h s one tree will-bear 500 or more distinct | Plate or film; they are responsible for | SPTAINE to Dr. Hess, has more s curtains were pasted in place. With that [ showe s s ; vear than West Indian colored paper rugs upon the floor the | fr g, worthy c “The tools for this part of the work of a larger 9.04 Eais L b wound. 2 < CANS what the Both Charges Serious. L o om the Cincinnati Enquirer. the formation of pigment in the skin | ropteal Citids sl , ! 0 (tanning); they bring about a marked | &14 tropical citles such as Ancon and dollies took possession of their new consist of a sharp pruning knife, a I L home. saw, o pot’of melted wax, with a hermr 5 » e esthe| “What is the charge against this The Invisible Rays. filters out the ultra-violet rays. Dr. Vaesd I s ill(—s.~ reports that he has found a best £ sions pansy satir Howe of elabe Al the one in | went ent quartz pane allowed the passage of goddes 1 that when N ARGETTE 20,000 prune time, Rather Long. From the ¢ “Ho morn “It remin women on -this his w skirts the sighed, use she fruit trees, when the ideal selected the branches hool of in every pened and | t last he young dropped and with tree on zfisher (Copyright. 1925.) cure rickets, and probably prevent a | acter & or spasmodic aftection of infants (chiefly) | T, oarasytrs there enjoying thelr a slit is made and the wedge-shaped o ion or graft is forced into the slit, called tetany (not tetanus). s sometimes several on one large branch. told The dust and moisture of the at- (Copyright. 1925.) mosphere absorb ultra-violet rays and increase in the lymphocytes (one Kind | mp & Hetucton m anss / of white corpuscle) in the blood; they | a1 st b Sl brazier for heating it, a brush and|Probably increase the activity of the|.oyq visit J. N. Adam Memorial some white cloth. parathyrold gland; they prevent and| pogpital, Perrysburg, N. Y., and see “In the end of some of the branches “your & enjoyi of the tree which has been prepared e patiently waite | woman?” asked the judge. y made as nd threat- At first n at him s eyes out! “Parking too near a fire plug and talking to me as if I were her hus- band,” snapped the traffic cop, The melted wax is spread over the prevent them from reaching the sur- slits where the grafts are inserted, as|face of the earth. Mist, fog and well as over the sawed-off end of the smoke intercept the ultraviolet rays branch, a strip of cloth is wound about, considerably, Ordinary, window glass Unmarried women were forbidden to wear pearis during the reign ef ae

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