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WOMAN'S PAGE,- THY EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON,: D: C. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925. FEATURES. What Tomorrow Means to You| How to Gain Variety at the Table New Fans That Are Very Popular BEAUTY CHATS BY EDNA KE Little Benny BY MARY BLAKE. S—— ' LY] UE B ), LKER. BY MARY MARSHALL. BY LEE PAPE. 2 BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Eo [ S — For the Housewife. | EoTan wiiirnis took mdor ot S There is probably no housewife over | up meals gets fagged. There i8 no| Tomorrow’s planetary aspects are| Whether or not we carry fans this| My cuzzin Artle came erround last | The hardest thing for the house:|it doesn't. The easiest plan is to keep e, facn.6F 1he Slobe wh doss ot sy | ofie but the launewits to Qu i, theugh, lexcellent nsiag-sis sesth SArt of 16| Autamn wid Wisten 1t wely Soem, 2 Imite and we tuwied about different | Worler 1i to remembor to protect her | vour cledning materials in 4 baskel at some time during the year, in per-|So she must go on thinking them ub.|day and until noon. Thereafter, for z L Aubjecks and pisyed aifterent gumes tn | /SNCE DELR S00 MOTEN. B s wonic| 28 th L maids do, ar plexed tones: Still there are pleasing and delightful | brief period they become reactionary 3 g 3 Bhe e CCLU TR DO e DeedInE | Tl Clnuoll imion miaicire, and! dust: u k. Rubber S8 meals in great number which she her- [ and ‘adverse. o donn | short-haired mode prevails or gives p 4 |the puper, and after & wile pop sed, Iy a , a 3 o g g 2 xbo o e r hafaub 4 ¢ influence of Look at that clock, the he )t doom | IN8 after all is not very dirty work— |ujong with Jolish d el f has devised. If only she could re- | throughout the rest of the day they [ WaY before the softer influence o ok at , the hour o ™ |and then at the morning's end she will | dusters, - dustbrushes and il e 1l In detail what some of them Were, |are favorabie, and the vibrations ave | frills and femininity that has been pre- S o OB b look at her hands, that started 50 | odds and ends of clehmins 1 such how much it would help! stimulating. Under these conditions | dicted. For It doesn't seem auite ap-] £\, 10 -bed; ‘anal T aed, 15 innits, | fresh and dainty, and find rough skin | makes the work enaie F Such afd is easily within her reach |it would be advisable to “tackle your | Propriate L"J carry a fan “:h}“f;: s ot o, Sed, 15 more minnits, |and dry black lines around each na, | ta e e ghe tool if she uses the suggestion given to-|job” as early as you can and, during | ¥ s O T T bleeve your rite. science has made | Dalf moons of grime beneath them and | saves steps, and it saves space. fnce day. If religiously followed its re-ithe morning, go at it with vim and | e seyerty of & youne spioce WP wonderfill advendes: bop. ged a collection of stains that appeared |the hacket can be kept down in the sources are surprisingly great. Try it | energy. In the afternoon our work |l Farrings, parasols, and tans— Well can Artie stay 16 more minnits, |10 the most extraordinary way Kitcher ket with o handle but for a little while and see what | should be more meditative than active, [¥4Ve i thelr most severe eqitions = no more and no less? I sed - "] The only way to work. if vou really | does st benefit it 1 and the syrrounding influences very well with the close-cropped hatr. Its a bargain, pop sed. Meening all | Want young and pretty, well cared fc And e vo uwear the gloves yoy Meal Record. for poise and deliberation. —After|p o' oy YQither do frilly, lace-trim. rite, and me and Artle started to per- | hands, is to keep working gloves all | carry about when you w AeAl oo this unwelcome break In an otherwise ;04 “frocks nor gorgeous-jeweled tend to be end men in a minstrel |OVer the house ore” you wash perfect re ‘safs 1o wesume|([L. SOCKE nor - SOREROL RAENE N show, me going down in the kitchen | dishes, or paint, or scrub, or do any-| Constant Reader—A plastie surgeor your former energetic endeavors, and |pracelets mnor dinmond chobers wof it g Gl Bernine end’ o & | thing ‘that means keeping the hands |corrects protrudf The opers to do your utmost to put o What (o ndbala | PF 5 s | yiir It < | under water, put on rubber gl tion amount \e cartilage vou have in hand Anything that has at Cinderella. wore. the element of speculation and undue| Perfect consistency would require a ace and all over mine, | YOU can %oak clothes by sme: | behin € L ome sewing Artie od eveni Mr. | hands with lard, slipping ¢ Lok 1 muscles. hazard is doomed tomorrow to failure. | very, very austere mode of dress to v v ko with the close-cropped head of to Bones, how do you feel this evening &l nd snapping elastic You will have to inquire of the sur day. But then—when in the last 2,000 I feel Tike & fat lady after she has |4round ihe wrists. The little water | geon about the length of e Ve ate 3 cans of baking powder, I sed. | that leaks in then won't hurt them. |have to take from business, and also < ‘o it. Filled, | strength. It will require, none the | Years has fashion ever been perfectly Hows that, Mr. Bones? Artle sed, | Take them off and wubstitute white |about ‘the costs. i the present o e O e Y aan for each day | less, much care and well regulated | Consistent? The fact ls that many and I sed, Swell. How do vou feel | COtlon gloves Tor sweeping and dust | varied styles of wearing the hatr, it would yield five menus for each doy | oo, 0 on. - S0 much. depends. on | fashionable women take much pleas- ik avining s M5 Toabor ¥ son ing. Slip on rubber on woman should feel sensitive about her e e 17 Bbing it resuiarly 18 | tho nutrition that thix child may res| Ure In just theso little inconsistencies. I feel Itke a man with a box of | Washing down the bath tub, fors. fand ¥l cawared most practical?, Dolng it FeswAry 40y I K e its Infney that theine] In Vietorian ‘ays—they wore tight- safety matches going off in his mouth, | MeANS using hot water an I sheiden e o e ey o e awrite down | portance of this point caniot be. over. | fiting. low.cit bodices that acoen AR S ; ing a habit. At any rate. write 3 DOMB) % tuated all the seductive curves of a & th e menus are sood as | stressed. Tt a boy. his characte 1l Hows that. Mr. Tambo? 1 sed, and jlis menus that are ¥ e & g sl RO e A., woman's body and then insisted on Avtip e/ Lilte i the Bea: ¥ A how 4 % Another Method. cheerful and even mischievous, he [SKirts that hid the ankles. That was lo vou feel this evening, Mr. Bones? = g will, ut other times, be moody and | Just as inconsistent as our present ) | he sed. o other way for the house- | mel oly. He should be compelled | Way of dressing with boyish simplicity | Halt, stop, the audience is ixhaust The' special dishes and occasions on |an age similar to his own and should [ fans and wearing jewelry of surpass- | faces, wen did that happen? he sad. which they were served: A vertical{not be left too mueh to his own de. {108 charm. And he made Artie go home, wich he | fling cabinet with the months indexed | vices. If a girl, she will be winsome| And really there keems not the did with the bernt cork still on his | | may give her the most satisfaction. | and attractive, and by her inherent | slightest reason to suppose that the |face jest for the ixperiment, and 1 | It should. of course, be very small, ) charm able to Imost anything | vogue for rt hair will diminish. In i\l:quvl to get riddy to wash mine off | with little cards to write upon. By |she war This, however, will not | fact, while there are instances now | and Jest then T got &0 sleepy I went to e The ‘menus for the month | make her selfish or unmindful of oth-as ever of women who are letting | bed with it on, and in the middle of i their short hair grow, there. are still the nite I woke up on account of ma depends on whether or not the boyish, Keep a book for the writing down of what you have for dinner at any time that it seems successful. In order that the seasonal menus be most accessi ble, use a diary, preferably one of the five-year line each day kind that has 3 hout enough s for the A child born ton w will give formation. Put it down under the day |every appearance of great vitality and and glancing at them something is inte sure to be found which will be of use in an immediate need. It is very de- sirable that they be separa ing to months, because in you will not be looking at n are out of season. The market varies little from year to year. What you were able to get two, three or four If tomorrow is your birthday and you are a woman, garrulousness is vour chief besetting sin. You talk too muth, yet say too little. In other re- spects you are kind-hearted, impul sively generous and possess high ideals. Your information is, however, superficial and if you could only per- many women having. it now short for the first time, and more numerous in- stances of women who already have it short who are now wearing it even shorter. *If you want to see the fashion real- Iy pass into the discard vou can wish for nothing more effective than the shaking me to get up and wash my pillo case. il IS SN Prune Fluff. Soak half a pound of large prunes face and also so she could change my | until very soft, then cook slowly un- til tender, letting the juice cook down to about half a cupful. Pit them and rub them through a colander. Whip | the whites of four eggs to a soft froth, | add gradually half a cupful of sifted powdered sugar and beat to a stiff meringue. Add the prune pulp, a sroonful at a time, beating hard. vears ago you will probably be able to | suade vourself to delve more deeply | increased popularity of this very short buy today. into matters you would be less prone | hair. If enough women go homt i i e to indulge in idle chatter and provehair cut as short as their brother When Time Presses. to be a better companion and then we shall become so heartily 3 od may | Home life and domestic duties ha sick of the fashion that we will for- oy ot 1t 15 ont which at ‘attraction and You | swear the barbers: shears for the rest BPE s s aithongh thege |3 1 to be a loyal wife| of our lives. Meantime some of the menus getting mislaid. | @ : best dressed of the more extreme of ds indexed, but do not| If vou are n, You have alto- | fashionable women are having theis T At T th zether too e 1 opinion of your-| hair cut quite clase all around, allow- themselves on cards. If you find that nd, lhvl Scasejor ¥ouiawn lig- | ing - nh'lmlju\§ B .1n| !;mzr on the i riting of them s too paramount. You passess | top of the head is bit_of longer o A ! II.T,{‘ \‘X: ‘:’.fii-é"ff,hir: :«\:«fi;.hlo vou | integrity of purpose, have a keen mind | hair is waved to form a fluffy lock on| g M}‘r')::“np“s([,y\,\' Ll\[\; fadl to do it at all, do not be thwarted, [ and much intelligence. You have nc top that is most boyish in appearance. WITH BIRD FE 5 but set down the list of foods on any | however, a monopoly of these charac: Pearls are still worn for evening. GOLD SEQUI little scrap of paper handy. Moments |teristics. A little less self-assurance, | But there is in increased tenden 1S oF are so precious to many busy mothers | occasional deference to the opinions of | among women of fashion to wear d VER BEAD A et ors thiat thinEs others and more of a desire to visual »nds. Perhaps the visit of the Prince| jIAND.PAINTED FAN IN be done in the easiest manner possible | ize your as others visualize you Wales—always the darling of fash- ER. 1C DESI IN or else they are apt to slide into ob- would i your usefulness and | ion—to the diamond fields of South RED AND ORAN: WITH LONG livion dd to your temperamental stature. | Africa last Summer had something to| FRINGE OF THE SAME COLOF Well known persons born on this | do with that. Besides this diamond L AR 4 ate are: Spencer k, banker;| jewelry one sees interesting pleces— | with diamonds or with pearls. This, DY _NoOT : TO PUT DOWN | ¢ the menus are kept i o man- | Charles V. Riley, scientist; John T.|earrings. bracelets, necklaces, pend-| of revival of jewelry of 3 SPUL: ® I ner of cards, e s made bwhridg N A ants—made from colored stones—ru: ¥ that any recipes for which the menu |cent, actress: Story, justice emeralds, sapphires, etc.—set 9 . Court, and e -~ — i 1d shall T have for | calls be written on the back of the |of United States Suj : wa&h ofiyo“r e e Guaranteed better kind. 25c and up. Puzzlicks card it It will be so easy to use e > Read, stat l ' - brain which thinks | when the time comes for it. (Copy pure imported l reCk es: [ 1 T Puzzle-Limericks STIEFEL'S FRECKLE SOAP Hiekory El | will remove every one of them Hickory U ONAL HEALTH SERVICE worll hes CAusel & Qern Tot weibe _ — in one week. Your money Hickory Sock Garter dow g so great that g works back if it fails. 60c at all good Hickory Baby Garters druggists, or by mail from J. D. k# Se.,N.Y. of Belgium Hickory Baby Pants Stiefel, Inc., 246 Pe: Sold Everywhere Another les: features make them perfect No.2—TheElastic used in Hickory Garters is the same firm, strong Hickory Elastic that you buy by the yard for your sewing. You know what life and snap and stretch it has, how wonderfully it washes and wears. The live, springy rubber in Hickory Elastic makes comfort- able garters and keeps stockings up smooth. Only Hickory Garters, of course, are made with Hickory Elastic. Be sure you get this ND VANITY BAG TO MATCH | ~ALKER : T Recipes. A king who began on his —1— claimed, with a feeling of —2—, ‘“Though I'm legally —3—, No one seems to —4— » & astic or gymna That I haven't been born with a | and various gymnastic or gymnasium I ha Jazzathletios. | games are available for the high —5—. rushed to capacity. 3Y WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. : Hickory Products are sold at most good stores. If you do not find them, write, giving Dr. Brady: | school boy who earnestly desires to 1. One thing kings have to_do. 2. Suffering. your dealer’s name. 3. One who inherits. Address, Mrs. Ruth 4 0 one of the edi-| got & good physical education, 2 £ovd | |One day 1 tock stock . Mind. Stone, 1173 West Con- ou wrote dealt with the | training for life. i faul high school athlete and, how he is| The boy's allusion to the “clean llv- of my fauvlts — harming his he articipationdn | ing” that jaz: hletics induces would . Portion of the body used in P 15 on @ few of | be a pleasing theory were it not for | |Such dozens and dozens| | e gress St., Chicago. tese points th iemand a recount. | the common association of the other 1 had | (NOTE—This limerick, which can I am a high school .\»v.yh‘l?—lh vears kind of living with this very abuse in be completed by placing the right old—and participate in those sports ! ihe school. ~Jazzathletics’ embraces | |1 coyld never be §ood,| | words, indicated by the numbers, in you « N ous to one of my Kind, not only the games or sports that be- \ ld the corresponding spaces, might hamel the 440 is my specialty | long properly to grown men, college But I ezsily coul apply to some monarchs. The an —-foot ball, hockey anc et ball. or university men, but also the evils swer and another “Puzzlick” will Tust what harm 18 this going to do, | Which o with professionalism In | |Dg perfectly, | appear tomorrow.) for unless you can show me that im- | sport d'u.zlingly | mediate death will result, n not go-| Parents should be as pround of the Hickory Crib Sheets A.STEIN & COMPANY “TASTY" breakfast which you can have ready in good time to get the family off to business or to school. Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” 1o give them up? You said that they harmed the heart, and I understand they do a few other highly technical things, but what is their immediate effect going to be? T try to believe that I am strong and healty—I am not easily tired, nev- er sick, quick, and it hasn't affected ny mind vet, either. So just what—in nelish—is all the harm that a strenuous game does to me? Your article also said that too much exercise is worse that none at all—or words to that effect 10 quit strenuous athletics, 1 do for exercise—play croquet or the rough game of checkers? And after all, isn't the good in oth- er wa —team-play, the striving for an ideal, the clean living that it in- duces, and the other virtues of com- petition—almost enough to outbalance n weakened heart and the aspect of dying at 85 instead of 907 I await your reply with interest, as my family believes that by active play- ing as I do now, I will soon be an in- valid, (Perhaps’ I will) Yours hopefully I this boy himself comp typed his letter, I want to congratu- Jate him nd his school or teachers upon the excelience of his educatior: thus far. Very few vouths of the day can write a letter of such length with- out committing divers error Occasionally a boy of 16 is physi- cally prococious and as well developed as the normal youth of college age. Tn such u case the objection which 0d physicians and educated physical riners vwhere hold against foot mll and lon endurance races and rer strenuous games for high school ths would n Perhaps this of that type, t does his What does the phy hos 1 physical director—or if ere is such an authority on the high school staff, does he exercise complete control over the foot ball, the 440-yard | run and other strer us games, or is he unceremoniously 1oved aside, i m 3 schools where jaz: athletics preva nd an uneducated, incompetent, blatant quack coach e control of things? I believe I & ed in the article which aroused boy’s interest #ome suitable for regular high school boys, and I omitted checkers ind croqu Boxing, swimming, the ghort runs, base ball, tennis, basket boy who shines in his school athletic accomplishments as they are of the boy who leads his class in any kind of study—it is all education. But ab- normal precocity is regrettable in any e (Copyright. 1925.) HOME NOTES The original purpose of slip covers was to protect fine upholsteries from dust in the Summer, but now they are considered desirable at all seasons be. cause of their protective qualities and ? | the varled decorating effects 1l director in his school say—or has | make possible For instance, if the furniture of a room is all upholstered in mulberry- colored velours, that room’s decora- tive possibilities are decidedly limited. | But: when one considers slipping it into covers made from the hundreds of pretty and suitable fabrics procurable in the shops, the outlook at once brightens. So great is the vogue for slip cov- ers today that much of our finest furniture 1s made with upholsteries of some inexpensive material, such as denim, with the idea that it will at once be slip-covered. bad. SAFE-for the BEST SILVER A lasting polish, quick and to apply. 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