Evening Star Newspaper, October 28, 1925, Page 34

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WOMAN’S PAGE. THE EVENING TAR, WASHINGTON, D. .. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, - 1925. FEATURES. BY MARY MARSHALL Revicw. Types. BY MIMI. (Copyright, 1025.) Shades of Brown Match Pekingese otners— . Classifies SUB ROSA . 2 T otk M i ’Doroth)a Dix| ‘e e vt The Daily Cross-Word Puzzl D match every ona's clothes stacted in Parls a fow annibal Mother, Doormat Mother, Goat Mother,| -opposites tive to each wrate and compli- [ woman went walking down the Ave: el e S ud the pets might ob- | nue des Champs Elysses with o spotted > Press-Agent Mother anpirc Mother acres tell us. And on this theory 5 dalmatis i g vore 5 S o S = blonde girls marry dark men, talkative and a hat to match. Her shoes and the Real Mother. and dashing sheiks woo and win shy, stocklngs were likewise of black and :'l‘lLlll;AR \‘ll;lli‘\ ‘rh]n[ have never been ot of mother’s sight. white. Then it became apparent that o other women were doing the same, oW eHEhL - 5 - In the majority of these cases, the INOW. raughly speuking, mothers may be divided into these classes: First, marriages are successtul, the oddly as- and a little later there wasadog parade te : - S the cannibal mother. The cannibal mother devours her children alive. e Bois toulogne, at which 3 3 ,. v s e e She never lots them have any life of their own. She never lots them have | sorced couples live falrly bomp that T o women Sen The brown ) a single thought of thelr own, or gratify a single personal taste or inclination, | {1,514 sy ng I8 & sound one. Pekingese, the wire-haired fox terrier or have any individuality whatever. There 1s one kind of opposition, how- and a white and gray bulldoz were 4 . S ever, which seldom makes for a happy among the dogs thus represented = 4 When they are small children she holds them by the hand whenever |marriage. The gay butterfly who A do <ht to be exceedingly they go out for a walk, and she makes them sit at her knee and listen to |marries a sober v-at-home fellow popular this Winter, it this fad for improving stories instead of playing with other children. She makes them fand endeavors to carry him along with ing one’s doz in the ensemble eat the kind of food she considers best for their little tummies. She picks [her in the soclal whirl soon learny ues, is the tter, for the out their clothes for them, and maKes their friends for them, and decides |thut though opposites may be attracted tones of hi ¢ coat blend excel- on their c s, and select’s their husbands and wives for them, and absorbs | to_each other, they shouldn’t neces: lently with some of the new bois de them so completely that they have no more originality than a rubber stamp, | sarily get married. rose tones. A brindle bull of stalwart XA no more initiative than a bowl of mush and milk and no more backbone than [ The man about town, whose wife build would go very well with the a fishing worm. prefers the quiet hearth and a book to b line-looking mixed tweed suit. e an evening's gayety, finds that he Undoubtedly this ensemble idea a3 Even after her children are married, the cannibal mother still continues | ISt elther give :‘:,’Q’g“i’,‘,’(’,‘;{ arties. e aaeh R ol { to feast on their bones and to nibble on their husbands and wives as a sort | p1% D e of side dish. For she conslders that she has a perfect right to continue to | W& (0o 0o ihine complacentl best developments of recent fashions, manage her sons’ und daughters’ affairs, and she thinks herselt grievously | ZVREEIES KIS B TR QU0 ill used when her inlaws emit loud shricks of agony when they see them-| it LA 7 ISR BIEH SR Set- It is an oft-repeated rule of present fashions (hat hats Should always ex- selves and their homes and their happiness about to be gobbled up by her. tled down in the new home. actly match in color the frock or the i, ot il Katherine thought so. She figured prevailing trimming. To strike a S ZJCOND, the doormut mother. The doormat mother prostrates herself be-|out that Tom had Egone in for the colo} not introduced in the costume fore her children and begs them to walk all over her and kick her around. | soclal ,\u}nl s0 heavily simply because would be quite wrong. Before they are 3 weeks old her babies have her completely under control|he hadn't a nice little home and a And vet as you look about you, even and can make her do their bidding. charming wife to make his staying in among women who spend a great deal =2 a few evenings a week worth while. their elof hu see how far from - But Tom n changed her mind Wniversal such n custom really e never thinks of such a hing as making her children obey her of |uput that. 11 favorite rematk over | You still see brown or bois de rose show her any respect. On the contrary, she minds them and lets them be as | e hreakfast table wa By the w coats worn with hats of violet or petu tmpudent and insulting to her as they like, When they criticise the food she | (00 G 0o e Gining with the Van nia shade. You see let-trimmed . has spent hours in preparing and find fault with the clothes that she has spent | g o8 By il Cenine ™ Yes, T know e rioality Onice asdin frocks worn with £ of the new to Victory at Orleans. half the night making for them, she is humbly apologetic because ghe failed | they ghould have asked you first, but| o Playing card. Finished kay shade. Doubtless we aré on the Atrased th har golden armor carey | 2 B and when they tell her that she is a fool and deride her opinion, she | van just extended the invitation in-f10" Coagt reglon of Minor . Pavadise. r sad, but will take a long. | < e Armor, Carry- | j,,ws her head before their rebukes. formally to me, and on the spur of (15" Goddess of Misc o Hawaiic time to convince -romen of the & utiful banner, Joan was & — the minute I accepted.” er of Troy . Concer e of keeping out the color | st ire as she rode forth at The doormat mother sighs sadly as she tells you that she can do nothing | And poor K., who hated the thought 01d Times . in their he of an army of 10,000 men. | with her 10-or-12-year-old children, and she weeps and wrings her hands be-| of dinner party with dozens of i imes G cause her flapper daughter stays out joy-riding until 3 or 4 o'clock in the | sirange people she didn’t know and Nifekniane (ofis Eovernos morning and her cake-eater son is ru th a ot of hooze hounds. Merci- | didn't want to know, had to nerve her- | 19" Lngineering degree soldiers and ws she led| ully, it does not occur to her that children accept their parents at the It evening after evening for an |3 pocior e O 2 1 they felt sure of victory. | valua and that if n mother thinks she is nothing but a rag fo r A which she had never expected |71 papived foir “ At 19 g She a supernatural being Lessons in English : tonished veteran childre on they will do it face. Sy ragle. e . She loved Tom—yes. But her life Eiectrified particle 5 ) The goat mother is the one who considers that her | with him could not have been called Notven: e BY W. L. GORDON. Her ' v ctrified the men y SR ke a living sacrifice of herself for her children. | particularly happy, since it consisted Fictitious name. of a5 ial events which took Hoch One of a pair of dice. Existed. Name. Unit of germplasm Furopean river . One hundred and one Ocean. Impel Herself. Leap playfully Child (Scoteh). Rest azainst St wzing the forces i Una 1 p they the . W evervthing for b as soon as baby is born. ; e L Words often misused: Don't say|ling < ns and rescued the| Be i P uentihe wiasiprecy, nd ”M”\'l nd interest | i ite for the things she loved doing. i city had promised the k . liked 1o go about with her husband to places of | "RULe 108 LI 0 RS o 0 1 asked for o 2 at ta & birth she goes dowdy because baby pulls at|noihing better than to be continually Augment | Y v ' ' ) takes time to comp her hair decently. Her | o vocial swim. She loved meeting (verh). » ' the au as o in m:»"‘; 1 1 it sterilized baby foods and she never | oqpte She adored the constant ex- o, aee last syllsble. ~ __[the Em o 5 ; S o because she b at home and hold baby's hand while | citement of rushing off to some dance [ us. Note | than hu and v o ek s every evening. L | But Roger, her fond husband, didn’t Skiliful, adroit. dex - : 1 the Iren are older she makes a burnt offering of herself on the | see things that way at all. He refused skilled, t ; lor the s suit of armor af o e Gove is of different cake to humor the food fads|to be made miserable because of his | 3 r Youngste Jis @ new hat so that Sally may have six at | wife's taste for excitement. 1 study Use word three d 3 4 e . ration thit means her very life so tha 1| And because Bea loved him, she i nd It is your: Let us in 5 J : vell fr v. Her hands are rough and sodden with dish water { inally cut out all the gayety and the wes the up-to- se our vocabulury by mastering 5 d ter's may be pink and manicured mad rush . Davn s all very well to word each day lay's word MENU FOR A DAY 1 ot elops all the selfishnes d greediness there is in| But she isn't happy, really—she tch the violet, and oke, to call forth “K dly at 7 character «nd she never understands why it is that e is|mopes at home, W Roger would More recently passionate rose | titude toward our W men never and why her sacrifices are made in vain luy down his eve: ng book and sug- Wra tile terrier wants to | fails to evoke the best heir na ] IREAKFA yved und unappreciated, PR i EEEEE gest their buzzing off to the dance at| 3. Neg ! Melof : e Ll A ) 2 i the country club. . Greek letter wi v ]‘M RTI. the pressagent mother. The press-agent mother is one of the| (et it definitely settled before you Half a dozen | rld’s greate »s and about as great a handicap as any boy or girl imarry either that you'll do the giddy | 6. River in 1 | could nave. “Fe her tries to sell her children to the general publ [—or that you'll lead the simple| 7. Unit BEDTI‘IE STORIES BY THORNTON « own valuation, and she boos r goods so high and so out of prope {h life. Don't think you can com-| 8. Doorkeeper of a secret soci i\ e 3 their real worth that she makes them ridiculous. romise. One or the other of you al-| 9. Not wild. W. BURGESS ) has to give in, and that one is|11. Arabian seaport always unhappy. . Part of the mouth. B nother raves over her as a beauty who would have Wi we are stiff, but if we are we 1 { beat Al 1l Mother calls her carroty hair “Tit her pale I don’t know it.” ¥ lad. > “ nehed in dew'; she describes her scrawniness as I suppose.” @ Peter, “th: peies I And mother tells of mythical million: who are | spend the Winter down in the ground.” | = o E Y t . “Keep right on supposing so,” r 0dy knc thoityneiofiboy whio s (upniediout by the vasq 0 e ru atls e plied little Mr. Garte: ake, “for that . $ T y 1biic school ther touts him as a genius who is going to set s is just exactly wi do. Sometim C € ot e w big business men are just struggling to get . Mr | e are in the earth and sometimes we C ir offices. - Eoncs He| Coldeslay insist upon wre in cracks in the rocks. Either Giacker ol o ¥ Ol place s us if it is deep enough. | 5 The result is that we all discount Mary and Tom and rate them far 1 ! ires for |iyvetal ry to get in deep enough below their real worth. Chief among the obstacles that young people have 1 so that there will be no danger of | to overcome are the prejudices that their press-agent mothers have raised my el f g to death. A lot of us usually s ainst them in our minds. We are so tired of hearing about them that we ! | make our Winter home in the same One cup boiled rice, one pint | Jare not willing even to give them a fair show. o | place. T have a little burrow not far sweet milk, two egas, two tea- | | s s e . In m‘Where we araright now. I don't| [ Spoons baking powder, one tea- | | mother. The vampire mother is the mother who 1t d-telling you that, Peter, because | | gPioN = St atte ! es her children to herself. She is the mother who makes a " cnowW you will keep it a secre ¢ s T ughter ve up a great career to stay at home and nurse her, or etersnodie head yigon Who forces her son to promise not to marry as long as she lives, so that he tedjthatine would (kespic > SE an give her all of his time and attention and mone o = o . . who persists in living with her married children, even A S ret She is the moth “A lot of my fa are around here A s < 2 h she knows that she is an element of discord in their homes and that B gy my family are around h {hree & o S wives and_ orphans Tittle children. More than seven million tea now. )i here is ery O separa husbands now. This bank here is a very good | | nritr eSO separates husband | Winter home for Garter Snake 1 ‘ PR r - {and my family have usea it for sta e pile, stirring oon | | QIXTIH, the real mother. The real mother is the mother who loves her drinKers will now use no other | era sald little Mr. : ling point children wisely as well as tenderly. She teaches them to obey her. (8 blend. Ask forSALADA to-day. e, She forces them o respect her. She develops their individuality and teaches ;ButiBmeyer baye seen you Ct any, P % them fo stand on thelr own feet and walk alone, metaphorically as well as other Garter Snakes over here in the £ gr “Eng ically. She strengthens their backs by laying burdens on them and Summer,” cried Peter. or young Americ hee 8 ve Jshness in them by teaching them to consider others. “I want to know!” sald Mr. el frimifines andinan s And hecause she has taught them obedience and self-control they grow Snake. “Well, I don’t think you ever until thick up into good and because she has been a shining example to them will_see us over here in the Summer 0l the mix- hey worship b DOROTHY DIX. In Summer we have to eat. In Win- Pt and tola to whites | | s ter we don't. Then we have to sleep. 2 until stiff and dry. | This is a very poor feeding ground. e torea talone e el Rttt ihite s - sl LB e 1 most excellent sleeping in pa ¢ eater ana aDRe S orum»bse. TNQUIRED| PUCHE I S mantienaaliont aleantne | hot Veal Loaf. Place in the pan and baste with a Mit. SNAKL and then when we come| | oven. Remember that ol coug, | | One and onehalf pounds chopped |tle brown stock. Bake about three out in the Spring we move off to bet- | | flo must be served at once. veal, one ounce salt pork, one cup |hours. | texitestinel gronads ST SuDEDse oM riced potato, two teaspoons poultry | know, Peter, that I am the last of the , T can't they are,” Peter | Snake family to go to sleep for Win- g herbs, two teaspoons chopped parsley, Oranges and Cocoanut. You know I don't want to Peel and remove the center | [four ounces raw ham, two eggs, one- just the exact place, Mr. Garter e oh ) renlive" manew Doty of the onion, parboil 5 minutes quarter cup cream, three teaspoons| Brown desiccated cocoanut slightly uld like to know the | “That's queer." 3 and drain. Mix one cup bread salt, onequarter teaspoon pepper. |in the oven and sprinkle over with > you sleep all 1S it queer?” inquired little| | Crumbs with one tablespoon but- | | Butter a bread tin and have ready for |oranges cut in chunky pleces. make a nice, Soft, 4 : 5 ther“melled). one beaten egg. one. | |loaf. Chog the meats all together, add iR alf cup chopped nut meats and | | the beater eggs and then the potato, i should say not.” replied little Mr. use you areusg uch) ’,’;‘fi,’,‘:; peper and salt to taste. Fill the | |which hasbeen mixed with the cream | Dallas Typographical Unlon, No. 173, P \a “Did you ever see me | Peter. “I should think a big Snake onions, place them in a baking and spiceg Shape the mixture into a | has just celebrated its 40th anniver- ) kind of a bed? When I |would stay awake longer than a little| | 2D Pour in a little water and loaf and IFush with melted butter and lon't care what Kkind of | Snake. Do you mean to say that Mr.| | Pake wantiljtenttor, iLasting \e: bed 1 have. You ses 1 sleep £o|Black Snake and Buzztall the Rattle. | | uently with melted hutter di- indly it _really doesn't make any |snake and Bluffer the Adder are al- e i Lollne waler akes are not so fussy | ready asleep for the Winter?” t have soft beds in order | ““That's just what I mean to €ay,” | Snake family to go to bed for the | replied little Mr. Garter Snake, re-|Winter. I suspect it may happen any said Peter, “that is be- | versing himself. Sivino Lt s s | not very well get into| “I wish you wouldn't run around |y, Syinnl R oy aastar ko || ble position If you try. | over yourself so,” complained Peter. | yeathe I don't see you | us other folks get stiff | “It makes me nervous.” Seiin Soodbvel Petec RABMIC until| lon in one position. | m just trying all my joints,” ex- | pext Speng. g © anything like that | plained little Mr. Garter Snake. “It{ " Tittla Mr. ter \Snake stopped| |is the only way I can do it without | running around over himself and little Mr. _ Garter | running away, and I don't want to do | plided away so suddenly that Peter to run arouhd over |that while I'm talking.” He looped |didn't see just where he went. And ThLat 1s, we never get [himself into a figure elght and then | it was that Peter didn't find little 1 stiff. I suppose when | re rsed it in the most fascinating | aMr. Garter in the middle of | w: Yes, sir, I am the I of the [ spend their New Lustre for Faded Fabrics DON‘T wear faded stockings, dresses or lingerie. Renew them! An fabric can be made ‘d luRsfi(‘)ugf fast blxic, = with New Improve . Tryit. It's . 7our fami] | wonderfully easy to use. ? i ";:flzdinb:.“ Fiendy New Improved RIT at I5¢c at all s . H druggists, department and general 3%’;,',’,:?:,: i - e who 4 % stores. Black and 23 beautiful shades rics and enables you to el Breatey ofpra Of the . i . . SO e ot o ol TR o R IT. o e " o Pracicl fog e Wtheyfoanans Your reputation as a cook is not entirely dependent Also removes stais NEW IMPROVED Pertactly barmios. i s e upon the cooking fat you use—but a real good =< ; : cooking fat does make things taste much better. T i Snowdrift a rich creamy shortening for making cake, biscuit aad pastry and for frying

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