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WOMAN’S PAGE. Adwmlag(‘s of Ll THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTOX, D. ¢, MOXDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1925. «rhl Weight Wrap BY MARY MARSHALL. To the woman of fas &oes forth after rious, well is no real or very hear is a lavish f many of the coals coats made of the such as mole or ermine bave had the good fortune for yourseif a rather light on who never ve in a luxu motor car there for a very thick ing wrap. There fur trimming on there are all-fux softer, thinner furs As you may to discover weight coat dark s heated necessit use D] THE MATERIAL OF THIS NING CAPE IS CALL! [SSUE GAUFRE, BECAUSE ITS SURFACE IS LIKE THAT OF A WAFFLE, WHICH THE FRENCH CALL GAUFRE EVE :D GOLD of metal cloth, such as you may have worn at Deauville or other fashion zble resorts last Summer, will really prove warm enough for the chilliest days in Autumn. If it is collared What TomorrowMeans to You BY MARY BLAKE. Sagittarius. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are, from early morning until sunset, ad- verse. Thereafter they undergo a de- «ided change and become actively fa- vorable, and stimulating vibrations will prevail. During the day you <hould refrain, as far as possible, from | making any important decisions, as| our dgment will be affected by lhn\ inimical influences that are apparent. | Th signs denote that you will not experience any vielent emotions of ither anger or disappointment, but there will be sensed inexplicable | nervousness and restlessness. In the avening all the worries of the day | will have disappeared, and you will derive real bleasure from the recre- . ations and diversions of the home or tfamily circles. Children born tomorrow will de- mand more than usual care, as they will not be {nherently strong, and sub- ject, in a marked degree, to the vic situdes of infancy. Thelr recupera- tive powers will, however, enable them to “ride out the storm.” if the | wasters of these little vessels steer them according to chart. A boy's character will be morose, and, at times, sullen. He must, to counteract this position, he forced to associale with hoys of simflar age and to par- ticipate in their games. A girl prom- ires to be vivaclous, full of spirits and sasily impressionable. During her early vears these qualities will charm and attract. Later on, however, care must he taken to tone them down, so that she becomes less impulsive and mora circumspect and self-restrained 1f tomorrow is your birthday you are exceedingly self-contained, rarely taking any one into your confidence | and always working out your own plans without consultation with others. You are persistent and de- | termined, and at no time willing to | acknowledge defeat, until it is so palpable that it cannot be denied. Even then you are not prepared to attribute failure to your own mis takes, but create alibis that may sat- isfy you, but never fool others You are very emotional in your love and always ready to feel hurt when your strong emotions are not reciprocated fully and freely as vou think they should be. Your temperament is jealous and often a | slight Incident, capable of e on, causes vou endless worry. 1 could acquire the habit of talking vour difficulties, instead of brood- aver them silently, many a heart- ache would be saved you Well known persons born on that * datg are: William E. Simonds, lawyer andi &uthor: William B. Cushing, naval officer; Frances Hodgson Bur- nett, author: Harry Thurston Peck, ator and author; Richard Croker, ex-Tammany leader; Cass Gilbert, architect. (Coprright 19 Lessons in English GORDON. Words often misused—Don't “We had company for dinner.” at dinner. Often mispronounced. nounce the “a’ as ‘o in “'of. Often misspelied—Counterfeit. the “feit.” Synonyms — Attentive, observant, observing, mindful, heedful, watchful, absorbed, preoccupied. Word study—"Use a times and it is yours.” Let us in crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word Invincible; not to be conquered. “Such & spirit is invincibl say Water i Pro in not as Note word three Date and Peanut Balls. Cut into very small pieces or put through the food chopper enough stoned dates to make a cupful. Then rub the dates into a cupful of peanut butter and add half a teaspoonful of salt. Mix well, mold into marble-sized balls and roll In sifted confectioners’ sugar. This recipe yields about 35 little balls. and otherwise trimmed with fur it will surely prove warm enqgeh for real Winter—providing. of coufe, that vou have your dispesal well heated motor car For the rest f womankind who aspire to fashion on a thin purse and who go to dinner parties on foot or in the frigid atmosphere of a public taxi or the family flivver warmer, heavier evening wrap may be neces sary One reason 10 manage wrap it trick now wrap with aurant dining room vou why it is well lighter-weight bossible is because of the of carrying vour evening vou into the theater, the ballroom or even the It isn't quite consid have a lovely coat of leave it in the dressin and gleam of the blase maid st in vour metal is may leave her Yon should the room wh dance or dine by flinging your gold or metal brocade car the back of your chair. 19 however with the ntere no e whose in the only piece when the vou leavr add to vou ik over MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKF Apples real with Cream. Vegetable Hash Hot Bran Muflins Cloffee. ST LUNCHEON Pot Thin to Salad Sliced Bol Rolls. Canned Cherries Feather Cake DIN Lamb Stew oes, Dumpling: Coleslaw. Brown Betty NER Boiled ¥ Coffee. APPLES When baking apples fill core ace with honey and broken alnuts. Will be a change from sugar. BAKED FEATHER CAKE Cream together a tabl butter and one cup sugar, one beaten egg, one cup & milk and two cups flour sifted with one teaspoon cream of tartar; put one-half teaspoon soda in milk before adding flour. A very dainty cake with out any frosting whatever. LAMB One pound neck of lamb or mufton, sprinkle with pepper and salt, and place in saucepan. Cut one pound string beans and slice two large Spanish onlons. Cover meat with onion and lay beans on top. Place cover on saucepan and leave on one side of fire for two or three hours. This dish requires no water or butter, STEW COLOR CUT-OUT Snow White. Snow Whits and Rose Red wera twn sisters, who, because of their like. nesses to the white and red roses| blooming at their gate, were called by these names. Snow White had fair hair and was the gentler of the two, | sitting at home or helping her mother, while Rose Red played in the meadows and woods. Thelr home was a very beautiful and happy place, for Snow White kept the kettles so bright and Rose Red brought so many lovely flower bou quets that the house was as clean and Bay as a house could be. The sisters were very fond of each other and | vowed always to stay together. Then one night, when the sisters and their | mother were sitting before their cheery hearthfire, something strange happened. This {s pretty Snow White. She has golden hair and s wearing a pink slip today. Her stockings and shoes | are gray. The Dear Wife's Logic. From Life. “My dear, I think T 21l spend the night at my sister's,” came his wife's volce over the telephone. Do vou | cate?" “Not at all,” he replied, heartily. “Then 1 had betier take the firat ain_home.” she decided ur ast Wonderful flavor. Contains bran—mild- ly laxative. Keeps v. you peppy all da: THE PEPPY BRAN FOOD B ] hand | LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Me and Puds Simkins and was wawking along jest | along, and some fat kid | us, being a short fat kid ! Ixpress wagon, me saying, | if you wunt to know wat its| s like 10 be even fatter than you, sk that guy with the ixpress Leroy | wawking went past ing your era as me it it zy, that guy wont | as fat he lives a million veers, Pu Go on guy you'd that smas, you was think it was woulident he, Leroy? 1 sed ure, Puds reminds me ¢ Martin alongside of that guy, as fat a Cr Skinny Leroy vour both crazy, kid me? Pu sed, Well good nite, ( i vou dont bleeve it, ask { started to call the Kid fellow, and he terned ing. Who. me? Wat? This guy wunts to r than he is ecither and it ze me if 1 was fatter Wats you think of ths vou beet that? Leroy and the fat kid sed to 4w)m ever " vou the ide wats you tr: s sed, and I . wizzikers, 1f him. And I saying, Hay erround sa; | An |ing to do, sy T sed Puds sed wouldent he sed fellow shooster sed, Puds, Hay, - you was fel vou aint Im ser- can as fat as n v Im the fattest low in my berhood Then it he @ very hood, thats all 1 got a say, Puds sed. | If you was the fattest fellow in my nayberhood vou mite have something lu brag about, but you wouldent be, { because for the simple reason [ would, | he sed O is that can fat nayber- | o, well Tm so fat every- | {body I know calls me Puds, the other | kid sed, and Puds sed, Well wat of | { it. thats ixactly wat they call me, and | L can prove it by these 2 for my’ wit | nesses. ! Meaning me and Leroy Shooster | and we admitted it and Puds and the | other fat kid shook hands. Proving it was a tle. TODE MINIA Turbans are an fmportant contribu tion to the millinery mode of today.| They are draped most cunningly to display the lights and folds of lovely satin and shimmering metal cloth— vet to form a sleek crown for the sea- son’s small shorn hea With their introduction many of the leading hat are offering to drape them directly on your head as Parls does it, thereby assuring a be- ming creation | one even for the Fall coiffure Turbans are to he avoided, however, the woman with a full face bec .‘1\e| of their rounded contour. { MARGETTE. | shops :fil’stow of Pour Nam BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. | ; EDDY | VARIATIONS—Eddie, Edie, Ediker. RACIAL ORIGIN—English. | SOURCE—A Given Name. One source of the family name of | Eddy, or as it is more often spelled | in that case, Edie, is the given name | ot Adam, as has been explained in| | the previous article. This develop- | ment is principally from Scotland and the north of England. But the more common derivation of the family name of Eddy and the fore- going variations is from the old Anglo- axon given names, of which “Ed” is | the first syllable. | Ediker, for instance, is but a dif- [rmr( spelling of the given name of Edg: and as a matter of fact is somewhat closer to the ancient spell an dgar itself. The Anglo- | axons spel 1 this name Sadigar,” and it had the meaning of “‘happy.” All of these given names, kdgar, Edward and Edmund were shortened | customarily to “Ed” in the period of | history in which family names began | | to form, just as we so shorten |hrm“ today. There are many who sea possi- | hilities of deriving the name from the | | Gaelic “eddee.” which means an “in { structor.” from the Anglo-Saxon “ed” |and ea” (meaning “backing water” or “whirlpool”), or from the Welsh ‘eddu,” denoting ‘‘motion™; but the weight of evidence is against these explanations. ‘f‘flvv‘llh( sl Some Superspeed. From tha Florida Times-Union A Jacksonville negro, upon hearing another speak of an aviator who drove plan 302 miles an hour, remarked n, dot's gitting dar befo’ he Startéd.” 1925.) FADELESS DYES Tint dainty you desise Keep yoursilk nw.—d«lluumw waists, hosiery, trimmings, etc., nd new looking by occasional dlpr ng in a solution of cold water with a of Putnam Dye. Simple, easy and quick. Directions on plck-le show how to regulate degree of color—how to getvariousnewshades. Forwonder- ful effects in tie-dyeing use Putnam. Same 15-cent package tints or dyessilk, eotton and wool in one o tion. olor chart at your druggrst’s. Purmam No-Kolor Bleach Removes Color and Stains | | shaped | arms folded on it and a perfect fitting | o | ways FEATURES, JUST HUMANS ‘T Suppose Y *Yeah, Lots! By Gene Carr u Had Lots to Be Thankful For, My Dear?’ (Copyright i BEAUTY CHATS Teh Arms Again. Are you The best will not are not rms ugly arms graceful? arms the world show their beauty If they gracefully used, whereas in themselves will seem beautiful if the woman knows how to manage them. The “all hands and arms” feel- ing is fatal to good looks. 1t you don't think t actresses on the stage, on the screen; watch dancers particularly, since they study how to make use of their arms to carry out the graceful motions of their dancing. In this short space I n only give you & few hints—mostly “dont’s vour arms are not beautifully don't wear short sleeves. That fmportant, for the covered arm will never be awkwara If your arms aren’t naturally grace- | ful, don't lean with your elbows on | the table. It is a trying position Neither lean on the table with your It's a position that makes the shoulders ugly by hunch ing them, and the arms seem ugly as a result Don't ever lean with your elbows on vour knees; no one could look beauti is so, watch | ful that way Don't_fidget with your hands and arme. Don't carry your arms stiffly. Don't fold your arms with the hands tucked under the elbows. This is a trying position for any o Your arms cannot look badly, when vou are sitting {dly, if your hands lie clasped in your lap, or along the arms of a chair. For one thing, the posi- tion relaxed and eas therefore Carry a stick. an walking: um the 4 handbag. ng, when urms look bett so0. Mis Sue B iginally a boys' game, more by girls —Hasket ball was but now it is than by or plaved even boys. Mrs. J. H. L.—Tt is best the habit of using depilator mere act as a shave, and vill grow in again coarser nerly ot to form s, as they the hair than for- conspicuous halrs can be ex acted with tweezers, and the finer hair rarely disfigures. Most women who are troubled with superfluous iair rid themselves of it in this way whenever it becomes noticeable Extreme cases will require profes- sional treatment to destroy the life of the hair in the follicle. Hair Tonics. You probably have my formula for hair tonie, but in case you have mis laid it, I'll print it again at the end of this chat. I advise every one to use it in one of its two forms—without the pilocarpine if there are no gray hairs. with it if there is any tendency toward premature grayness, or even if gray hair has already started. There is al n_age when grayness is in evitable, but I see no reason why age uld not be pushed back several <. Tonics and proper care of the salp will do that Most hair needs but one tonic. clean nes resh air. Short hair get CHOCOLATE Pure chocolate, straiwed Beney, and Siended, (from o Freneh formule) o wee for - T.-hum\u.-tu-u.- Turkey Dressing :u! a dellghtf:.l; new avor in your it aibioenars Jones Dairy Farm Sau- sage meat. Takes the place of butter and gives atangthat’sirresistable. Jones Duiry Farm Sausage meat is exactly the same as Joneslittle ssusages, butwith- out the expensive casings— it costs less. Toremove sausage meatfrom parchment wrapper, dip ene tire package in water. Slice through paper and all. Jones Dairy Farm Pe. Atkinson, Wis. NES DAIRY FARM BY EDNA KENT FORBE dirty sooner than long hu easy to wash that most glving themselves successful shumpoos every week now. A good thing. too, for if the scalp is dry, a little oil can be rubbed in to counteract the dry/g effects of the shampoo, and if the wcalp is too oily, the weekly washivg will mot hurt it. Daily, thorough brushing is the next thing needed, but we've talked about that a lot recently. Hot olive oil or hot crude oil should be rubbed into a dry scalp or a_dandruffy oily one the night before the shampoo, rubbed in liberally and allowed to soak in all night. "I cured one case of dry dan druff that had existed 12 years, by rub. bing occasionally with olive ofl. It took months, but after all, the dandruff had persisted years. Some beauty shops use fodine, but you had better not try this vourself. "~/ The tonic formula hydrochlorate, 2 grains sulphur, 30 grains; carbc 30 drops; castor ofl, 10 drops; 4 ounces; Tr. cantharides, 4 dram cologne, 4 drams; rose water to make 8 ounces. but opi is 50 ar is: Pilocarpine precipitated 1 detergent Betty D. C. K.- season’s sunburn from you use cucumber juice on them every few days. Another way is to rub powdered oatmeal into the skin after you have washed and rinsed it The skin should not be entirely dry, as the ocatmeal in drying will also make the skin very soft and smooth Mrs. E. T. B—Nothing leaves the hair so soft as an egg shampoo. To do this effectively, rub the egg into the scalp an hour before the sharn and then proceed as with method All the dried egg will solve in the lather and rinse out the hair, while it carries with it dandruff that may be the sc ere is sulphur In the egg, that } to purlfy the scalp, s amounts to a special s Anxious Mother— I do not think there is any particular age for a boy to begin to wear long trousers It should be whenever the boy appears awkward in short one: this could be s early as 14 years of a large boy or 16 with a small You can bleach the your arms if on ips too Ap treatment To Cure Tongues of Beef. For a tongue of seven pounds take one ounce of saltpeter. one-half ounce of black pepper, four ounces of coarse brown sugar and six ounces of salt. Rub these ingredients well into the tongue and let it remain iIn the pickle for two or three weeks, turning it every day, then drain it. Soak and boll it or it may be boiled without soaking. L WASHINGTON My Neighbor Says: To scale fish quickly, dip them in and out of bolling water. When hashing cold meat, add a little chopped parsley to m- prove the flavor and appear- ance. Do not serape a frying pan; it is liable to burn afterward. Instead, rub well with a hard crust of bread and wash in hot water. To peel an orange easily and to get the skin off in one piece, put the orange in front of the fire for three or four minutes. The skin will then come off easily. The buttons on a woolen or knitted coat sometimes tear away from the fabric, leaving a bad hole. To prevent this, place a linen button of equal size at the back when sewing on the pearl or horn button. Sew right through, thus fastening both buttons with the same stitch. To keep flatirons clean and smooth, rub them first with a plece of wax tied in a cloth and afterward scour them on a pa- per or cloth strewn with coarse salt. When milk burns, remove from the fire at.once, place the saucepan immediately in a ba- sin of cold water and throw into the milk a pinch of salt. Stir spoon, and the burnt te will disappear. e Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Regular Feedings. baby s born he regular schedule With children of over 6 pounds in weight the four-hour nurs- ing period is ideal. This gives the mother comparative freedom, so that nealthf fon will make her happier and thus a better nurse—and babies fed every four hours are less to develop colic than those on more frequent feedings. To feed any oftener than once in three hours is to court all manner of digestive troubles, Next to a proper interval comes the importance of sticking to intervals exactly. If the baby is awakened the first few days at regular periods he will learn to waken at those times Feed him only on those periods and establish his habits. There is nothing I conducive to trouble than to feed a baby every time he cries. Cry- ing is not an indication of hunger in every case, and to stuff a child with water or food when he ¢ is to make @ cross 1ble baby of him and one whose digestion will suffer throughout life. Imagine giving un It a meal every t e grew rest It is no nnier than feeding a child because he begins to squirm and fuss and cry. His action rise fromany num- ber of causes Having established regular hours of feeding, a mother can then figure out auses of the baby's ailments. She will know that his hours are right, and if he is not gaining, is uncomfortable or cross or is too fat—she can alter his food to correct these troubles. She won't have to worry about irregular- ity as possibly at the root of the trou- 0 this s the baby's first habit is a good one. This makes the : of all other good habits so much the easier. From the time the shouid be put upon of feeding Charming Window Curtains. A delightful effect by using two pairs of window cur- tains, one pair heing of a different color from the other. The material for both pairs must be quite thin, preferably of filet net or soft muslin, or even cotton georgette. A novel combination 18 to have on one side of rhe window a blue curtaln hung over a pink one to secure a shade of manve. and both curtains looped back and held by purple cords. On the other side of the window a blue curtain should be looped back to re- veal a curtaln of vellow hanging in straight folds. The blue curtain on thi is loopad up with broad vel. vet ribhons of jade green. harmoniz- ing with the blue and vellow chosen. Lamp shades and cushions are hand- some when decorated with tiers of petals of different colors. can be produced Boston has been offered by Mrs. May Cummings her 200-acre estate to be used as a country club for the poor. TWICE TODAY, THE WIDOW’S MIGHT BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR Fay Carson is not attractive to men. She reads a book extolling the charms of a young widow and she decides to masquerade as one during her vacation. With a new wardrobe and a stock of fasci- nating tricks, she is quite the most popular girl at the Poppy Inn, but she cannot ceem to make any im- pression on one man, Dean Hamp- ton. In the meantime she is flirt- ing gayly with other men. A crowd of young people go picnicking in the Berkshires and’ after lunch they separate to go searching for a mysterious place called the Devil’s Den. Fay ventures out on a rocky ledge over a 100-foot precipice and part of the ledge breaks away so that she cannot get back CHAPTER XXXI The Rescue. But strangely enough, it s not Jack’s blond head and cheery coun- tenance that appeared suddenly out of the gathering gloom. Fay's first apprisal that any one near was a deeper voice than Jack’s calling her name over and over, and she drew herself carefully to her feet, feeling cramped and stiff. At first her throat was too dry to| ' -Now - | make a sound, but at last she called| think abou out in a trembling voice across to “I'm here.” il fastibel In spite of her long, drear Jor the mrou and the peril of her position, could not help wondering why Hampton had come to her aid. He had made no secret of the fact that | contro he disliked her, and she certainly did | out that she simpl not want to be under any omgaunnul fort, she wanted to him. To be rescued by him was a | the ground and humiliation that she did not want to|cause &he knew face. Hating her as he did, he might | despised her even believe that she had done this|spise her still mi thing_purposely so as to dramatize | -, she herself. { And then quite suddenly his face ap- peared on the trail below and the re- human being y forgot every tle sob welled up ir es blurred. e cried weakly near. Part of the away and it isn't her throat, her “Here I am,” “Don’t come too ledge has broken safe.” Dean was on the ledge now and was coming swiftly towar nd again F 4 toihim “Please don't come : whole thing y moment He was quite enough to controlled comforting. ful gap the a ny closer, ve way near her to her in at was een th now, near voice t e the hudderi What was “Come, Mrs I wa r arms e safe threw rope to her, and with g fingers she picked it up and you m bt is noose watched hi; end of the r linked ¢ wait Fay Dean that toward waters roared, but beating so fu scious of nothing rope tugging gently and the other end was ned and that he had said he wou her, but as she reached the | part of the ledge it her own he: wa knew th: to_ De: save At she was con Parking With Peggy her memor: She felt tr her fee! forgot caution herself She ran stumblin strong hands on ing her a roaring in h went black arou er shoulder (Continued € m half well beaten ‘ cut in smal teaspoonfui of lemon extra: e cupfu « miTk in which two level teaspoc € soda have 1ssc and two and one. “The trouble with French menus is | sifted with a pinch o that a calorle by any other name is | and bake in a buttered just as fattening | one a cupf eggs “of bu tter. Add tu nful lved of flour Beat w and floured When you ask the grocer for Gorfon's Cod Fish Cakes uklngfor the m'!gi‘alprepnredfishmku. “No Bones” Codfish and boiled ponaou,mdymputmwthefi-ymgpm GORTON PEW FISHERIES CO., Led., GLOUCESTER, MASS, “QORTON'S DEEP SEA RECIPES"—~Welse for this new frea boakics. ALTIMORE and Every Day P® RED-STAR-BUS PHILADEPHIA WITH STOPS AT BALTIMORE & WILMINGTON Leaving Woodward and Lothrop’s Store ASK MR. FOSTER—14th ST. near Penna. Ave. N. W. CAPITOL PARK HOTEL at 8:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. FARE Through Trip $5.00—Time 6 hours A delightful trip over excellent roads througl h beautiful country in well-heated Fageol Safety Coaches. Individual Seats. Convenient Comfort Stops. - WILMINGTON Washington to Baltimore $1.50 Washington to Wilmington $4.00 Information and tickets may be obtained at Woodward and Lothrop’s and at Red Star Office, Phone Main 1075. Operated by RED STAR LINE, Inc. WASHINGTON, D. C. PHILADELPHII