Evening Star Newspaper, November 9, 1925, Page 30

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FEATURES. THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON. D. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 9. 192 WOMAN'S PAGE. COLOR CUT-OUT i ] pea fiv»«z‘,,;,vf-wflDorothyszj MILES STANDISH. Criticism Dainty French mules interpret in captivating manner the mode for B a o Tk = B s E metal, making it possible to be as We Should Live So That We will Not Be Afraid |wen #hod in the boudoir as on the Fay Carson is not attractive to |train. If shs had dreamed that Dean . & 5 2 atreet. Gilitéring broeades o .| men. She reads a hook ertolling | Hampton's fealing was nne of dis of What Others May Say About Us: and, 2 i ing (brocad e Ol e e e | Eoon iattics: thin. (idiffetence: e o - named Kitty Carlyle, and she de. wonld have he~y thrilled at the succes cides to hecame a avidow during of the role she wag playving Tt did her racation With a new ward- not oveur to her that he might dislike sobe, she arrives at the Poppy Inn. | her type, not until she and Jack Nor s s Situated in the Rerkshires. On the |ris met him on the street and Dear with larse fur collars HERE is no more difficult question to decide than how far we should be train fwo wmen harve interested went out of his way to hurt her. Tha Then there i= another tuing to aled by onur neighbors, and where we should draw the line hetween 4 her. one who is impressed with her | made her wonder {f perhaps he hadr cofislder, It has Deef/aain vn mretty | #napping our fingers in Mrs. Grundy's face and groveling in the dust S and one who isn't. Her first night |taken a dislike to her for some re: Zood authority that women won‘t before her ar the Notel she meets the man |son. It seemed that way and vet she A illionatre’s dictum, “The public be damned!” very nearly wrecked a 4 g who has admired her and 1whose | was at a 108s to understand why railroad. and certainly it will wreck any man or woman to flout the opinion name is Jack Norris. The two go She tried shrugging her shoulders wear wide-hrimmed hats then they of the community in which he or she lives. For our reputations are in the for a walk and meet the other man, |And telling herseif that it made 1 must let their hair grow. So vou mouths of our acquaintances, and we stand or fall by what they say Dean Hampton, who is still unim- | difference one way or another, hut fo see, as the maiter stands. large hats | about us. 3 g pressed by her charms. some st e reason it did make a dif cannot come in while hair and skirts | ¥ = e ference. She kept recalling the lool are worn very short. as thev are at | 36 it oo B 5 B aai. ot CHAPTER XIX of amusement in those steely, g THE WIDOW’S MIGHT BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR \ Large Hats and the Short Skirts MODE MINIATURES BY MARY MARSHALL. Some one has said that the chorus| “WIll the big hat return?’ is a £irl is the only one amongz us who|Question that has been much heard e |of late. And. as vou see, some people | say it will not—cannot until longer skirts return—and others say that women don't want {t anywaybecause they have found the small hat is so comfortable. so secure, =0 easv to wear in wind and rain, so convenient can wear a large hat and a short skirt together and still look attractive Having Done That, “Not Care a Hang.” # e AEEREE wear large hats so long as they have thefr hair cut short. and if they must | i | " o A look good to those about e O i e he present time —and. anyway, most us. and act in accord with their conventions, There is an unwritten law Cross Currents. Ves, thaycopl iyt whichinher b women very much prefer the small that we may not do certain thine sald. “Ah. but think how impressior 10t do « nes without subjecting ourselves to gossip, and Dean ston lived in Shadow Val- | able yo T heaaloy hat. we defy this act at our peril e n Hampton lived in Shad Val- ahle you are. Jack It was as though So oesn't s o he a very He awned a lovely old house pre- | in those few words he had wished 1 ,,,P.,q;:,’"l,.dufiifi‘r'nf”'.’h'n Voer 16l o ,::,'::\""',, ',:’“‘.‘,:':”“"’""“"" Goes Joyriding with slick-haired youths may he sided over hy a New Kngland hense- | convev to her that she had ne char waiting for adiaission at the door of | SoungiEinl who ‘_“h‘”'“ i""';um"?'j'hn ; .md‘ faithtul Ix her hushand: the | aniay in coloring, others more delicate |KeeDer and he was always there eight | for him no matter how attractive -i. fashion. But intereatingly enough. in Ofi e HouseURt 3 Gralacle i b e O R s he | mife talry “spuniaces andlstiaeai IORIND QUL of the sear. Ine Winter fwas (o Jacie 3 spite of all odds. the widehrimmed i e AL 3 iclock In the morning. may be meraly indiscreel; the |iig anl contribute thelr enchantng|Mmenths he svent (n town. Duringithe (Continued in tomorrow’s Star) hat does seem to he gaining ground N iin e A e aeEnbe OU GO RIUBCRIAY (De SAGtURKE B | iapienadr 4 d il fusnoy Summer Re arranged hin businets so (Consricht. 19251 it does seem to kEONTg: h y e ar consciences avail the Jendor ehd pig e o [that it was necessary for him to he in | Not for a sireet hai and not a nothing A pair of these imparts finease 10|i,yn oniv three or four dave of each week. The rest of the time he spent rival for (he comfortable. wearable those charmingly frivolous negliges little hat. but as a picturesque sort of of softened simpiicfty which now pre. K e dress hat | “V‘h"r neighbors cannot see into their sonls. They can only judze by the |side nver many a feminine boudoir |7 Shadow Vallev. plaving golf. giv-| ONE OF NEW WIDE-BRIM-| In order to adapt themselves to the | gutside, and make such deductions as appearances seem to warrani. There-|and hefore long will travel Diithely Ing occasional pariies in the old (ol MED HATSCMADE OF GOLD | fur collars which are to be found {fore. we are foolish if we think we ean defy our neighbors, and do as we {sauthward. WA BT [onlal house with ite white pillars and RY JEAN NEWTON. TAME F 3D WITH DROWN VEL- | on almost every sort of coat now, and { please, and live our own lives regardless of them. ‘:;fl“‘m’: 53 hlgf‘- ;;lllnr:x:l : .-m;:.:; .’:{;G — VET. A BAND OF VELVF WITH which are of quite generous propor | & - ore a ronzed 1 i : . i RONT IS THE tions. the new wide-brimmed hats are Every now and then you find some intrepid individual who tries this a {his skin looked like that of an Afriean | Paying the Piper. T WAS usually verv. vers shortbrimmed at | experiment: A younz girl whe thinks she has the right o comfort and lues to Character | |explorer | This is a phrase which i constani] ] WITH A the back—sometimes the brim fis| | console some married man and receive his attentions. A couple who decide | Dean had not given a great deal of | ,,caq in svervday spesch with refer h O i SROCE Tuened un and sometimes it is entirely | { to live together without henefit of clergy. A man who scorns to follow the | » {thought to marriage. although manY | once 1o the fact that everything Ir lacking at that point | dictates of fashion. wad who comes to vour parties unshaven and unshorn, BY J, 0. ABERNETHY |women had made it clear to him that | jife must be paid for: that there is and she can only do it while she sings Amonz the large hats of the season | and wearifz a flannel shirt and baggy trousers. But, sooner or later, the they would not be averse to tAKINg ‘nothing for nothing™: that if we nd dances. Under ordinary cireum- | Lewis of Paris has heen making some | juggernaut of public opinien rolls over all of these peopie, and leaves them A Gen Nat charge of the lovely old Colonial would dance we must pay the fiddler e oo s A s The {crushed and muimed. ‘They find ihemselves ostracized, halked of their erous Nature. ""l‘:*"-m e he | The implication s nsually that e since. apparently. women are not Ro- are decidedly picturesque and trimmed 3 2 : | ambitions, dropped out of everything, and left to go their self-elected All of us recognize certain rela- % clind in anv sense he cannot escape the consequences of ing to lenzthen their skirts, then there only with a scarf to match wound | Fairest of Puritan Maids. way alone. he |was a woman-hater. He liked women | our aots tionships in life hy observing is no hope for the wide-brimmed hat | ayound the crown. Often these Lewis | The hum of Priscilla’s wheel stop-| HOW IT STARTED hands of persons we meet. \We speak |“fer 8 ’:;"""' Dt qoward them he| The phrase takes its origin in ar 1AL w s predicted sp enthusiastically | hais are faced with richly embellished | ped and she came out to meet John INOW this fear of what “they will say"” is the heginning of righteousness. of the hard. rough palm of the In»;’,‘l";’l“:_" "h:'" Sitlinde ar ool indif [ old legend immortalized in the poem number ¢ posed authorities | marerfal | Alden I knew it was yvou when I} It is the hangman’'s whip that keeps many # wenk, tempted hrother | POrer and of the soft hand of luxury, nen was maddening “The Pied Piper of Hamelin," tten 7 such matters earlier in the season (Covyriaht. 1925.1 | heard your step.” she said. “for I Was | and sister in the strait and narrow path. And it is a mood and wholesome | The hands of highly organized and | pE¥Cr e e A oference. |in 1842 by Robert Browning. In his thinking of vou | us to en ain e ~ ’ : RO g = s £ v eaaa was neu sérious with any one.| poem, which is sald to have heen wr | $HIREO s tolentartalh dinrones. teanect for ont AEILbbUIa: (o cuss, analss | TieH texturediipagsona muyibecom® (LS TR BE2EE parions I MY SUC | poss wRIGE IR BITinInEYE bacn wEIt: Alden could think of nothing to say. | to conduct ourselves that we are not afraid o ¢ Tubjeet of conversa, | hard and calloused by hard labor remels n cou o that we are not afraid of being the subject of conversa- |hard and calloused by hard 1aTow |ng woman could truthfully say that | Browning tells the tais of the pipe r ~ 78 N “ ~ ‘ | n WE GO SHOPPIN He was dumb with delight that she | tion when twe or three of them are gathered together Ihe had ' 4 ¥ . - d . = e had ever paid her any marked at | who agresd, in 1284. 1o rid ths towr o i St i hot N e e skin and contours of the back of the ¢ | . 2 r bad been thinking of him, but he was ention. of Hamelin of its plague of rats, an when he was not paid his promisac reward lured with the same nates that had conquersd the rats precious children of the village in : tent it was true. Perhaps he was not | mauntains. where thev dicappeared ware of it. but suhconsciously he re-| Sn the villagere wha wen e The Joneses will think we stay at home tan much: the Robinsons that we | Strong desire for amusement and et Tt i e S He a0 up ilbeers ol ,‘.',K,? e {hemselves for their forehandedness' (gy for heat. but a poor chance 10|to lean an And I bring vou an offer | E&d 0o much. The Smiths will opine that we are extravagant: the,<cant moral and intellectual POWers. |, a1l male in that he liked nitra-|thelesz and a murch higher price in gerting readv for Winter when|pean warm. For such a problem the|of marriage from a good man and Thompsons that we are tightwads. The Johnsans will hold that we spoil our When the little finger i€ ahnormally [ ¢ inine women. and when acrogs the (Convright, 19951 thev have “laid in” enough €0al 10| caypenter »uld be called in true—Milas Standish, the captain of | children: the Grahams that we are 1oo hard upon them. If we have an !long, its rendency toward =V‘“‘””,’“ aisle of the fast-moving express train car m through Do the windows rattle? That means | Plvmouth.” automobile, the O Reillvs will wonder how we ecan afford it. If we don’t have [1stic beliefs. and has an attraction fOr ,o 1,4 encauntered the amber eves of 2 MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN also dumb with misery st the task But while we are yise to accord proper deference to our neighhors’ hand must he -wmx;\m. . . If anv one had ever charged him g 5 E B | which was hefore him She ied him | opinions, we are fooiish®io he si o them. and to he sa afraid of what| The hand of an adult that is short, | o old-fashioned ideas ahout BY MRS, HARLAND H. ALLEN into ‘the house and told him how | they will say about us that we sacrifice all of our independence to them. [thick. moft nnd fat, the knuckles dim m\‘-::»::.»\xing,,‘.:‘!amh\‘»n n".:.’:h;a it ne lonesame shie had heen and how she| - For we may be ture that no matter what we do. we will he discussed piéafand che angaetifat And wrinkled |iqea. Nevertheiess. 10 a certain ex g sest of houses teve is even | had heen longing for England and eriticized. and that we will not he ahie to please everyhody hns clues to inactivity. lack of fore eady for Winter. the best of hou It tere en | had heen longing tor Englan: A y o > : ; : c Getting Ready for la'emall opening at either of the upper| John Alden answered: “You are ten love of ease. fondness for lquid diet Many people inclined to Aatter | aornars of & door vou have a fine out-| der and trusting and need some one Thats very govd &n i ae ¥ goss. | 110 (ne winioms 1aier Tt MR | | one, the O'Toales will wonder why we don’t, If aur household i< 4 devoted | manifestation Fav Carson. there had hean something capecially in & time of coal shortaze. | Undesired ventilation, a8 well a8 thei o il hair should he golden |one. some of the neighbors will hoid up as an example of a happy When the thumb is extremely sUP-|chajlenzing in their expression that VUt theve Are a lot of other rhings AESTACAUing noise | ThiS tan AIWEET| o har eves Mus. Make her simple | marriage, and others will suspect it of heing a biuff ple and hends backward easily or. one [ 2® CREIL B which have to do with keeping & N G500 0" Lyt some weather| Puritan dress pale lavender with 2 may say. habitually. it indicates an | ™40 0 aval brows Fav had met ouse warm during the Winter, aside CloSer, toseinete PULo Some, KERENC] garker collar and cufts And soile g0 Others will disciEs ueins wein our tirn discuss themy| easygoing. extravagant, butiménerally |yee HOIL (S0 L™ 00 00 1een from s stock of coal. Ordinarily. SWAPIOE, SPREST DEIL Ko e per- | \Copsright. 1925, and in the and we have to fall back upon the philssophy of the ald Duteh | @ VErY generous nature embarrassment in her face. che had too. they are much less expensive 10 4 ,,c 4 jitle more effective in keep merchant who suddenly acquired a fortune. and whn. knowing that its origin (Coprright. 1975.) not quickly averted her eves npen en provide than coal. 1 have in mind ing out the eald. { would be & matter of speculation amonsg his friends. carved over the doorway countering his, nar had she hlushed the little problems of insulation, FOOD AND HEALTH/| of the fine new mansion that he buili: “They say. They will say. Let | uncomtortably She b merel: which help to hold the heat in a| While at these openings it Is just| themn b saving” I l,r'l ‘l‘: BE\ VY B e o : 1 Ironing Boards as Slide. house. o it can he distributed evenly |as well to think of storm windows. | ——— PIARCAR Avie. | Avd there had Hea which make it comfortable. and an You may not want ihem all over the BY WINTFRED STUART GIB! Unfortunately. this fear of “what they sayv” makes such cowards of S il i her.atitude 4 cer efMrient place to live and work house. hut 10 have them against the| Food Specialist RN ELCEORIE S ChaL Ahes o1l Cifln: CHELE e cather (Bhay 4 S0l slDE ADEE ¥ of e Ghaini ihiit had ‘morie Tre secret of making a house com.| prevailing Winter wind is a pretiv| they think the neighbors mis iz, 1t is at the mottom f what makes EYSNEE naks ow annoved Dean 7 fortalle 1s dead air space in the walls, | sensible plan. Remember, it isn't the| = men starve along at what they call “white : IIBa’ when thes ratEnt'h S&-inaThnd he- was e o heve and helow. Still air I the | warmth of the extia pane of glass.| Fvers now and again book lovers 3 Starve Aling s Jihey SHIR NI sONAihal oinan might be e A ot B e ast ot he ta O T Enbwi. Biit iy [Nt Ehaiautet Air snace Betweenswhich l'are. WoRt" ol regale themaslves by [ MEKIKOriunes in some trade: I¢ 15 what crowds the pEotessions with the - Mhis: aftarpoot ona e Qas O D e e e s inz air is just the opposite. Does the | I8 most needed. That's why storm|means of one of their favorite indoor unfit who would make successes us carpenters, or bricklayers, oi- plumbers. | holex out of pops socks and I a6d. |ene was lovely. In that brief moment | Wind et Into the "walls of vour| windows need to he fitted with more | sports—the makinz out of listx which s e .. Hay ma; T bet vour one of the best e had noticed several + aout b Thore s ateomg draft in|than ordinary care, and also explains | show the books they would choose OR years the fear 6f what the neighbors would say kept women threadhare | darners in the wha fl«““‘.' sint you? her. the lovely golden ilne of he Tha Aitic or the hasement? If %o, the | why many people have thought theirs (o keep by them if forced to relin in genteel poverty and eating the bitter bread of dependence. when they | Well the werld 1a a large place brows arching daintily above her am e e e e I 2S L hinwt o iham aoy laved quish all others. Why not adapt this | were just aching to get out and work and make money for themselves b€ Timustiany dve lin (compliventedies fayes iihe gUG ol siissel 1iher higher than neceasary. and there! If the window shades are drawn ali|SPort for the benefit of those who This dread of what the neighbors will say is still keeping thousands of | mere than once on my darns. ma Sc- [ pa /v Tse @ G 06 GFe€ SEE 0 ole e T ey In Tie howne | over | e I e AN | aspire to the acquisition of -workable | women who have a genius for gookery that they would love to express, and [ Meaning she mav not of bin the |acke BEIm, 00, Ao6 S0l 108 S0 000 between December and March [ dark In the Winter its “surprising | information about diet? s not th> | who thrill at the sight of a pan and pot, out of the kitchens that they | Pest in the fverld but she was BreCe | E8E0E €€ MOt e "t oo After a house has heen huilt several how much coal it will save and how | hewlldering array of tomes and long to he in neer it ""‘ " 2 ’, ,.“,‘ Ve ok {‘mun‘l'n'n <0, She w3 perteet vears. it dries out and shrinks =0 that [ much added ecomfort it will give. | (reatises on dietetics the chief stum A umbrella wont oper ; inz ~old afr can get in. and warm air zet | Again it Is the alr epace between iwin. | PHNE block in the path of the iay Whes wablffs silllon: timeskea (herh o\ aub toldomentic seryice Ihah work | - LIDS MUFOUE (GIVIBE tims" and thought to t e Ao i nae e o s lewinese LsAndimay not IS Dfonial 5 e Toi ok (Brclart i alares, 1€ they waron anatizadt iy tha Ehauhe or || ey oat o s rlbo | self. And that cool. casual wa times it Is under the basehoard. This not the thickness of the shade: { tion be reduced to its lowest 1erms? (pat their neighbors would sy Ty Sl use A e which she had observed him betokened can he corrected by putting 2 mold- | Celling the hasement will zive an|And will not such reduction. if skill. Sora Lo} iis fear Of WDAE ihoy =ay" malkes men aad women) raliy bos o maC HUADIRTE DI L exeticnce | No Aoubi she ttrae Ing down, or a larzer one if A small| Imments lot of pratection to a house| Uiy done. resull in a YEATNINg fOF | nemseives hy exiravagances. Thes fcel that thes have 1n keep up with the PP 190N © L R e R R MR RS one is already in place with an old floor. Covering the finor nv‘\(-h:’-vizv'niri x:.vry::,::!;fl:“", oneses. Thev haven't the courage to live according to their means. They | ('O o G0, ced quite weli aware of her power and Tars will warp and frantes sag in| of the attie will dn the same. R e e e O med, Jor | RNk thex will be criticized Jf thev. don't give the sort of parties their friends | ""X0"1 " aliidant, either, ma, because | exercised it whenever she wished. The 2 all diet hooks were 10 burned. let zjve, and wear the same sort of clothes and have as zood a car. S0 they fUn | 1 didom 1 sed | Took of the mueh-admired woman was oareay, be a drenzieo nopuaos. iy into deht and come to disaster in the end et \Wen® ma sed. and I |stamped all over her as though she gave at deal o One mather save It is not the easiest thing in the world 10 kee e or ree vear.oid child happy and safe at the same time. . One way to do it i tn make a tohogzan si'de out of vour ironing hnard rv it and your livel: ! be delighted R ironing board against kitchan s:061) then let yard and slide to the chair heside tha stove, even a sized chair for the [ step makes it easy fo lto climb to the tap of the And the queer part of it all is that when we are hrave er wotldent open and [ pus and ghtz ESradine thrabgh: Dan < , e g independent. and chooze the sort of work we are fitted for hy nat O nd pushed and mmshed and | Hampton's mind. she wonld not race such as treat of the fundamental e roll our own haby carriages and make our own frocks and et 1 would never open but I |suffered that moment of panic on t principies an which the sclence of die! | fivver and live within nur means. aur neighbors all praise us for it SAY { kepp on pushing and pushinz and et in ght. velop e e e O sioy | burry. few books on diet do. just this] yeryig of what '‘they say”.about us, and, having done that, not care-a hang day, mo sed. and 1 : Biairays n natural zermicidal{anq nothinz else. The authors feel. I “ L srate man some day, m 1 Vltraviolet light (the Invisible YAYS 'materjal which is always necessarv|nn doubt, that they musi improve WhAt they do sa e DOROTHY DIX sed, And finally at last it opened - which are present in sunlight. the for the destruction of disease zerms |ihe <hining hour hy embroidering It must of hin a srate site, its too S . eloctric carbon arc lamp. the mer. | Which et into the system: if the | theif themes with innumerable de had I wasent there to see it, ma sed Small irritations S el i T 1 ey ave ot aesrosed alsease ac-| i, andliherston el ot | MONUMENTS OF WASHINGTON, | e ottt siad iy |{ Like dost in the |l ety v ey conrse, no the pretty lizht ziven | velops our few indispensable volumes with irse. mot in v stop wen it came to the top and the eye sippi River this Fall in a genera | result was it terned inside out. westward migration from Tlinols and off by a certain toy) readily p.n.«sl” Metabolism, the constant combus- | care. . e e throtigh quartz erzstal but is practi- | tion of food fuel and tissue substance | To get down, as the busy man it wag it terned inside o1 : 3 & . e Erereened out by glass. It is[to produce museular and organic |no doubt would express it. to brass BY VICTORIA FABER STEVENSON. | Ewa P eniwax allithing majsed) Can blind us to big | Wiscondn nat enough, therefore. to [n’n\'ld.‘en?rg\' and heat in the body is pi v-i acks, here are a few of the facts ’?;‘\1 d .H. i e & ",‘d"“ thir\ s mple window space in the living | foundly influenced by ultraviolet | With which we must furnish our = fshe sed. How can that be, it dident hing i room and fo resist thai deadly im- | light. Amongz the improvements in | minds. divided roughly into facts PR 37 RN R rain today E di As life hurries by . pialsa to cover the windows Wwitn | metabolism brought about by ult about quality or type and facts about - 3 prt enything to do so I jest tried the um- b dewdags which shut out the lizht: If | violet light are beter utilization of | quantity or food 2 X 3 5 d 1‘;“';'}1:: ”‘J?IS«“'.‘.‘.'.’.”Z"”"L"‘A"'I{‘...'" :‘-‘fl. 'Vl‘(""‘. vou want health and happiness to |ealcium (lime) and phosphorus in the ; First. l\;m; of f; ~} i . - 4 e Ll . b come in at the window You must | bodv. Both of these Important ele- We must have body builder né L 5 G HEiad i open the window wide, or else =0 | ments of the body are present in |body renovators, hody regulators and | 7 ¢ : Or:‘x;\‘;dm!nm..uh e umbrella wa to the enormous expense of glazing | higher concentration in the blood | body movers. —Meat, fish. lexumes, | v 5 ? . woow panes of fuzed | a exposure o aked sk exzs and cheese are the chief | E TR, : Gy Yours, I sed R T T e e B e e sh fruits. sreen and| iy § X & Not heing the end but heing all 1 4 the g * ¢ feel like telling. —_ i chonse 1o save for the good of the BY WILEIAM BRADY, M. D. after vou have once helpad him ! i it part of the game is done. Cons 1923 anartz ultraviolet light, fro a sunlight or Thesa precious invisible light rays lefther of the artificial sources men- leafy vezeiabies and milk he herond the hlue or vielet of the spec- | tioned. list of body regulators. while fats, 3 ¢ A .'v' m or r ho have the property sweeis nd starchy food, such. as| . e ; bread and cereals, are the mainstay Rhubarb and Pineapple. of increasing onr natural resistance ' of the hody as sources of energy or E 5 - S . : To every pint of rhubarh and pine ¢ 2 moving power. This hy no means apple pulp add a pound of sugar and Bl Clean Faces 1< Which are respansible for most | development and . growth of e | 1% the whole story, Lo let boil 20 minutes. The first step in beauty Let me show the way. the iliness doctors see. The ultra- | horog AN SR 2 a e nd hig and stronz i . oopanh has taken a long stride By Edna Waliace Hopper Lueie Lanteime. the famaons Par- | MENU FOR A DAY. tear down the window shades, dis- | FU(o G rull knowledge. HOCOLATE || isian beauty. told me a wonderful ard the draperies. remove the awn- B 3 e lbE i % oo er o, Temoyen Next comes the matter of quantity st Pl L o e . . ONICECREAM || (o vears ago. A noted French \\vrv.m”y atter there was mothing vers | hullding food vields 113 calories, or % come worn in the middle should N R Bo use. et tn Por. THat secret TiAk [zman_about the Cannucks in the | measures, of enersy. and it will not 1 . be torn in halves and what ia i oaders for.tie. Tt helnea | either. The amount of ultra- difficult 1o ascertain whether or not S : &2 4 . one w < fo o | he atfcuttiio a were the two outer edges joined Al i riats. tarmnus beautsi T¢ | | Aside from the prevention and eur of rickeis in infants. the proper ntil- ization of ealcium and phosporhons partientarly the respiratory infec- | the hody is essential for normal or immunity to infections disease: My Neighbor Say: | When bhaking potatoes, srease o them first with a little hutter. o hody bulldern—and these, let ] | or R A e . 4 . When cooked they will he heau jluy Tememben ars 0. to 300 % 8 s ' e " titully brown and erisp, with \ [ Intors —we reauire from 150 to 300 - S the clazed appearance that ) c calories, or measures, daily. Just re- 4 e hae e member also that each ounce of hody- | N . . ; makes them so appetizing. 3 % ' o Large sheete that have ba. BREAKFAS e averaze stature of Yankee i | =oldiers was found to be ahout 3 Dre ekl iin Gieam inches greater than that of Fng- D e L Sheat Giken lish soldiers in the World War. For Coffee LUNCHEON jerkraut with Frankfurters. Rye Binad Apple Sauce Tea. hi in England is far below | the hody-huilding food yvou are eating | FEA. > ¢ i ; s - ¢ amount in the sunlicht in these | is being served in approximately this | 5 ; ) e Moo g IS - has kept my vouth United and Ci States : ¥ 3 - : 3 which i now the outside, Now that formula is no longer nited and Canadian Siates and | proportion should be trimmed away and - secret. I have just returned from provinces. Maybe that accounts for | The hodv rezulators come up next | R - A A i Ay TATTiea: o seccel Ditave Jusliyeturned fron it Then. too. our be: physical | for consideration. 7 b AS 3 ] i B b e |>" g re I find that most 1hve. | specimens are found in the mountain | Now. the regulating clements n | i 3 Cotirse: e trmallers bubithes wall > inomenjuagic [ Teading hent DINNER ezions where the largest possible | these foods, the fruits and vegetables fit & single bed and will do duty SAMPLER f\z'l :\‘l!» “" F o no oy Roiled Smoked Neck of Ham riion of ultraviolet light is|and milk. are called mineral salts and for quite a long time, SIZE 1°¢ AW v "- which bars it from the Boiled Cabbage, nll‘!lln ;‘r\]: may not seem to | vitamins and. important as they axe, Gasoline is splendid to cleanse 0, P O :_m;‘:“,h ¥ I Buttered Beets. well with the notably low stature | can reely be measured. o the combs and brushes. Beware of Yo . - with Raisins ihe <ons of sunny Tialy, vet the |old advice, “Eat plenty of fruit and fire when using the sasoline: . n" a:\"S;!»r"r:_l;‘“llrr"-‘rm}(h:‘{"{j‘:;l:lr': | stature of men from the mountains | vegetables is all that is necessary, Melted butter is a very good e mame Edna Walace Hopper lof 1taly is areater than that of men |since in normal health overeating of R 4 . substitute for olive ofl in salad Fhetal Youth. The price is only from il‘r-' ‘\"ll-.\‘s these foods is rare. i 3 i dressing. e P X | Civilized urban life shuts off most | The body movers, such as starches R H : e g Two much salt will keep o P {of the ultraviolet rays which we | and sweets and fats, may. on the | % —— - bread frbm rising. e | should receive. Indoor occupations | other hand, easily be measures " "R . e % When frying fish. instead of Ot eanuot asimilate in’any spoon su 1 cup wheat flour nd amusements. glass windows, | ounce of sugar and starch gives 113 | : S 8 using an egg to brush over it, Ty Dot nd e huckwheat flour to smoke, dust, cloud and fog in the | calories of enerzy, each ounce of fat | i - i A make a paste of flour and wa- s B g e g B g e make a nice batter. Set in atmosphere, and the unnecessary ex- | 255. S the checking up on our habit- % G 3 3 : ke § ter, brush the fish over with '\n'?h» crime and dirt, dead skin warm place and et rise for sev cess of clothing worn hy men, wom- | ual consumption of cereals. bread, this, and then dust with bread A e i A Oiiarc S It sil ot s ."’1{“"" frying | Jen. children and even infanis for the [ butter, bacon. efc.. is an easy matter. Koratarskd hemisphere is shown with its map of ?"'{"h” ",m{ & T";:'“}:h“:lrz I never knew what a clean skin them add 1 level teaspoon Soda sake of custom. false modesty (Covyright. 1825.) g i i D ook as nice as if done wi L and salt to disaolved in & | | (uneictitious fears of ~exposure: e eloi the Americas | The hwonze eagle ! | e Tnd when eggs are dear It meant until T used this Facial Jittle warm water. A little of contrihute toward our deprivation Pulaski. the two Polich generals who | j < is a_great saving. the hat \v he saved and : privation. i = ulaski. the two Polish sen Tring the hravers of Koschiszko and . . The first step to heauts fx a the batier may e saved and | |In the Winter scason. particulariy Parking With Peggy | heloed America in the Revolitionary | gthers who fonght to pratect Amer- Ve STIRIE | isaaDIen clean skin. Don't try to doctor A nsed ir | the proportion of ultraviolel rays in 2 Y | War, were unveiled the same day, Ma¥ | jca's fheity. On the lack of the | | Pattee while thes are i the clogged skin. Don't think that starting the next batch. Sweet | | 1pe Sunlight is at the lowest point. | 11, 1910, f hi T m milk may bhe used inatead « S . owest point ’ 3 statue 1he representition of his na- bt f o s0Ap AN WAter can ever clean your mill i Ultraviolet ravs markedly raise The statue of Thaddens Koseluszko. | tive land, Poland, i< seen. The bronze ahdepan SiloldoisniwiilimaKs skin to the depths. Facial Touth them sodden. D AT CAKES. cake yeast in 1 quart warm water. Add 1 tea PUDDING WITH RAISINS. Into 4 cups boiling salted wa ter stir 1 cup rice, which has vater. the iron content of the blond in the northeast corner of L:7-vette |eagle over that country is endeavor- ix the only cleanser 1 aver apply e | frequently seem to produce a marked | Park. was presented tn the United | ing to kill the serpent of tyvranny with to my face. And 1 apply it all RYID BREAD. ,increase in the number of blond cor| Statex in hehalf of i'olish-American | its heak and talons. and the word over my hody hefore the hath. Two cups milk, sealded: 1 puscles, hoth the red corpuscles and - itizens, by the Polish National Al-| “Raclawice” recalis the fact that at | No woman who once applies Fa tablespoon lard. 2 cups water. the white corpuscles. | liance, to show their appreciation of | that battle Koscluszko, as head of cial Youth will ever go a day with 1 dessertspoon 1 cup mo. | Ultraviolet rays have prohably pre- | the fact that the United States Con- | 20,000 regular troops and 40.000 poorly 2 ] out it. Tt means toe much. The lasses, 12 cup . 1 teaspoon | vented and cured more haldness than | i gress had honored Pulaski with a|armed peasants, made his last des- coupon will- bring vou a sample. Awny seed. veast eake, 1 eup | {all the alleged “restoratives” thus B Banment, | Koscluszko. standing on | perate stand against a united Russian Made from the finest with my Iatest Reauty Book. Let rve flour and 3 sieves white | for concorcted. a massive pedestal of Vermont gran-|and Prussian army of 150,000 men. me show you what Facial Youth flour. ! g ool | e ie khown wearing his Continental | That was In 1794, eight vears after Fish Caught HMNE LB eitle and yamen. And | Tiver andiBanon uniform. He is pictured holding the | his reéturn to his native land from tell you all the other helps T've. i 3 i plan of the fort!fication which he ' America. The failure of Poland to found in my 40-vear quest for heau | some slices of cold bacon should be | mapped in the Saratoga campaign of | hecome free is indicated by the carved ORTON'S famous “No |ty. Clip coupon notw. { put in the oven, to remain until they | 1777, words “And Freedom Shrieked When Bones” Codfish mixed i 3 tich has | |are really hot. 'While they are heat- 4 work as an engineer for the |Koscluszko Fell.” The bronze figures heen e AN e use of | |inE. wash some calf's liver very care- ; l,\:e‘:knn Komy was napired by his | 0N the west of the monument show with boiled potato, ready to fry : with silver fork as the use of | | fully, dry it on a cloth, then slice it | 4 nselfish military ambition. The [# Young Polish officer who has fallen, and serve. A wond ly deli- M e o N ive: (hE a fork prevents the kernels of | | thin. Dip each piece in flour, then | ——{ | aword which he clasps shows his |Put who Is still directing the action clous family meal in every can. B Enclose 100 for postacs and the rice from BreakinK St | | place it In a frying pan containing | ) |atanch deterpination that America |f & Polish peasant who seeks to pro- A Packine. = n Sowly S0 b e Tanially | | hot dripping. Turn and turn it untit | | should win. “Saratoga.” graven on the | tect him with a scythe. The peasant The original Ready-to-fry, IhwAoiagtyAFanaL Tt ston holling, . WK I it is cooked and brown and nicely Tonument, names the most impor. i€ An especially interesting study in in the biue-and.yellow label. cooked place on hack of <tove 10 | | crisped. Keep the liver hot while you \ |tant victory. which resulted partly |eXpression and costume. The appo- metelysimmetiuy k make the sauce. 'For this, warm some 7 | from the ald given hy Koseiuszko to |Site side of the monument pictures Gorton Pew Fisheries Co., Ltd., A the following sause; | | butter first, beat a little flour in with the American forces. and which In con. | S0WRE, ATCGSND (ATmer heing freed ETREE e IR S : mitielk it until it is perfectly smooth, then | sidered one of the 15 decisive battles 3 oppression “GORTON'S DEEP RECIPES” Chop 13 cup rals "»_*‘::‘ m"‘}";‘ add ainittieiibollie twalor atie BN of history before the World War. by a soldier who cuts the ropes which N?;IMM i eables SPECIAL—Miss Hopper is on cup of boiling water 15 MRS | ! pour it onto the gravy in' the pan. | " This monument by Antonio Popiel [ have bound him. Write for o tour, playing picture houses under “dd 1 cup sugar an s Add a spoonful of tomato catsup and - | represents the Polish zeneral as a| Both of these groups are symbolical the direction of Wm. Morris hero of both hemispheres, for his aims | of Koseiuszko's career as a soldfer in = Theatrical Agency. She - will .y s 1 . cornstarch, blended, and boll in a few seconds the sauce is done minute longer. Remove from fire, add butter size of nutmeg and 1 teaspoon vanilla. Serve bacon, liver and sauce together. All must be hot, with par=ey placed around. This is a tasty dish, ’ | brave deserve the fare’ must have | America an independent republic. On itried living on a diet.” the north side of the monument the 4 ““The poet who wrote ‘None but the in life were to make Poland free and |the cause of freedom for both Poland and the United States. (Copyright, 10284 gton st an early

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