Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WONMAN’S PAGP. Barrel Silhouette Lends Variety BY MARY MARSHALI Lvery once in a while it occurs to ar another of the well known de- signers of Ps that it might sult 1he fancy of some of the fashionable women whose clothes they make to 80 about ped like a barrel, Or, to ] cnffs and narrow bands down eithe: side of the coat. the French woman trifle difficult. with would say, conslderable care. But then difficult. new things of the scason. admit, though that the We mus perhaps unwillingly, little straight frock tha der to hem is going, going, gone Now the new fro | with more or less shouldersto hips. outline the frock follows stralght and very wise the effect of the clo; frock Is rather spofled. is vou will, but still a flare. the barrel silhouette same graceful Well, with there is molding from shoul. cave. you agree? (Copsright. 1025.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Baked Apples Cereal with Cream Egg Cream '] Coffee LUNCHEON Tripe Fried in Batter Rolls Pineapple Slices Cookies Tea DINNER Baked Pork Chops, Apple Rings Browned Potatoes Creamed Onfons Celery Baked Cranberry Pudding Coffee EGG CREAM TOAST Melt In quart saucepan one tahlespoontul butter and stir in one tablespoonful flour.s Let it cook and bubble a moment, then draw to edge of stove and add carefully one cup milk, stirring constantiy, and cook until it thickens.” Season with one-half teaspoonful salt and keep warm: do not burn. Beat the whites of three or four eggs stiff, add the yvolks and beat again; then fold carefully into the cream that was made, just as the whites are folded into cake. Cook from three to five min- utes, heap on the toast and serve at once. TRIPE IN BATTER ippe et Ga- mg the more yminent French v appeal very much ho always wants to| s perfectly mod So, irrel silhouette must be ie of the extremer notes lifficult achievement Soak plickled tripe several hours in cold water, changing the water twice. Make a bat- ter of one egg, pinch of salt, flour enough to make thin batter with one cupful milk, one heaping teaspoonful baking powder. Wipe the tripe dry dip in batter and fry in plenty of hot fat CRANBERRY PUDDING Cream one-quarter cupful shortening with one-quarter cup- ful sugar, add beaten yolks of two eggs. Beat. Add one cup- ful sweet milk, one and three- quarters cupfuls flour, two tea- spoonfuls baking powder, scant one-half teaspoonful soda, one- haif teaspoonful salt. Last, add poi f view. btained by little me- | putting 1)\-" <imply me by nto a the black velve the skirt perpendi slar these sla vel effect wh part forms ch | is re- | |BEAUTY CHATS Tired Ejyes. ins possible them rested | sight by he keep hardship or readi time. i 1 to have not that | but | more foolis] eeth ine arour heada the eves Is off by eves and | of tea. either hot or cold | Closing | wax that is applied wi one cupful chopped and floured cranberries. Bake in moderate oven. Serve with sauce made as follows: Mix one cupful sugar, one heaping tablespoon- ful cornstarch and one-quarter teaspoonful salt. Add one and one-half cupfuls boiling water, stirring constantlyq Boil five minutes. Take from fire, add small piece butter, teaspoonful vanilla and stifly beaten whites of two eggs. Makes a rich dessert. BY EDNA KENT FORBES. people put their faith in compresses These are good because of the tannic tea. Bathing the eyes with an eyecup containing a weak solution of horacic a good way to make the eyes but T recommend it more fo here the tiredness is due veling or to dirt in the eyes than headaches or general fatigue. the eyes for a short time always rests them. Matilda elect removing all the coarser hairs, and then continue to bleach the finor hair with a mixture of peroxide and am monia. A certain percentage of the hairs will recover and grow again, but second treatment will likely finish them. The article you allude to is a m, and when <kin all hair of wwholesale -1 think in your case the it comes is removed from the with it—a sort | tweezing. that often You do not, | \e cold cream | the eyelids which ind which est the eye drawing nd make | rnate hot | wre more | + treatment 1 Tinse to close the in and to tighten up| les relaxed by the heat. Mar MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. find that mp Sleeping Sunday Morning. Tike a g1 any other people, my usband and I ltke to rest a little later morning than other morn 1 been unable to be irls in the next room awakened and wanted to get up as usual I overcame this annoying fea- ture of our home life by reading from gtory boo! night and laying them on a table by the children's bedside | go that their first thought in the | m ng would be to sit up and finish | thelr evening story. ow they are | > are not disturbed. These s they are permitted to y purpose only, which doubly enhances their interest. (Comyrizht. 1925.) canse out Rosalie--1 believe the birthstones are turquotse and diamonds with a birthday early in Decembe This type of frock or coat is, as a It needs to be worn many of the new things are just as This new barrel outlined is really quite in the spirit of the other curved neither in nor out from shoul- ks follow the figure closeness from ou feel that the quite youthful—other- y molded From the hip to the end of the short skirt there is then a flare, a rather gentle flare, it the ders to hips and then instead of hav- ing a curve like this we have a curve like that—convex rather than con- Quite a simple difference, don't acid in the | to | reedle would be advisable for | SUB ROSA BY MIMI “I Don't Want People to Laugh at Me.” “Ne, I simply won't learn to dance.” Dorothy was firmi on that poirt. “Peo- ple will see me and think I look per- fectly ridiculous. I don't want peo- ple to laugh at me.” And that, be it sald, is Dorothy’s | principle in life. She refuses to do anything which she feels may cause some people to ridicule her, and so she is learning nothing—accomplishing nothing—for there has never been a successful per- son in the world who hasn't been laughed at during some period of his career. June was quite a different person from Dorothy. June loved dolng imi- tations of famous stage stars—she enjoyed tmprovising new dance steps and trying them out on her friends— - |and, of course, the unkind element of her 'set sald she made a fool of her- self—that she appeared ridiculous. But June didn't care a hoot for their merry laughter. She went straight ahead, and today she has become fa- mous on Broadway, and the boys and girls who laughed at her are falling over each other In thelr efforts to see her agaln and remind her of old ac- quaintance. Dorothy will never in the world ke a success like that. She can't the slightest giggle at her ex- and so she is losing out in - t h she knows people are mocking at her when they see her feeble efforts in the water, She liked to read and write a bit onge, but was afraid to take up too sefiously the thought of being a writer, because when she talked to her friends about it the boys hooted at her and thought it an uproarious joke that Dot should develop into a mem. ber of the Intellectual set. If Dot only knew it—she's being |laughed at just the same. Lots of | people smile at her taking herself so | seriously—at the useless. purposeless existence she leads in her effort to arouse no one's ridicule. When she wanted to go to business her father and brothers shrieked at the idea—they made humorous com- ments about it for days—and Dot gave up_her ambitfon. | "NWhereas, if she'd taken up a secre- | tarfal career, ignoring the gibes of her | family, she’d have lived to wave a fat pay envelope in her father's face and laugh: ‘“There, call that nothing? Were you earning that at my age?” There are always unkind people about to laugh at o beginner's efforts. But if you're going to pay attention | to them, you'l] never start doing any- { thing. | "If you wanted to do something bad- 1y enough—Iif it seems to you worth | while—go ahead and do it. no matter { how ludicrous a spectacle you may | appear to the onlookers When vou've accomplished what | vou set out to do, you'll find all the | s lined up on your side of the nce and rooting loudly for you. The fear of ridicule has spoiled many ambitions, many half-developed talents, many good times. Don't let it spoil yours. (Copyright. 1925.) [ HOME NOTES WREN. BY JENNY A ladder-back chair of the Phila- delphia type is here shown delightfully placed at one end of a big, old-fash- ioned fireplace. The Philadelphia lad- der-back 1s distinguished by the arch | of its crossbars as compared to the D gland version with straight | cross-bars. One of the interesting things noted on a recent stroll through the new American wing of the Metropolitan | Museum in New York city was that | the rush-seated chairs were nearly all | provided with little seat pads. Usually | they were very rich in color and tex- ture-—rose or green satin damask, red turkey cloth, and bright. many-hued prints being used. These pads go far toward giving the tine old rooms their air of stmple, cheerful comfort and should furnish a suggestion for many homes where similar chairs are in use. (Copyright. 1025.) Cn:cp Waffles! —with a certain fine flavor you can get only with Aunt Jemima’sspecial ingredients. Her famous old-time plan- tation recipe comes ready- mixed. Easy directions for making are right on the package. AUNT JEMIMA PANCAKE FLOUR 1. Flavor. 5. Different 9. Before. . Part of a stove . Perfod of time. To utter gaspingly . A small depression. . Was conditional upon . Behold! . Distance from center ference. . One of Jove's sweethearts. New England State (abbr.) Pronoun. . Preposition. . Doctor (abbr.) . Conjunction. . Asiatic city. Forty (Roman). - Municipal legislators 36. To be carried. 38. Girl's name 40. Before. 41. Employs. 43. A light blow 44. Dispatches. 45. Makes accessible. LIATSTs] HIATB 4 ]T] [AIRIA} to circum- “PUZZLICKS” | ————Puzsle Ltmericks. Some fellows residing in —1— Gave a party which proved a —: At eight-thirty —3— The lights went —4— Through a lapse on the part of the —o—. 1. Large city in Scotland. 2. Humiliating fatlure. . In the neighborhood of. 4. Where lights have a going. 5. Corporation which supplies a cer- tain type of light (two words, second one_abbreviated). (NOTE: Though they said the party was a —2—, it might really have been a huge success, as will be seen when the limerick has been completed by putting the correct words, indicated by the numbers, in the corresponding spaces. The answer and another “Puzzlick” will appear tomorrow). Yesterday's ‘Puzzlick.” “For dancing you sure have a knack,” A girl told a fellow named Jack. id he with a prance, I've a reason to dance— “A spider just fell down my back.” (Copyright, 1025.) habit Your breakfast—warm, WHO of | FLAKE FEATURES The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1923.) Leaf of a calyx. Southern constellation. To sell. . International language. . Preposition. . To pay attention to. . An cagle. . Comparison of magnitudes . Frightful. . Abandoned . Hurt. . Man’s nickname. . Nickel (abbr.). Kind of bullet. . Above. Alpine wild goat . Monsters. . Pronoun. . Railroad (abbr.). Jumps. _ British seaport of Arabia Short letter Anger. . Hurried. . Pronoun. . Thus. AUTUMN BY D. C. PEATTIE. Papaws. These are the days to go up river, | along the steep rocky banks of the Po- tomac, where the sofl 18 rich, to gather the wild papaws. You may or may not like their taste—it s an acquired one at the best—but nobody can miss the thrill of the quest itself. There is something startling about the mere presence of the papaw in this climate, it is so completely, so obviously, a tropic fruit—heavy and fleshy and curfously shaped. ~Even | the leaves of the papaw have a trop- ical appearance and a heavy, unpleas- | ant odor, and the little, dark red flow- ers, with an odor like crushed straw- berries, are even more characteristic of the torrid zones. Not papaws really do grow in the tropics; they are merely a northern repre- sentative of a tropical family—a sort of farthest-north for the great Annona family. As for the joys of eating papaws, there are papaws and papaws. Itisa fruit on which almost no human skill has been expended. Nobody has se- lected or bred or improved the papaw and so it is but natural that some are good, some bad and many but indiffer- ent. A good papaw, however, is pret- ty nearly a meal, and quite a deliclous one at that. It is, like most tropical fruits, a custardy type and you must not expect the sprightly, acidulous flavor one gets from an orange or ap- | ple. A papaw is more nearly what we mean by a “vegetable"—that fs, “‘heavier” than most fruits, nutritious rather than refreshing. And if this fruit reminds us of | things tropical, it ever recalis. too, the red men, the vanished race that once | paddled the clear Potomac and lived upon the sweet, the aromatic papaw. Brakes for boys’ sled: accidents through collision: perfected. to prevent have been Family Needs ThisWarm Breakfast delicious old-fashioned oatmeal can be made in 5 minutes with Armour’s WHOLE FLAKE /- Oats. With sugar and cream, it is a perfect nourishing, easily di- gestible, and full of body-regulating BRAN. Remember! Armour’s Oats are the only WHOLE OAT FLAKES that ARMOURS LE OATS that the | Tomorrow's planetary aspects are adverse until noon; thereafter, they change and become distinctly favor able, remaining so until sundown. In the evening, they are unfavorable and the vibrations are sluggish. During the afternoon, arything that savors of constructive effort is predestined to success, especially along mechan- ical or finventive lines. Agreements or contracts can be executed, and it is an exceptional opportunity for an: correspondence of an important char- acter. The rest of the day should be spent as quietly as possible, all ex citement should be avoided, and oniy dutfes of a routine character should be prosecuted. Children born tomorrow will suffer, during infancy, from their “ups and downs,” but, given proper care and well-regulated alimentation, there is no reason to despair of physical nor- malcy. Tempermentally they will leave much to be desired. They will show little or no consideration for others, and, unless checked, will grow up to be selfish and self-seeking. They®vill be evast and lack that frankness and openness which so often breed forgjveness and command admiration. They will be very pains taking, quick to learn, and fond of study. It is quite within the prob- abilities that they will attain success, but, if so, it will not be surrounded with that glamour that sanctifies the success of those who have been un- selfish and considerate It tomorrow is your birthday, you are ezsily satisfied, as you am- bition, You are stubborn, and cannot see the value of an opponent’s logic it it be opposed to your own particu- lar brand. You are easily influenced by externals and, although you set no store on them for yourself, you give an undue appreciation of them in others. You possess a very high sense of honor, and anything that is a depart- ure from established usage or custom is anathema to you. Habits are formed very quickly by you, and, once formed, they become a part of your religion, and are as unchangeable as the laws of the Medes and Persians. Your disposition is affectionate, and as, owing to your nature, you never make large mental demands on others, your home life is happy and you are contented. Well-known persons born on that date are: Stephen J. Field, Justice of the United States Supreme Court; James L. Alcorn, statesman; James Douglas, mining engineer; Samuel M. Peck, poet; George F. Shaver, in- ventor; Ernest H. Crosby, lawyer. (Copyright, 1825.) MODE MINIATURES The windbreaker jacket of suede— what a place in the feminine wardrobe it has come to fill. By rights it be- longs primarily in the shooting box, { but this Fall its domain has been ex- tended to include clubhouse privileges. What a boon one is to the woman who braves the links almost until the snow flies or she travels to the North woods in Autumn. With closely knit neck, wrist, and waist bands, it defies any gust of wind to penetrate. ome are jacquard trimmed. others lined with plaid flannel, sportslike fashion. MARGETTE. Youthful Freshness Brings the viva- dous glow of youth to your skin. That elusive . charm which makes the passing years deal lightly with your sppearance. Made in White - Flesh - Rachel 'Send 10c. for Trial Sie Ford. 7. H & Son, New York City ' Hair Shine ‘, A new-type shampoo | ave it to me By Edna Wallace Hopper My fame as a beauty and a | beauty adviser brings me the best| new discoverles. This is to tell you | | of one. | |°" About a yvear ago some famous chemists sent me a new shampoo. | They said, “We have spent many | vears in hair study. We have made | 2t least 250 kinds of shampoo, each | eking to better all others. Here| is our final creation. It contain many ingredients. They are de- Ened to clean and to help the hair in the best ways known today. Two of them give glint to the hair. One or two trials will prove this to be the greatest shampoo of the day. i tried thiit shampoo. Tt brought me results T could scarcely believe. Then 1 had the makers supply it to a thousand women. As a result there came to me an overwhelming | | demand for more. ! Now I am convinced that every woman would delight in this shaj /poo. It has multiplied the beauty | |of my hair. It has done and is do. {ing what I never dreamed a sham.- oo ever could do. | T this shampoo to my line 5. It is called Edna Wal- face HoppeT's Fruity Shampoo. Al toilet counters supply it with my other beauty flld}: let me first gend you a_sample v it, as T did. - See how it heautifies the hair. You will wonder, as I do, at what ience is now doing for the Lair. Send | coupon now For Trial Bottle * Mail this today to Edna Wallace Hopper. 53 Lake Shore Drive. Chicago. ~Enclose 10c for postage and packing on a sample of Fruity Shampoo. BY WILLIAM From Uomplex to Simple. The more or less famous, if not well known, “Constant Reader,” pro- poses thac the Government or perhaps the Red Cross should reprint the articles in this column, and distribute them broadecast in pamphlet form—as though any such circulation could compare with the circulation the articles enjo n this newspaper. “Con- | stant Reader” goes on to uch he enjoys the articles, hm-.i much he has learned from them, and so forth. He adds, however, that he has been unable to grasp the reason for changi. name of the com cold to * and finally to . He feels sure the symptoms are the same and that one can feel as badly with the same disease under any name. Since “Constant Reader’ is anony- mous here, it may not be sarcastic to mention that one with “cri” may feel bad, but the 20-0dd diseases which | belong to that group do not particu- larly impair the sense of touch, so that it is inaccurate to say one with such an illness feels ‘“‘badly.” Coryza was invented lonz before I was born. It is the medical name for acute distemper, acute infectious rhinitis, acute nasal catarrh, or, if you sist, acute cold in the head. It is | not just another name for “the com- { mon cold.” nor is it just another name for eri When doctors or folks s of the “common cold” they do | refer to coryza particularly, but nobody knows which of the score or | more of illnesses which 1 have pro- posed to group under the general name of the common respiratory in. fections, or, for the sake of brevity, the cri—a word I have coined from the initial letters of “common respir- atory infections,” and which is pro- nounced kree. I have listed here on more than one occasion the score of clearly defined diseases which sclentific physicians everywhere classify under the name PERSONAL HEAL' | from the’ I | him H SERVICE BRADY, M. D. include coryza, tonsillitis, simple s throat, acute laryngitls, acute bron chitis,” pneumonia. tuberculosis, dipt therfa, measles and all the other erup tive diseuses (of course, smallpox among them), Infantile paralysis, i fluenza, meningitis, probably pneu- monic plague and encephalitis let It makes an imposing ¢ are all transmitted, rule precisely as diptheria is. When come in contact with ny « respiratory Infections take your c it ma whether you believe ir factor or not; the infection is and you may take it or leave it. Now wait a minute—thi the deuce of being 8o confined to this little two by four corner; it warps my style, often makes me seem sarcastic when I'm trying my best to be kind and informative, and spoils some of my most important lessons. Let mc first finish explaining why crl is the word. Cr{ covers the ground as no other reasonably simple words can when you use this term vou know and every other Intelligent person knows what you're talking about there is no evasion subterfuge about it. When you “commor cold” no one knows what you are talking about. As for me, when | hear anybody telling how he has *“‘common cold” T nt to e him reasonably wide berth. I strive ¢ keep not le: than five feet aw fromn if he fairly intelligent anc polite; not less than 10 feet awa he is ‘an ignorant hoor. Soiled Ceilings. and marks friezes sh th on ceilings o !d be treated wit Dissolve som:¢ white starch in cold water until a so lution about the thickness of ri cream fs secured. This should be ap plied to the marks with a brush, the mixture being dabbed on rather thick ly. Allow the starch to dry, and ther it the spot shows through, repeat the of respiratory infections: Briefl aint Then ing? why not use + - the best of their kind? D The white enamel worth it. FARBOIL proof spar varnish buy. $1.45 a quart FARBO- thirteen beautiful ON'T waste your time with cheap paints. Only good paints are worth the time and trouble of putting them on. The Farboil products are the finest that can be bought at any price. FARBOIL Enamel Paint white with the sheen of bridal satin. Very easy to apply. Dries quickly and wears like iron. $1.55 a quart, and All Purpose Varnish Stain Now you can have a water proof, wear one of six deep colors as it varnishes. The finest varnish stain money can that is white, pure that stains in any- and worth it. The Water Paint that won’t rub off The wall paint that is quickly and easily applied to old or new walls. Goes right on over the old wall paper. Comes in colors and white. For use in the finest homes. A 75c package covers 250 square feet. We make only First-grade paints If your dealer can’t supply Farboil Products, phone or write, we will tell you where to get them. FARBOIL PAINT COMPANY BALTIMORE - MARYLAND Farboil Enamel Paint is sold by the following paint stores: Yoore & Wood. 300 joth &t XM, G. Hariig, 50D W K. N.X. Mrw, Silvermun, 1245 4% 86 SW. 5 o Tertin & Freeman. 603 Fenna. Ave, | SIQrart Hardware Co., 100 11 8t Mas Goldbers, 2 | 1. woite, 1000 dohn Sawer, 1920 | Mall & Weiss, 207 Thos. Reardon. 3205 Nichols Ave.| Geo. I Mayhew, 16 B, iovens |45 Keany & Wooromy “Haraware Co.” 433 8th | 5. iond b R Atpha Hirdware Co.. 906 Bladens- | Cru Pure R, N-E. | NW. D. DefVecehio, 1434 Florida Ave. | Mt. ' Pieasant Hardware Co., 3 £33 > Mt Pleasant 1. N.W. Furbo—ihe Water Paint that won't rub off——ix wald by peactically all the Paiot Mores in Washingion Capitol ~t.