Evening Star Newspaper, December 4, 1925, Page 59

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e T WOMAN*®S PAGE. THE MONUMENTS OF WASHINGTON. BY VICTORIA FABER STEVENSON. ¢ War thave | n the oy k and | wounded pa triotic s 1o care f case ami few at the to his mortalized of the Decl In Ju cal A with a Rush, the profe seulptt located fourth st which he had al by signing it at the end| aration of Independence 904, the American Med ciation presented the Natior ‘ bronze statue of Benjumin | triot and pioneer of their | This piece of | compatri he tion he holds in his 1 pen in righ very one which he had v ing the Declaration of 1 On the panel in front of the monu- | ment may be read: “Dr. Benjamin Rush, Physician and Philanthropist, 1745-1813." On the east side of the cylindrical pedestal of the monument are laurel leaves, parchment pen These symbols express the eminent doctor achieved itings, whict riative. The Sino ¢ hi may be ed in his w a 1 S amo MODE MINIATURES the newest brassieres re- | ity bit of lingerle rather | P tical con en of slender and m. increased preference ner. For wom- | ¥ soft bandeau in brassicre of heavy Meta sel clot} often b: gether of elastic ously wi ning gown. but_e: or fine place of the long fabric. strip spicu o8t cut eve startling, | of net FRENCH FORMULA (HOCOLATS Sold, by the best, shops every T | That quick--and your brass, silver,gold and nickelshine i like new, with a lasting ' | | s S S luster. Buyacan today at your grocer,hardware, 350k ks EANNA S < S Y | edge |as MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST, ced Oatme: Bifked Orange with Cr in R acon ke LUNCHEON siled Bi Fried Sweet Pota Creamed Caulifiower Checolate Tapioca Hot Corn DINNER Cream of Celery Soup Beef Steak with Mushrooms. French Fried Potatoes Brussels Sprouts Fruit Salad Cheese Crackers, Coftee IN RAMEKINS, umekins, drop an eich, put small pieces top each and sprin- bake in oven until CHOCOLATE TAPIOCA tablespoons pearl hour in cold nd one-half wrter poon tablespoon (h little water and milk. Add tapi- k. Fliver with apeck salt milk in cream o FRENCH sut let FRIED, pots ient. ¢ nd an hour, tien Drop ay i enough oes as you it in long cold water dry on towel hot fat, hot When they ihey suff Drain on brown sprinkle with salt o taste slice 1« all ) browr pen is a dreu 3 come to sur panel « . th 1 e emphasizes profe Yering pper per nd suit the the in ed by 1St Man's ni in poe M + number of holes from ing of oluntary action EVENING 10 1o 35 miles an of a musical com- founder sary man wt poet th is nt when smpleted v \dic vision Rush, a 1829 § fc incory srgetown f Port Said s a bed. Nutrition Nuggets. food v 1lies is larg contained in then fruit, of course, digestihi percentage of the 1 ry alts, te scuit Many persons who Except folks hes when stepped on Th, and j ally the same words me v a mo s pla by | ed by | sxponding his as white the two ed find e 1 or ind whole can_be if rwore e «dy-build can, be kept for nger period. PREPARE this treat for the family tonight! Take from their box a dozen Skookum Delicious apples. Remove the specially-prepared paper wrappers which preserve the last atom of goodness for you, then pile them in a center dish or basket and place them on buffet or table. it than one Cold of STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Dear Ann: The simpler the shoe for u short, broad foot the better the foot will appear. It certainly will not be at its best in a slipper with leather ap- plique deslgns on the sides for simplicity, LETITIA, (Copyright, 1025.) Answers to Food Questions Ausaers to readers’ question diet will be miven by Winifred St Gibbs. food specialist. writer and Ject ition hould e i by essed. stamped e, 25, only tome of general “inter- AL will be ane: in_this column: oth era will_be ered through the mail. Every effort - made to answer ques k the in- regar tablespoons of mashed potato. a slice of bread and butter and a dessert of two tablespoons of gelatin pudding, of apple sauce or two small cookles or two tablespoons of taploca pud- ding. chic] day en broth or when there | soup or one of The numbs scrambled egg on Ao e TR0 § 5, et Lake has been no egg at ath street, New York City a slice of bread and days when there i Loy began |t tablespoons e he has been badly troubled | served with six peracidity e is now three | On days when ther vs old. At times it iy better, then | at breakfust a small pe return, and it seems that noth- | three tablespoo of baked < ‘with him, although I am t his meals. If you could| 1 am 1d » me a diet for him I would be | pounds. My height is 5 feet grateful.—Mrs. ¥. Y Will you please send me ir s At ST i matiite about weight_standards and children’s digestion, due to immatu- |Feduce”—A. K i rity, it is rarely safe to give an exact | YOUr normal weight is 127 pounds. diet for any illness unless one can | This means that vou have consider- watch the children. It seems to me | &Ple reducing to do. Some: when that the best thing I can do for you [ the welght is as far above normal as is to outline a perfectly normal det | YOUrs there is something likely to for a child of this age. This will give you romething to work toward and vou can begin gradually with|© | moderate portions of of the | | foods. hing him arefully | until delay. The ny butter, and no eggs served my baby o 1wo or ar eigh 160 inches. ormation how to very of | find out you first of all to be I. therefore, adv ure that the Granting that normal K 1 T ean give ng | to the point of taking the entire dfet, | 2dVice about reducing. : | One o my strongest theories s that | FeBUIRE dally diet 18 tesulting i children of this age are frequently | Rrefeny stath of overwhight it s fre made {ll by the simplest food because | 0500 Lhat ¥ou MU%, CHAREr o G0 of very large portions. This s such | SNLY safe way to reduce s by cutting |a simple thing to remember that it | Silne i poundthiatennaithatiibs in- i sometimes surprising to see what| Fiiql "as’ caten food furnishing | Bood results will follow. Mothers are | apol¥%) (0™ (oties o1 mensiirements so apt to forget how tiny the young of energy. If a gradual reduction of children’s digestive organs are. Por-|fooq will not help you to gain vour tions that seem only normal may very 3 normal weight then, us 1 said before. easily be too much, while a smaller | LOUMT S€ R ) you must consult a physician. serving of any one of the foods could | ¥OF MGt SOt A E N your occu- | be easily taken care of pation is. This has considerable to do Here {s a dlet: For breakfast, | with the energy requirements. If you times a week, flve or six table arc at home your exercises will be ! spoons of orange or prune juice, two | vigorous than n office tablespoons of oats or wheat served itting at a desk |in four tablespoons of milk, about inly, you should not have | three times a week. Other mornings, | more t ories of energy a ce of milk toast or a coddled egg jday and you should be properly ery day one ' nourished on suc and a cup of | One of the ch d occasionally by | =———— A cup of coct r dinuer in the middle of the day. the lean part of a | small lamb chop or two tablespoons of chicken fricassee with three table spoons of chopped spinach or two tablespoons of mashed turnip or one small artichoke, together with two ou are otherwise some 1 ou 3 your ries today saucepan after adding cqual quantity of milk but do not boil. mediately, Let the whole family enjoy their tempting appear- ance, their engaging aroma, the full, fruity flavor each bite discloses. No other eating apple is like a Skookum Delicious. It tastes of many fruits combined, sweet yet piquant, full, yet delicate. It is the desert apple supreme. Enjoy the Delicious at it best by i the Skookum label. PATIATR I Write, today, for unusual recipe book showing 209 tested ways to serve SKOOKUM Appl Address: SKOOKUM PACKERS ASSOCIATION Co-operative Non-Profit WENATCHEE. WASHINGTON Northwestern Fruit Exchange ales Agents ting on Wenatchee, Washington Wenatchee-Okanogan! Skfikll%k, No. 3 For supper a cup of cream of pea | breakfast with | cause this that only a physiclan can | o such | DECEMBER 4, 1925. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRFD. Obedience. It is plain to even the most casual beholder that the mother who ap parently works the least to gain obedience Is usually the parent whose | children obey her quiet orders with-| out comment, and the one who shrieks at them and is constantly demanding | ind bewalling her inability to make them “mind” is the mother whose fiercest behests are met with sullen dsobedlence. Some mothers start out when tie children are hardly at the walking stage to see that they obey. All well and good. Children should obey, but the real idea of obedience is not that a child shall walk a chalk line laid down by @ selfish mother, who thinks of 1o one but herself, but that there | shall be such falth and trust in her self buflt up by the mother that a child will obey when she agks because he has come to know that this is the best plan for hoth of them. Tiny habies do not understand rea. sonini, but they sense injustice. arouses antagonism in even a baby Wwho {s never allowed to follow out any of his whims, which to him may be vitally important, but is constantly thwarted because otherwise he might | discommode the mother | Suppose small Jane wants to play with some object which in her baby hands might come to danger. One ort of mother will jerk this preclous object out of Jane's hands, give them | @ smart slap and say crosely, “Don't e ¢ touching that again | ¢ naugh She t ks will te obedience. | teaches Jane i to he a trifie s | next time when she goes afte | particular object. The hand siap is | forgotten—it momentary &ting that meant nothing in connection with the object The oth take the object from Jane's hands and | g explain gently that this belongs to mother, but that mother will give Jane something to play with that shall be | Jane's m Jane's desire moth gently su else and tells Jar it appear that such a possess preferiable the ftirst on iappy. Both their ob, 50 re | 80 b | that | 4 te complis 1e cherished mothers Lave ct of getting vase. or what not, away from Jane, | but in the latter case Jane will be o satisfied—she will feel no impulse of | anger bacause the vase has been taken | nor toward her mother who took it while the first Jane will cry into a rage and nothing bu ¥ object will satisfy her. One has begun to teach obedience in the | the other has forced obedi- | ence on an unwilling child and stmu- | lated nothing except e at its ow n| helplessness, th | | right way vour | s much better to eat a n diet, cutting down on portions of each | | food, than trying to subsist only on a | few foods. | " With this in 1 | be something Iike | { that it nd your diet this sugar, one slice of toast without but- ter, a cup of coffee with one and one- half teampoons of skimmed milk and two or three times a week an exg. If you are very active and feel the need of food in the middle of the morning a cup of clear broth with a discuit be taker ¥ uncheon try a small serving | of 1ean cold broiled steak or cold roast beef with lettuce salad and only slice of bread may eat all th may one butter. You e you like und will without lett the addition « make more nourishing it | | | fast a raw apple or one baked with | i Cream of Tomato! Heat the contents of can of Campbell’s Tomato Soup to the boiling point in a pinch of baking soda. Then heat SEPARATELY an or cream. Stir the hot soup INTO the hot milk or cream Scrve im- Serve it as a Soup Sauce Salad mindful of meant remark, that there gere | Rlad to dance w One | the veranda raili |feet, and Dick Pre for the time being thing about Mrs. (1 acted & | th r type of mother will 150 | THE WIDO BY HAZEL DEY V'S MIGHT 0 BATCHELOR one ordr. Guernds " ax With o mew inating 1 « opuiar girl ar the Poppy ot seem 1o ke any i Dean Hampton. Then when he saves her unconacions in his nrmis tempration to Kiss 7 Startin. of which Fay i nizes ter Afrer conversation” Fuy s ‘ahie excape from 1, Jear he will reven, “ively she accents driving" with George she ust wiet. e o, uh CHAPTER Back at the Inn. at the hote Barbara Buck Stevenson's ome girls remaining who woul h him, sulke som came the du »mbined with tI be was t olved to make the is peace with Ilinor rer, wl inclined That hil ard comparisons wiis <he ne if she ow Why 0od heavens, b | enguged and here angry wife. This thought hat even the iec wasn't out when pmething Just much like her n ‘Of co be we vening V) —~——— | (TOMAT SQU ¥ Carenes soup ot wchill's popularity weren't t that she made married e to the fi She had having be is willing ) take the trout good-naty 1d gone toc N\ N NN NN \ N Al 0, +7 Delicious %olden omato Soup Luscious Tomatoes blended with and the skilled seasoning o country butter famous chefs! Taste tomatoes at their very best in Campbell’s Tomato Soup. For we use only the choice red- ripe tomatoes and only the flavory, appetizing, nourishing juices and tomato “meat,” strained to a fine, smooth puree. Today—enjoy Campbelf's! 12 cénts a can RN S

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