Evening Star Newspaper, September 7, 1925, Page 29

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)

WOMAN'S Pinezpple a Pleasing Centerpiece BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. THE EVENING that is the quection. ether 'tis better fr the tub to sprin. And race all dr‘? g let it ring and ring. Rkl 1 STAR, WASHINGTO There Is No “Perfect Wife.” Urges Husbands to ‘Make the Best of Their Bargalns. DorothyDix Instead of Bewailing Wife's Matrimonial Bargain as Total Loss, Why Not Take Stock of Her Assets, Mr. Man? A MAN writes me that he was married to a woman who was a splendid housekeeper, a fine cook and a thrifty manager, but she had a high temper and nagged him until he felt that he could endure it no logner, so he ot a divorce from her. j Now he has married again, and the present. wife is easy-going and good- natured, but the meals she sits him down to would give an ostrich an attack of acute dyspepsia. The house looks as if a cyclone had struck it. She wastes his money and gads the streets, and he is miserable and dissatisfied, and wishes he had wife No. 1 back agaln, sharp tongue, good bread, savings bank book and all. There is a moral in this little stor: for all disgruntled husbands, and they would do well to ponder it. It teaches, first, that in swapping wives a man nearly always jumps from the frying pan into the fire. And secondly, it teaches that you can't have everything you want in a wife, and that he is a wise man who takes his wife “as is,” as shipping manifests say, and makes the best of the good qualities she possesses. Naturally, every man would like to marry a woman who was a com- pendium of all the arts and graces and virtues. He would like his wife to be an orfament to the parlor and a treasure in' the kitchen: to look like a T: ., MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 Liabilities and Listing 1925, SUB ROSA BY MIMI Keeping a Diary. | Nowadays we don't go In very much | for diaries. They belong rather to a| former day when languishing maidens | confided to-thefr journals: “Ah, how | my heart sighs within me when I be-| hold the fair features of Percival Al-| gernon whom I love.” You can't im-| agine the average modern girl in.| dulging in any of thtse sentimental | flights. | But still there are a few sensible voung girls who keep diaries, and \\'hn: have told me that they find a lot of comfort and help from so doing. | Sounds a bit far-fetched, doesn't it? But now just suppose you've had | something pretty dreadful happen to | you—something that takes all the zest and joy out of life. It seems to you that “you'll never be happy again— that life stretches ahead just, one/ dreary blank of horedom You jot down these unhappy specu lations and fancies. You look at your diary sadly and say to yourself: “Well, that's that. There'll be nothing cheer ful to record from now on.” And then as time goes on and new interests come into your life, you'll| find your spirits graduglly rising back FEATURES Sport Clothes Are Severely Simple BY MARY MARSHALL. To the Parisian choosing sport difficult than town attire mode, she the problem wear {8 really more that of getting proper No matter what the has certain well defined of | their sport clothes so easi | fcan dressmakers | of ornamentation or and with self-possession To the French woman the problem of selecting and wearing sport clothes is rather complicated—needlessly so from our American point of view As the French dressmaker ex plains: “There are two categories of sports costumes, one practical and the other fanciful. worn respec- tively by players and people who come to see the players.” To the French woman a very wide gulf exists be. tween these two classifications, and the dressmakers who design costumes for actual participation in sports have | become most insistent on making gar ments that shall not in any way in terfere with free motion in the game. They have almost outdone the Amer in this regard any one knows who has seen Suzanne Lenglen on the tennis court. Any sort anciful device is frock intended than actual par as reserved for the spo for spectators rather ticipants in “le sport The question of hecomingness ought to have a good deal to do with the wearing of sports wear You may be local tennis champion and still find sports clothes in th. usua. acceptancé to normal, and one day you'll awake of this term very unbecoming. They to the fact that you've got some jolly B very often are to the champion events to record in the faithful old| N irwoan . R Dacnoaan diary. self, whom no one would consider a From then on there will be a de- real beauty, is very much more at cided turn for the better in the gen.| tractive Sahon Grocecn o g it it eral tone of the journal. Fewer and noon frock of the sort she wears in fewer lamentations will be recorded skl et et ol il and more and more appreclations of o ISt whits foeclc that oie o good times and happy parties | oh kel Bonis vonct. Dol g Of course, though, there will come Toke M Bt 1 et s another trial, and you'll find vourself | often Thve maither ot wor in the depths of despair again—but and takes no more active part in the now if you behave like a sensible, in affairs of the country than can telligent girl, you'll use your diary to! conveniently be attended to from a good advantage. comfortable chair on the club veranda For you'll turn to that record of a former dark day, and vou'll read along. | noting how the black mists of doubt | P . k ’” and unhappiness rolled away grad Puzzhcks Puzzle-Limericks fashion plate, yet run up no bills; to be brilliant and entertaining, yet self- | €Macing in his presence; to be gay and lively and full of pep, yet never to | want to step out except when he did; to be high spirited, yet have no Me and pop was sipposed to meet | temper. & down town Ehis dite iocn ‘And Cat Of course, he doesn’t get her, for that sort of paragon has never yet been dinnir in a resterant, and we went to | born. But he generally does marry a pretty fair assortment of these desirable the corner ware the bank is and| qualities, and he should content himself with them instead of beating upon started to stand there, me saying, I his breast and wailing out that he has been stung because his wife s not don't see ma vet, pop. | the earthly angel of his romantic dreams. I dident ixpect to see her, ever sints * i e the age of shivalry its bin a womans | (JERTAINLY it would do much to stop divorce and add infinitely to the privilege to be 10 minnits late, and happiness of the world if. when a man got his matrimonial bargain home as long as we were on time let us wait | and looked it over carefully, he would make up his mind to get the most out heer with easy consciences and smil-{ of it, instead of writing it off as a total loss, ing faces and patiently bow to the old | Suppose he would say: “Humph! I perceive that S tradition, pop sed # hung on a hair trigger and likely to explode at any moment. And we keep on waiting and wait- | is going to be like living in a storm center, and I 1 me saying, G pop, Im hung cellar badly and often how are you? The same, thank you, pop sed Proberly meening hungry too, and he took his watch out saying, Ve gods, the 10 minnits perfod of grace has bin up for 15 minnits, they wouldent of stood for this even in the age of shivalry, this is wat is known in mod: ern times too mutch. Im glad your .a boy and not a gerl destined to hecome a woman and go through life keeping some innocent man wait- ing, he sed And we waited 20 more minnits by pops watch and all of a suddin he| sed, Yee gods it wasent this corner at all, we decided at the last minnit to meet in frunt of the resterant. And we'quick went there, pop wawk ing so fast I had to run slow, and ma was waiting there with a mad ixpres sion, saving, you made up your mind to get heer finally, did vou. do you realize that Ive bin walting heer like an ignorant wooden Indian for fully 10 minnits? Ten minnits, well wait till you here, pop sed 1 dont wunt to heer, I have no wish to lissen. enything you say will make matters werse. I don’t care wat it is, ma sed Wich pop dident say it, and we went in the resterant and ate, pop and ma ordered chickin and me ordering ter- key jiblets and changing it to ham. berger stakes and then changing it back to terkey jiblets God's earth happens outside of this block chirp about the children HOME NOTES or a platter. Put the fronded top of | t wdores me. fruit in the center of the dish. Lay| me. She wouldn't even think that they were crimes If I the triangles about the edge with the | committed them. If I were put in the -enitentiary for 99 vears, she would skin toward the cut rim. Serve three | be sitting at the door waiting for me 1 *n I came out. I couldn't sink so triar on a plate with a heaping it : 0w or be so disgraced that her arms uldn’t be open to take me in and an armchair like this In fact, this | oV - spoonful of powdered sugar in mpf;\”"'x',‘m;h’;‘ type of famback Windsor | cover my shame, and what is brilliance i~ side thatssort of devotion center )r the plates mayv be re dy | = 5 = —_— — s ometimes called the oper’” | prepared and served from the pantry. Lhfl,r_m —,-,:‘,, right arm ,.n,,,d,,,j to “What is being entertained beside real love? And, anyway, she is the Pineapple triangles may be a brea s s { oniy person on earth who regards me as an oracle and a model of manly fast fruit dish, eaten alone, or a de: | beauty, so I guess I wouldn’t swap her off for a lady spellbinder who would | sert. If the latter, some accompani only give me a small slice of afiection that she coulq spare out of her ment is required, but be careful not ve to have it veyy sweet or it will make uppose men the fruit appear to be too tart. Sponge | will just make the cake. shortbread, crackers pastry girls? cakes or cookies are recommended. ‘ The Daily club lly has a temper Living with her am goinz to need a cyclone “But she is a crackerjack cook. She is a human dynamo and, while she may give me the rough side of her tongue, I will get a soft berth to live in. She may be as fretful as a porcupine, but she is as industrious as a little busy bee, and if she isn't a soothing companion, she is a mighty helpful business partner, so I break about even.” Or suppose a man should say: “Betty is certainly a flivver as a housekeeper. She couldn't have a meal on time to save her life. The food she feeds her family on is first aid to the undertaker. The house always looks as if a cyclone has passed through it. and the children and I need about a pint of buttons sewn on our clothes. ually, and you'll say to yourself “Well, I got over that dreary busi ness. 1 guess this new misfortune | won't kill me. Just look how miser- able I was at one time, and how quickly I got over it. This new blow isn't going to discourage me any NCELINE There v voung poet Who failed to emerge So he said “I'll —-3 With rhyme, meter He did and he's now ir 1. A suburb of Lor the site of the Royal | dens. 2. Sight of A PINEAPPLE M CONTAINER 1s a AY FORM AN ARTISTIC CENTERPIECE AND BE THE OF THE PREPARED FRUIT AS WELL. an as Pineapple is so decidedly a trapical fru t it carries an atmosphere of the South to Northern tables. Pineap- ples are intere in appearance whth | their green fonds grow of the top of the finely col fruit Th closely connected disks ¢ ‘eves” af ford opportunity w mellow shades of deep red to shine almaost it hed while away i brown the rim There auty form and color in the pineapple. It is surprising that this fruit with such a combination is not 1d antage in tabl and you will have an artistic and un usual centerpiece. Serve With Juice. When the time comes to serve the ipple it should be set before the | ess, who scoops out the small into sherbert glasses, putting « ladleful of the juice over each serv- ing. The juice should be served in a mayvonnaise bowl, a small cutglass bowl or any dainty container of the right shape. Macaroons or lady fin gers are delicious with such a course. If preferred, the pineapple may be | put on a tray with the howl of juice, | the spoon and ladle passed to each ! erson, instead of being helped out by the hostess Triangles. A Southern method of serving pine apple slices is in triangles. Cut the pineapple into rather thick slices and | divide them into pie-shaped portions of as uniform a size as possible. The slices near the top will cut into fewer than the larger slices if por- tions are to be equal. The pieces a eaten by holding the skin part in the fingers and dipping the fruit into sugar as eaten Serving. The pineapple may be served in an attractive way on alarge round dish | Such courage you'll get from that dlary of yours, if you record events faithtully and truthfully You'll realize as you read it over and over that life is a succession of ups and downs, and that as you were ng “But the very spirit of home dwells in our house. There is peace in it, and love, and tenderness, and gayety, and laughter, and people flock to it. no matter how untidy it is. Betty may give us underdone bread and|able to conquer one setback, so you'll overdone meat to eat, but she feeds our souls on ambrosia. She may not be | be able to overcome each new one as always able to find a clean collar for me, but she never fails to find just the | it right word to say to me when I need it to brace and cheer me up. And so if I have my trials in matrimony. 1 have also my consolations.” Al (R suppose a man should say “Maud is a waster and a spender. She throws on trees. She dresses too expensively. She tries to keep up with people who are far better off than we are, and I can see | that life is just going to be one long sprint after the almighty dollar for me if 1 keep out of the poorhcuse s 3. Do away with 4. Meaning. 5. A volume containing the name of famous living personages (Note: It was not difficult poet to achieve fame, once he the secret—and this, in the form of MI.SPORT COSTUME OF BEIGE # complete limerick, may be deter A;"D P;\'r')g!‘ m»:hl PLAID FROCK |mined by putting the right words, in o SIGE R K dicated by the number in the cor AND BEIG SUEDE JACKET - ding spaces. Dhe nnmwer s LINED WITH PLAID. THERE |responding spa ko - e another “Puzzlick” will appear IS A RED SILK SCARF by Saturday’s “Puzzlick” There was a young salesman of Leeds Who swallowed a packet of seeds. In a month, silly ass, He was covered with grass, And he couldn't sit down weeds. as | o \ | 1 comes along. If you read this excellent philisophy in a book, you'd be inclined to pass! | it up with the thought: “Maybe that's | o right, but personally 1 think it's the bunk.” But when vou read in your hand writing the tale of a difficulty over come, of a sorrow forgotten, of a dis-| appointment met bravely and rele gated to the limbo of unimportant for this found in each sma is bott of is used to better dec money away as if it grew ration: < too soclally ambitious. She Pineapple Centerpiece. An attractive centerpiece costs nothing and which is prepare and artistic can he the following way: Wash a and dry well as possit green fronded top portion o apple off jaggedly, followin lines of a row of “eves flexible steel knife in one of sever the entire part of the fruit come low enough of the fruit may be scooped out. Be careful not to break the u edge on the top. The inside v e out in rather small down and keep on ice for sev hours, Also put the pineapple shell and top where they will keep cold which easy to made in neapple cut the the pine the out Insert a or a grapefruit the cut places, and top from the lower Make the opening that the inside principles concerning good taste in the city, and she knows just what type of street frock or hat really becomes her. But with sport wear it is not so eas and she frequently looks for leader. | ship in this sort of thing to well dressed Americans who seem to wear BEAUTY CHATS Slender Ankles. The girl who wants slender ankles | can comfort herself in the thought| The massage is not difficult. Take { that there are at least half a dozen|the ankle with both hands, and work { ways of achieving them. Some of the | around and around it with the fingers | methods are long and expensive, some | rubbing and pinching and kneading aren’t. By way of ellmination, the | the flesh as jard as vou can for abot most expensive way is to have thel!5 or 10 midutes. Incidentally, th fat baked off: it is done in elegtrically | makes vou feel fresh if you are tired heated ovens and the soft flesh liter- | and your feet ache. Rub up and down ally is melted away. This treatment | the leg, and well up to the calf. Wear hflhl"ér;s :1;« to be good for rheuma- | silk stockings whenever possible as tism of the legs. e ‘the ankles seem more Here are some more practical mmsg‘fl&‘% methods: First. find out your weight; if you are too stout, reduce. For anv reduction of the whole body affects| L. C. D.—If vou do not know ex most_particularly those parts which |actly how to dve your hair, vou will are normally thin, the ankles, the be taking chances on having an even under part of the chin and so on. and perfect shade, even though you And then massage hard. You can | are expecting to dve it black. Badly wear away a lot of flesh. You break | dved black hair may show all colors up and scatter the soft fat, and if you | in the rainbow and still be black, and are patient, you can make your leg as | too much dve will make the hair look like wool, lacking any trace of gloss. Miss B. P—To get rid of sagging | chin muscles, vour massage should in shapely as vou want by this and by exercise. The exercise is to sit with | clude the muscles of the cheeks also as the sagging is not confined to the the feet hanging, then to stretch them in front of you. point the toes, and Walking about on tiptoe without | chin alone PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | tense all the muscles as hard as you BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. But I'll tell the world that she is some looker, and that it is some satisfaction to perceive that I am getting the worth of my money when she dolls herself up and everybody rubbers at her. Nor will I deny that the new social set that she has broken into, simply because she looks like a million dollars, has opened new doors of opportunity to me in a business way. Just because I do have to get up and hustle to make money as fast as she can spend it makes me put forth a lot more energy than I would have developed with an economical, savimg wife, who was a dime nurser. So maybe t xtravagant wife isn't a bad bet, after all, as a helpmeet t Try keeping a diary and as as doesn't cure that hopeles: going-to-be-happy-again feeling. (Mim{ will be giad to answer your love question. Just inclose a stamped, addressed envelope for a personal re. ply.) for the (Copyright. 1925.) BY EDNA KENT FORBES. COLOR CUT-OUT i man should say certainly ¢ s bore me to tears. She doesn’t know a thing on 1 get to tired of hearing her and the cook, and her new hat, and the people next | shoes fs for developing the calf of the | leg, but it also strengthens and makes the ankles shapely. 1 | | she It 1 should commit every crime on earth, she LITTLE MISS MUFFET. ve James Fenimore Cooper. the Amer- In Green Leaves. ican author, did most of writing the time comes for serving the eal, d off the ice of the pine and fill the scooped out shell with the drained portion F the top onto lower p; nd stand the plate is covered eaves, or with such nd, the dish of the table, When 3 If green parsley. w with lettuce fresh tercress would say: “Oh, best of the ones we have got.” well, there are no perfect wives! Wouldn't_it DOROTHY We be great, DIX. sreens sing or (Copyrizht. 1925.) Cross-Word Puzile 1925.) BY THORNTON W. BURGESS BEDTIME STORIES Jimmy Proves Useful. (Copyright. until in a few covered a nest. s has but poor excuse | very big nest. o Mother Natu lowjackets had been all Summer . building it. You should have seen s Sk b G Jimmy tearing that nest to pieces. He Sy Skonkc fad SHited M0 Mo | e tatter) a0 Ine T iy Tachets ld and the Green Meadows up to| Which then were in that state called | Farmer Brown's harnyvard . He wae | EFUbS. When he found nothing more Id hive happened | e ambled on his way down the Long "armer Brown's | “4ne. time before Farmer | . Later that d'," driving them down the | Farmer Brown's But before he reached|3eStr gre in the bank heside the roud| They didn't know exactly where it e e was. That is, they didn't know ex- R aiteatcs e e actly where the entrance was, for you | thing else and he turned aside. Jimmy | know vlhul entrance was only _fln\:illl was out All night. e is quite apt|hole just big enough for a Yellow i be out all mizht. Meanwhile the | Jicket to go in and out of comfort. Yellowjackets were in their home for ably That is why they had come they come ‘out -only by day down to look for it by daylight. port book, magazine or sewing basket, | Jimmy stayed out unusually Of course, when they got there they | 45 well as writing pad. It would also | Jolly round, bright Mr | found where Jimmy Skpnk had been | be a clever choice for the small guest | | net aeatiaoved w1l anowtl” ey ane | room, where there is no space for a | then that there was nothing more to| 9" worry about so far as those particular | Yellowjackets were concerned. “Jimmy Skunk.” exclaimed Farmer Brown's Boy, “I always have said Jimmy is one of the most useful of all the little people around here. and | this is another proof of it Jimmy certainly has n de a good job of this. I don’t know of anybody else around here who would have dared dig that | nest out. No.'sir, I don't know of anybody else who would have dared do it 1 hope Jimmy will stay right on our farm. He certainly pays his way." “He does s0," moments he had It w: un- s a big nest, a | You see, those Yel-| can Brown and came down to ackets’ nest armer Boy Yellow, yrses some s wn_ was make a writing shelf and under the Long seat there is a small drawer for paper | and pencils Reproductions of these chairs are found in the shops today, moderately priced, and are very convenient for | various purposes. It makes a com fortable chair for living room or porch and the broad arm can be used to sup- | for the he plac where Hygiene for Hikers. ‘:;rllaie:"wew Two girls plan to hike from Duluth |~ There is probably no greater per. to the Pacific. and they wish to Know | sonal health asset one can have today what to carry in the way of medical | than a well planned and intellizent or firstaid kit, what clothes they|executed cross.country hike. It is and what blankets or| just the thing the average city dweller nlh;r sleeping eqm‘pr}?lem. They in-| sorely needs but seldom gets. | tend to. camp out nights (Copyright. 1025.) Perhaps they can do no better than saiocis arrange a little pocket emergency Kit | of their own, following the instruc- tions and directions given in the tour ist's first-aid letter, which any reader may have on request, accompanied | with a stamped self-addressed envelope | but no clipping. There is just one | practical point to add to the instruc- tions given in that firstald letter, [ qnwion A3l (R #) GUICK oven namely. that ordinary tincture of | 5 iodin is a good emergency disinfectant i for questionable drinking water—one, The Chines have often been con or no harm in two, drops of the tinc: | quered, but their victors have always ture may be put in a quart of the|been absorbed by them. As a race water in question, shaken up and al- | they loathe fighting lowed to stand 20 minutes before one | drinks. This method of disinfecting | drinking water along the way has | just one advantage over the use of | “chlorid of lime" or other chlorin preparations for that purpose: every kit contains tincture of pack covering im some. Jate. Here's Miss Muffet. had al Have you ever met Little Miss Muf- fet who lived a long, long time ago and about whom you have often heard in the old nursery rhyme? Well, here she is, come to play with you. And If you follow the Color Cut-Outs you wiil have a whole wardrobe of pretty hats and dressés for the little lady. Before cutting Miss Muffet out paste her on a plece of heavy paper | such as the cover of a magazine. Her hair should be colored a lovely golden brown and her eyes blue. Make her slip a very pale pink with shoes and stockings to match. Her pantalettes, which little girls of long ago used to wear, should be left white. Next time, the story of Little Miss Muffet will begin, and there will be a pretty dress and hat for the young| s { emergency | fodin. On a hike it is necessary to have some protection against sunburn, par ticularly in the mountain regions, and for this purpose either a generous smearing of the exposed skin with freshly prepared cold cream and a heavy covering of talcum or a smear. ing of zinc oxide ointment will afford good protection. The walking shoes should be light | soled, broad low heeled or rubber heeled, neither tight as dress shoes nor any looser than is necessary to avoid all pressure, and the soft up-| pers_should extend at least half way up the leg. The toes should be broad and give room to permit free wrig- gling of the toes within. The shoes should be roomy enough to permit wearing a cork insole as a cushion for the feet, or perhaps thick or dou- ble wool socks for that purpose. For hiking over soft ground, turf or in the woods, moccasins are far better than any shoes. Easy or “athletic” union suits of all wool or silk and wool should be worn by hikers in all seasons, and light weight, of course. You may under- stand the reason for this is you will put on a wet cotton or linen bathing sult and stand or walk in the wind and then try the experiment with a wet woolen bathing suit. Women should wear bloomers for hiking, just as they do for athletics in the better colleges. A good wool sweater is better than any kind of coat. A felt hat with medium size hrim is most satisfactory head covering in all weathers. Get the hat a size too large and remove the lining, so that the felt will cling to the hair. Flannel shirt of middy is the best body covering. This, too, should be Chocolate One-Egg Cake. One-half cupful butter or other fat, one cupful sugar, two cupfuls flour one cupful milk, four even teaspoon fuls baking-powder, one egg and one teaspoonful each salt and vanilla | Bake in layers in a quick oven and | | What TomorrowMeans to You BY MARY BLAKE. Virgo. The unfavorable planetary aspects that prevail this evening continue to morrow until a little after noon. Then | they change and assume a more ame- | | Horative character, and, in the eve. ning, they become quité benign. It is hardly necessary to counsel restraint | during unsatisfactory conditions. You will find it difficult to concentrate, and | | it will be one of those periods when | everything seems to go aw It is not much use attempting any out-of- | the-way task, but for the brief space | of time involved be satisfied with the small things of life. In the afternoon and evening more cheerful influences will prevail. They will not stimulate you to accomplish anything big. .but the daily task will be less monotonous, Do you chafe? Dustmagic Kora Konia on parts that chafe. No more soreness! 50c at' All Drug Stores said Farmer Brown. | Across. To connect. A color. Employ. Mark. Title of address. Phoenician cit | T e 4 AND THEIR CHILDREN. Volcano. Congealed water Heavenly hody Grassy plain Hoisting device. Greek letter. Easy going. (Copyright. 1925.) MODE MINATURES Somoa NTION TO SOMETHING TURNED ASIDE JIMMY'S DRAWN AND HE Gloves were not so many years back considered one of the most important attributes to a gentlewoman. But | nce war times we have been sorely started | neglectful of them. However, this Ambling | season Fashion promises to recapture him of | their place of prestize and a woman|and social functions should be pro- Br and those horses the ductive of pleasure. fternoon before and once more he r A boy born tomorrow promises to began to der what could have be lusty and healthy. He will go happened to them. When he reached through infancy without any serious the place where they had been plung ailments, and will undoubtedly attain ing about, he stopped en he_be a good physical maturity. A girl, on gan to look around. Yo Jimmy the other hand, will not be so fortu- has quite as much curiosity as other | nate, and though the signs indicate a little people. He climbed up on the healthy womanhood, it will be secured mossy bank and as he did so a Yel only after illnesses of more or less et disappeared in 2 hole al-| gravity. In disposition and character, rder h0se. the boy will not be studious in the exclaimed Jimmy, his eves general acceptance of the term. He bri nz. “Ha. I'm glad I came | will, by nature, be a lover of nature, down this way. A few Yellowjackets well versed in all outdoor sports, and, are just what my stomach needs.” in the choice of a career, anything of Straightway Jimmy to dig. a confining character should be elim- Now Jimmy Skunk may sometimes ap- | inated. The girl will be patfent, win. | pear to be lazy. That is simply be- some and attractive. She will seek to cause he takes thi eas When acquire accomplishments, both prac- there is somethi hii he Wants!should even in these small accessories | tical and artistic. She will be ex- Jimmy is quite will work for it. | exercise discrimination in her choice, | tremely loyal and affectionate. | As soon Jimmy bezan dig=ing. | If your hands are plumv then you| If tomorrow is your birthday, you out poured those Yellowjickets, angry | haq best restrict yourself to tailored | are shrewd and calculating, and, al- through and throuzh. Fach was gtyles—selecting the plain doeskin |though of an affectionate character, armed with a sharp litde spear and|glip.on, now appearing in new rust | never allow vour head to be dominated ready to use it. You know there are!anq shrimp shades which bid fair to|by your heart. You are discriminat. no hotter tempered litile people than ! become the rival of our old favorite— | ing. especially in your associations, hese little wasps which are called | peige. Slender hands can wear novel. | and carefully separate the wheat from Yellowjackets. They are afraid of | (v gauntlets without suffering from | the chaff. You are studious, and think | nothing and no o 0 1the moment | the hreak of line and effect of short-|# great deal over what you read. You | limmy began to dig, cut they poured, ! ening which the cuffs afford. are extremely fond of having your prepared to fight and drive away who! NARGETTE. |own way, and are not easily led, as ever was digging in that bank. no AR | your opinions and ideas are positive. matter how hig he mizht be i | In your home life, you are loving, But they hadn't counted on Prices realized on Swift & Company | tajthful and loyal, and although nof | Skunk. That long fur of 3 demonstrative or gushing, convince | whipped cream and a bit of currant asn't easy to zet down every one, by vour actions of the place | 5 lor plum jelly on top. For variety Jimmy just snapped them our home and family occupy in imy the cavity in the apple with and left. He went right your heart, g | chopped nuts. % HEE A o Down. Linear unit. Group of players. Island in the Aegean. Persia. Fondle. Girl's name. Article of belief. The solar disk. Uncooked. Nine hundred (Roman). Engineering degree (abbr.). Act of from one navigable water to another. Law maker. Egyptian sun god. To be protuberant. Clergyman's house, Goddess of grain. Auditory organ. Ocean. Electrified particle. Made by a spider. Native American. Tre. Pertaining to Scandinavia. Not_difficult. Against. ‘American patriot and orator. Obstruction placed in a stream. Settled course of procedure. We. Prefix meaning in. Not most. ready blue nb up in the my 1 e v tha S 1 Novel. Cleaning fmplement Man's nickname. Japanese coin. Convulsive in “Encountered. Personal pronoun. Pertaining to a country. Personal proneun. Loose garment. Wild ass Conjunction. In contact with. ... for Sore Skin The Sewing Club. mer alation of air. NEW COLOR GIVES STYLE te wearing apparel—draperies —everything Use Putnam Fadeless Dyes to change the color of last year's fabrics to this year's most fashionable shades. Bring your wardrobe up to date. Redecorate your house. Curtains, furniture covers, pillows, etc., can all be easily and suc- cesstully transformed with Putnem Dyes. The same 15-cent package colors ell fabrics—silk, cotton and wool—in one operation. _See color chart at your druggist's. Directions on every package. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES original one-psckage dye T averiats and pirpoces g | = T ] [ lowjac most 1 “Ha hter old. Great period of time. Point of the compass. Commotion. To move a boat. Waste cloth. Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. 15 One Mother says: Long before they are old enough to Join ‘the domestic science classes at school, my own little girls and a num- ber of their chosen friends learn to cut out small garments correctly, do neat hemming, make a French seam, cat-stitch, etc., through the fact of my having started a Friday afternoon sewing club. The girls bring their dolls and any pretty pieces of material they may have gathered together. I do not think it is the simple tea-party which finishes the afternoon that| purchased a size too large, to allow keeps up their interest and good ef-|for shrinkage; and it should be light forts, although, of course, it does help. | weight. (Copyright. 1925.) It is best to avoid waterproof ma- Baked Apples. Baked or steamed apples, which have been cored and peeled, make a | most appetizing dessert. Serve with Jimmy JImmy's | 1or" Week “ending . Saturday. through. | 1925 on shipments sold out. ranged up. right | 9.50 cents 16 20.00 cents per pound and iazed 15,14 cente Der pound.—Advertive: on “digging | ment,

Other pages from this issue: