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WOMAN’S PAGE. Veils Are Coming Back Into Fashion BY MARY MARSHALL. *“I may be terribly old fashioned, ylped a little standing at the middle-aged where veils woman counter 3 FUR XTENDS TIP OF THIS NOSI to Food Questions d. For the o be You questions on sulting e wecret of 1 both Mine, whetl ead, get taf abhove dough £ood bakers' bre::d tain to make better than t best homemade bread in the world. The accurate work of the mack used r v be depended upon to produ Siro least practically cer . sae bread is at 24 hov eri of unte before *ho out of the On the assured her, and would have had it not been that this little oldish lady really prides herself in lagging behind the fashion. Old fashions always seem more respectable to her, and so goes on wearing vells because make her feel more tidy. new veils that loom on horizon of fashion are 1 m any such motive. With and hobs and sleekly ar- hair stray locks are a thing past. And the present day on of its own accord quite sati ily. Frankly the new little vei em to be worn as fans nowaday carried, purely for ornament or the n of the the Begum of Bhopal s high-born ladies of India Oriental countries who now v visits in Paris, London iropean cities have had some- to do with this revived interest | s ruther faspinating ju nd a completely | this day and genera wscinating to think that in quarters of the earth the old cas of feminine modesty still prevail. And it fay be that these velled ladies Iy visiting in_ Paris have | brought ubout a revived interest in veils - just the Highland soldiery Paris during and after the war set on (that still continues) for | e —in is as they are sed up-to-date down farther —sometimes new these martly never extend tip of the nose far An intere: ench hat has a veil so ¢ shows the entire face. It Is caug! the hat above each ear and hangs n under the chin at the front. opyright. 1 will produce a t time will tend The principle | of brofling the | iring of the outer fces in the center enough to send a with muscular lay t s is quite imatie | n that | old days much same as that for an or in normal temy We | nk thing else, how- th excess of acid i there should n of the intes. warm Milk Milk ind 1cuati me of min in orange little sugar. adaed s . either raw or baked; ] baked potato, cream of vegetalles, and, finally, fleshed d chicken. 8 1 meat soups should be sugar should be used in very quant desserts, such as rves and pastries, and in ses few fruits, namely, cher- rants, eberries and straw- w toa king of water is advised. | and he said, I | head he we 1y will soon broadcast radio | | THE EVENING COLOR CUT-OU RUMPELSTILTSKEN. The Bargain. As 1 have said, the queen had com- pietely forgotten’ her promise to the dwarf, and lived very happily among her subjects. But at the birth of her first child, her heart was stricken with fear, for she recalled the piedge the little man had exacted from her. When he came for the child she wept bitterly and offered him jewels and money instead. All her pleadings were in vain until she pressed the child to her bosom and begged the dwarf to take her life, but to spare the King's son His heart was softened by her grief will give you three days' grace, and if, by the end of that time, vou can tell me my name you keep the child.” The King's doublet is of purple and gold and his hose and shoes match. His hair is brown. and on his s a golden crown (Covsmight. 1925.) “Nowadays the fellow who can drive a man to drink generally demands a bonus. are to| STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, | to her purse, which {s the only hold she has on him. | vour sleeves and go to work and make your own fort DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Foolish Girl Who Joy-Rides With Married Man— Shall He Marry Poor Girl He Loves or Sell Out to Wealthy Older Woman? JDEAR MISS DIX: Do you think I am unreasonable in asking my daught to stop riding home from the office every evening alone with a marrie man, when she could come on a jitney and get home an hour earlie: "l man is of excellent character, so far as I know, but he has a wife and young child, and T am afraid this may cause a misunderstanding between him and his wife. They now seem to be very happy and congenial. . WORRIED MOTHER he Answer: You are mot only not unreasonable In trying to stop your daughter froin her joyrides with this married man, but you would fail utierly in your duty to her, if you did not try to protect her from her folly. “For though she be chaste as ice and pure as snow” there are certs things that no girl can do without ruining her good name, und automobiling with a married, man is one of the headliners among them. Your daughter and the man may be merely platonic friends. They may while v the time by discussing the weather and the stock market and the President’s foreign policy, but no one will believe it. Appearances are agaipst them, and tongues will wag. And nobody has the fight to blame the gossips, because the married man who shows attentions to a girl seldom bodes her any good, and the girl who accepts them is generally na better than she should be. Iurthermore, unless the man's wife is entirely devold of jealousy, and has a far more trusting disposition than many wives are blessed with in this suspicious day and : she is sure to get green-eyed, and then your daughter will find he involved In a messy and unsavory scandal. So your daughter is idiotic to take this risk, nor should she be willing to be the instrument of breaking un a happy home. s Perhaps she will say that so long as she Is Innocent, and does nothir wrong, she will not heed what people say of her, but there is where she makes a mistake. Innocent or guilty, Mrs. Grundy will break her, unless she | conforms to the convention. Once a girl’s name is slimed over with scandal, it never can be washed clean again. People will always remember that she | was talked about, and they will forget that nothing was cver proved against her. If a girl is a cold-hearted adventuress, who has no pitv for a sister woman, and who is willing to break up a home and orphan little children in order to get the man she wants, you can see why she has love affair with | a married man But it is incomprehenaible why any girl Who is not a hearth robher ing to jeopardize her good name, her peace and happiness by a flirt with a married man. She risks so much for so little, and she so surely om in the end. Perhaps you can make your daughter see that she is starting on a road that is bound to lead to her undoing, and she will turn back -before she has gone too far. DOROTHY DIX. | o EAR MISS DIX: I am a young man of 24, full of life and Ic for voung lady ubout my age, who is beautiful and loves me, and would ma a good wife. But she is poor. On the other hand, a lady who is very wealthy, but much older than myself, wants to marry me. What shall I do? A.D. Answer: Well, A. D, I think that the young man who marries an old woman for her money selis himself cheaply, no matter how much money | he gets. The best vears of your life are just before you. They should be fu iove. of companionship, of plaving about with one who likes 1o do the he does. What price for these’ What money will pay you for being an old woman put up with her crotchets and whims? For sper listening to her moans and groans over her rheumati mistake, When an old woman buys a young husband. she regards him in the light of a hired boy to do her bidding, and she has sense enough to h I have seen ma and n himself For having eveni For. m old woman dole out nickels to her young hushan every time he took out a car or went downtown b; And did you ever know the young husband of amounted to anything? Never. It kills initiative and marry for money—or perhaps a man has no initiat would do such & thing. Anyway, the young husbands of ri their time in waiting for their elderly spouses to die. demoralizing and disappointing occupation in which So my advice to you is to marry the young girl an o ambition 1 man eve you love You sell out to an old w I3l thousand times happier than you will if vo EAR MISS DIX: We are a family of six boys and character, but we have the misfortune to have drunkard. Can you picture our horror when we come home 1 T work to find & mother under the influence of drink. using foul and degraded language? Uncleanliness reigns in our house. There is never a wieal fit to eat, and we fear the environment is injuring the m £ our young brother. What shall we do? EX-SERVICE MAN Answer: Consult & physician, and see if you eannot have your mother placed in some institution where her bad habit may be broken she has lost the power to brace up and cure herself, and nee You are quite right in_ thinking that her example will hav effect on your young brother. It will also be blighting to prospects, as no young man will caTe to visit in a home pre drunken woman. DORO! ded over by HY DIX. All Kinds of Money. in China practically every city issues its own currency, which is not legal tender in any other city. DECEMBER 10, Bedon Lo Fhia, small wm,mm L dress ed. P = 1925. insome for redoed. nosvnour braid. ppare ket, blanket Your Baby and Mine BY and W el eay MYRTLE MEVER ELDRED. Convulsions. o do. o ten towel t, of course, I ap him completely in the ing Put f ving to the ¢ think of Whatever the cause pe him t fee food tting w with eding, stuff: 1, or &n up- f teeth— the steps to pare a ith ther a woolen in an vel out of \ la I\'m' cold or iced water. Usually th | will be eufficient to stop the cons sion. If it does not, put the child § the tub of hot water, adding a } teacup of powdered mustard | gallons of water. Have the ck | inersed to the chest with the wa merely dashing it over him 1 effect and he would do bet in the hot wet towel. The object is to bring the blood to the surface of the | skin and thus relieve the heart and lungs. When the convulsion s ove a physic and cool enema. K | child in bed i quiet and be | careful of his diet. Most convu | unless the forerunner of sc i | disease, are of digestive o E | healthy children can't eat a hox of gir aps or half a bananas d expect to get off without trouble, < some children are prone to do on nics and wh . Some children are disposed to con- | vulsions, being of a nervous tvpe These children have spasms on sligh provocation, while stronger child ght have the same degree or even higher degrees of fever and never have | convulsion. It a child is of the nervous, convulsive type he should be guarded against fevers which rise to | dangerous hei ts. As he shows a disposition to fever he should | less liable . if a child v ht ailment ilsion with the re rn these habits one spasm after an ren of this type who MAMA DOLLS NOVELTY DOLLS CANDLESTICKS NOVELTIES 98¢ to $4.50 CREERON 614 12th St. N.W. Around the Corner from High Prices Between F and G Sts. (T HIFPER. soon as Jiredermal Hagper SPECIAL MATINEE FOR WOMEN ONLY EARLE THEATRE Friday Morning December 1I1ith At 11 o’Clock Bringing in the Boars Head.at the old Maxwell House—what 2 moment of hushed expectation! It was then that the Christmasrevelsreallybegan. Feastingsuchasold- time books describe —and afterward that wonder- 4, fulcoffee which made the Maxwell House famous =~ throughout the old South! Today this same blend of fine coffees with its rare, mellow richness, is on sale in every section of the United States. It has pleased more people than any other coffee ever put on the market. Serve it for breakfast tomorrow. Yourgrocer has Maxwell House Coffee in sealed blue tins. Maxwerr House CoFrree ToDAY—Americas largest selling hugh grade coffee. At this intimate performance Miss Hopper will reveal in detail her secrets of youth and beauty. She has just returned from Paris and and will, in a most elaborately staged production, show her daily routine from the time she leaves her bed until dressed for the street. EE HER wNw BED HER BATH EXERCISES 'I.argores Now Easy to End Forever ow-white, greaselesscream | erfected by the Secretary of oard of Pharmacy, tracts the pores very quickly and skin soft, smooth, healthy and fine This new healing astringent cream, s being received everywhere with great enthusiasm. Over 870,000 jars used last Sear—over a miliion this year! On sale for only 35¢, 50c, and S1 at all good drug stores. FREE—Large Demonstration Jar A Wdainty, has been the Marvland “Good to the last drop” | B 0XZEMA <1 N