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WIEOINEAN t ceful New Leaf 8Y LYDIA LE 1y let are al ns con how to how to d-resolu the idea namely AYS THE AN TM NEW THE EVENING ' for the New Year BARON WALKER. leaves will make an excellent color scheme: the green of new leaves. the many tones of Autumn leaves and the brown of dried leaves. If vou gathered Autumn leaves when they were bril liant you will have these on hand. Rrown leaves mav be gathered frem some varieties of trees, even in Mid winter, and green ones may be from nl such zeraniums (especially ivy. holly, laurel and It preferred. leaves from colored papers o paper that has leaves printed in colors on it. 1), elc rose zerani nts, cut house pl can be Decorations. Bare and twizs of trees can appear to be in leaf if these paper or real dried and green leaves are Lizhtly touched with glue and stuck o them. Put such branches in vases bout the rooms, lay them on riantel pieces or stick behind pictures. so that th wre ornamental against the vall. Have o cenierpiece of leaves for the dining table. with odd “leaves strewn over the white cloth hranches leaves Findinz Partners. partners there kind only for a man who are to be two leaves, two To be supper 1 aves of a Matchin partn ceraninm leaves maple leaves, etc nd wdicates There may two holly v zirl ane them Leaf Men salad Buttered New Leat leaves Leafl cookies Leaf ices, and violet candies rolls Olive clover Leaf Nala salad lettnee I Recipe. by combining and Leaf is made celery cabbaze leaf the shredded leaves and leaves with some on the lettues ise mixed with cabba rose leaves. Use the whitest o holder the minced Dress mavonn hipped cream i sprinkle rose over all, just before servinz very full-blown roses will suffice number of Olive Leaves. nt stuffed olives to form circles and on the plate with the salad. ar ranging them in zroups of three like clover leaves. with salad plates Leaf Cakes and Ices. Use a leaf-shaped cooky cutter to s<hape the cookies. The ice cream will be leaflike, if it is colored green and Slices eut with the leaf cooky cutter Din the cntter into cold water before h leat lA’]jl{S()\.\l‘ HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Luxury of a Bad Habit. subject night with lsmal Bos last it of it screen, this’ line 1y income I buv with the n nostrums of to keep his hion hase and use nostrums the cost vwels, the It to A pro The modest . liver and kid nature” ive enough for for that propa- twentieth cen- nostrims make the 1tent medicines seem al & numerous i ~ pu used to cost about a regulate the e kind that sets Tt 12 cents a and an exclusive ng and bowal Wisenheimer family langnage. Concerns thoncand and one mineral internal ot ported tc T hat's are mast n the nse riicular relation is a falrly it has al- o therefore a good target. rity of cases con- a bad habit de- cultivated. inevitable bane of deserves credit he establichment ¥ in many ably bind 1 and reason it | MARTILF MFYFR FLDRED. Little Pearls. tate that the child snffers ting his teeth \onths of age and remark afrer. e the bahy less inclined 1o th a rietous ap e didn't pa n thesa svmp- ceth had ap if every well and percentge of the difficulty of < in exact ratio from the nor ehind them a long n. slowness of ral symptoms how decided They may run <. and when erupting they er that con hese are apt the child who wrd convulsions fever v at ss ai teething night, ss of ap- | to think that teeth and cal changes in ore food to and see if cause of it i amonz the blame for rv condition at from the time the B ald. One can not " the con tretful etite if these con for over a week who has every right to continue than a some + haby's tion for longer t time the teeth will be | It a had sleeper and | the tre Jle over. & HlameIBIs e atn here it belongs, and t i on the way in which he is be fed. His diet, and not his teeth, Which inevitably brings us back to where we started. The well nourished hahy have more than the maost triffing disturbances at teethifiz time, zmd s if 13> baby Is a whiny. il nonrished lit{le mite. start out to right t wrang and let the testh take cars the hlame 3 and | ntestinal | in-| BRADY, M. D. is still a desirable remedy in certain cases of diarrhea in infancv or child hood, but never in ordinary costive- ness People fears of | the bowel | da generally harbor haseless dire consequences in case is not emptied for a few and these unwarranted fears are plaved upon and fostered by the prop. aganda of all the nostrum interests for the zood of the businesa. Fven some physicians. who somehow have good professional standing and repu tation. land the dignity of their sup. {port to this unwhnlesome propa zanda. for. after all. doctors are pao- ple. And people like to be humbugged. Wa doctors are hombarded with high- | pressure propaganda of this kind from innumerable nostrum makers of the | exciusive or ethical kind—they offer { their wares for physicians to pre- scribe, and if they can get enough | physicians to bite. why, it will be pretty soft for the manufacturer | when they get ready to offer the goods | [ to the public without the iInterven | tion of the doctor. | T have occasionally recommended | the practice of taking a teaspoonful or two of whole raw flaxseeds daily 25 a natural aid to peristalsis and a harmless habit Kvery little while there arises from an unidentified hut inspired source a suggestion that this s a littie dangerous in some vague wav. The source of this scare is dif. fienlt 1o trace. but 1 believe it is a manufacturer of a very expensive product which will accomplish the same purpose, though it comes in a {much prettier and more Impressive package than the bag or box one gets homely flaxseeds in. | I have often urged the eating of a | | reasonable amount of wheat bran | | daily as another natural aid to peri- | | staisis. i | No article of food fit to eat is con- | stipating or binding. Many items are | particularly laxative. however. Rut | 1t isn’t 0 much vour diet as it is vour habit of mind MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. | | s T | “You're Not My Boss.” | One mother e says must child with {other people. be sure that you trans- tor over the child, at far the child knows. 1t must restrictions, let | them be given when the child is not {around. Do mot put the friend or maid in the embarrassing position of hearing the child say: “I don't have to mind vou. You dare not touch me hecause you're not my boss.” Take the child hefore the tempo- |rary guardian and say something like this: “As vou are going to be kind enongh to look after Mary while I am awav, she must obev you. You |are 1o take my place for a while. It !<he does not obsy vou. vou are to I <hut_her up in her’ room until she! | doea. vou leave a absolute control least a there bhe (Consright. 1925, Cuban Sandwiches. Cuban sandwiches made. from | Roquetort cheese are very substan- | tal, and served with a bit of salad make a delicious supper. Cut slices of bread very thin and teast on both sides. Place lettuce leaves and thin slices of Roquefort cheese on toast and sprinkle with chopped nuts, add salad dressing and coyer with re- maining . slices of toast. Crusts should he cut from bread before toasting as these sandwiches are in- | rended to be eaten with knives and | forks. | ually | again COLOR CUT-OUT A MILLER'S DAUGHTER. i The Fair; When hirthda bhe drew great rejoicing in the soon he The and neay p all this preparaiion and dwelling o tremiled ling the younz feet in alarm nd The nurse prince jumped 1o he and the the 1 the strange and 1 time the prince ished into n for foot to the = years old revenze. who was grot me van touched dair he h ind before he was The a gray a gray prince’s suit scarf about feather is bright red. with his xhoulders and red hat (Copyrizht. 19 UB ROSA in his BY MIMIL You Can't Blame Him. ‘Oh. he treats me <o dreadfully. It fsn't fafr. I Idn't mind his other faults—his conceit and selfishness—so much. but when he lies to me! Oh. It «imply breaks mv heart when 1 think of how truthful I am in my deali with him. And he doesn't take trouble to do me the same hono This impassioned speech gina, whose Dionald had heen caught n a iie. had s imitted his nd refused to discuss the matier a fur ther Resina had alwavs kept watch of her man. and whan one eve ning she met Anne Judson, who seemed to ha on chummy terme with Dionald. his sweetheart where he'd met the other girl ‘Oh. she was dining down rastaurant last week. and as I the hov she was with, we duced.” Donald's answer quickly. And then a few party one night. to D: T day. and he was minded me of old Remember used 1o from Re asked i at B'e knew had come weeks later. at a Anne remarked cas- saw Billy the other sking for vou. Re times, seeing him the old davs when he live on Eichtv-fourth “treet When stormil nded her he heen Rexin: later in the evening } bov friend had knowr sheepish!y admitted that pal of Anne’s for vear lied fust to was sa darn jealaus ke doesn’t it side of the story “It's all well to talk playing square and always coming clean with the whole truth, but if I tell Regina the whole truth, and nothing but. I always end up by having a grand fight. “Once, on a long t passed the time talking to a pretty girl who sat opposite me. She was engazed and didn't care a hoot a me. Regina was at the station me me home. and sk companion give me a “When she asked told her frankly vight there ir the tausht lascon th conle fib my was at how the hussy he'd and that ible, hecanse R triek for him But now hear his rain journey, 1 my train good-hye smlle utit 1 me all a jon. That whenever 1 of a sft Na use running into cafoly ont nation 1 would trouhle with a full eanfessinn If 1 admit 10 her honestiy forgot 1o call her up one day canse my mind was so full things. she weeps and that 1 net he of other rants. So 4 concoct some story about husinesa ont | of town. It's peace. “If she were the sort of girl who was willing to overlook a few slips now and then she'd get the truth every time. But as it have to lie to avoid constant ructions.” Can vou blame Donald entirely” Don’t vou see that his only chance for a pleasant evening i= to avoid telling R too much of the truth? If you're Zoing to make yourself so etern and unforgiving a judge ihat vour sweetheart is afraid to plead “guilty” you've got to expect lies now and then. The small boy lies to the stern and unvielding mother who would whip him severely if she knew he'd heen eating jam. The grown-up boy evades and hedges and refuses to answ: - the sweetheart who makes a teai ul scene over his every misstep, (Coprrisht fHistory of Pour Name PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. the only way to keep 1095 FOX. VARIATIONS—Sinnock, Sinnoch, Seeny, Reynard, Reynardson, RACIAL ORIGIN—Irish. SOURCE—A nickname. This is not the same family nawme as the Fox which comes from the Anglo-Norman source in the given name of “Fulke” or “Fulque Though they may not look it, Fox. Sinnoch, Seeny. Reynard and’ Pey. nardson are all really varfations of the same name. some of them being Anglicized variations of the Irish pro- nunciation of ithe name, and some of them being Anglicized variations of the meaning It came ahout this way. There are two noteworthy figures in Irish his tory who were founders of clans or septs from which many bearing the foregoing names trace their ancestry One of these wes “Flann,” the 169th monarch of Ireland. 876 A. D., who was known as “the Fox.” The other was a certain “Teige,” who lived about 100 years later, also known as ‘‘the Fox"—"Teige an Slonnach.” From these two surnames came the family or clan names “MacSionnaighe.” Ac- cording to sound it has become Angli- cized to the forms Sinnoch and Sin- nock. According to meaning it has become Fox, Revnard andy Reynard- son, (Covsright. 1925.) and this was the evil fairy 's| close | were intro- | And we had a scene ! STAR. WASHINGTON, D. (., TUESDAY, DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Idle Wife Who Hanl-ers Can Miss Eighteen < Instead of Chum to Boy Friends? After Romance.—How Be Sweetheart My husbhand is one of the hest men in the world ] EAR DOROTHY DIX | - considerate than he is to me, | Nobody could he kinder. more generous, \ | but he is Yery quiet, a good deal older than myself. and absolutely settled T don’t feel that I really love him, and | nearly go wild for affection | Also T crave to do as I please. There is just something lacking in my life, if | ¥ou know what I mean. I would like a career—to go to places of | amusement, and. about all, 10 he romantically loved. Do vou think that I should get # divorce, or should stay and do my duty to my husband? Do you | think that we are soul mates, and that our marriage wax made in Teaven PERPLEXED WIFE | comfortable homes sorrows, need like yvou, with zood about hunting up imaginary heads rattles, Answer: I think that women | and Kind. tender hushands. who = | to be shaken until every tooth in their Why. woman, you don't know how blessed you are. You ought to be | down on your knees thanking God for giving yon that kind of a husband, { instead of thinking about divorce, and pricing the raflroad fare to Reno hushand who Same home every night (hused vou untl you went in cowering fear of him? A who was unfaithful to vou, and who tore your u uppos had a lazy noaccount husband poverty. so that vou went shahby and cold the erust of and heat vou | Suppose you had a and who eursed you and Suppose vou had a hust heart to shreads with jealo who dra vou down to hitter and hungry, and had y littl bread that you could not zive them” Suppose vou have fallen in ravazed by a ho children erying about you for who find that whose very ame reason nate women hushand. and those unf their love with cle for unhappiness and discontent with You. You have all 1 sonz of hlis< and than out on a still hunt f < passion? Then vou would have Rut you haven't # thing on earth the matter <'in your hand for making life one grand i Tot, and you th it all away, and they souls are ivinz for trouble whatnessof-the-what, they are They are pifffle and amount to wrilliant career and bhe famous Queen of England. or Mary who is a ter star. hut we rd didn’'t make us of the blood lent. we cannot realize those earning after the fmpossible hat dealt out < of the mind o have a would also like to he ne other wom that if the good L ome great espec on for all of \ nothinz hut the nothi Of « Al of i Pickford. or Gallit have sense en roval 2ue vearnin of an idle would li We 1zh o knoy or and splendid destinies but go ind make f Along to us itself in talk in that love that ¢ flubdubhery poetry-quoting Jresses =oft s how the making the wo And o think exactly tastes. T don't different Jates vou mean 4 man and 4 Woman who d e precisely the 1. Men and women are e hev were nat | think they kind subie same there is any such anima vould bore each othe of a marviage that we make it Give up foolish r i and sentla to death if Every m DIX ahout nee. and get DOROTHY vo ind rom man « sue AR respect MIss DIX: To his father ¢ whom do his mother? that a child shou the most to the deserving of respeet Answer | parent who is most invariably does Children should say respect and as a matter of fact it almost have ition in this bhaby reats its pa rents. 1 make ohev the strons lettinz Child mother wh her ther permits then iden them 1o do. nor nd fyranr dges of chara 'n their head her intn do they respect the them as chil vhe Bluste There are no Parents dihe: to o dren are. They size thei with them fathers and There esser n holding children’s respect thei them father affections. EAR Miss of heaux want is love. | advice. T love one Ylease tell me this is th a sweetheart. not a hrother mothe! stand sho ' d authority mother must be nc mother jealousies over 1 DOROTHY DIX or no rivalries or DIX: 1 an and ir thi 1 . a sister to th i these hovs. hut N vears ¢ eresting. and have and them m want PAL TO A h reason why They are oo e enough sense to know it. So they ju eat her as if she were an extra nice bo » inspire 4 real passion in any man’s heart. Yon and vou will have 1o wait three vears until you will really get the love vou crave. But Answer: 1 surmise my de friends are s vour awn and that the hecanuse theu e chums . they ha and play around with a Also von are just a nice kic are zrown up before Your own emotion too seriously The Kind of calf love vou think you are experiencing now malady from which vou will soon recover. You will have such chills and fever before vou really fall in love for Your are, however. a wise virgin, wise beyond sense the fact that there is dan r in becominz just man-sized job irl and vou don't take is an infantile + dozen spells of keeps . your vears, w he vha the For all women may who have no who vided nev ugh isces. First. those ho k Aoes the money ta buv themselves a ind conrted fron hushin the cradle t the law fes arm raised 1o its the ho con o desired ane perm \nd Men like then confide their love a4 marrying them thay This type of Woman cats her heart ou the an to pass to some other woman, and generally ends up by marrying late § Jife some old bachelor with whom she has chummed for ©o many vears that | she has become a habit with him DOROTHY DIX. when teill then: them. but wdmire them. enjoy their th other they would other dirs W no more t omen t men for food that she had HOPPING ALLEN. WHEN WE GO BY MRS, HARLAND . Shirts That Launder Well. It has probably of every honeewife which her to launder than o are many reasons for this the nature of the fastness of the dves. etc. If von are Ibuying a shirt for its durability {are naturally concerned with its laun | dering qualities i Any white cotton material washes {well.” 1t will not change color and it | won't shrink. The finer the cotton is waven the better it will hold its shape | through many washings Most fabrics with printed cannot be guaranteed. but good qual |ities of madras, percale. Japanese |crepe, chambray and sateen are practi- i cally fast. Learn to look at the stripe to see whether ft's woven in or just| printed. A woven stripe will rarely | lose its color or wash out entirely. An| | inexpensive printed madras is more drdlioing i 6 Ihexpensive per.| A labor shortage in India has heen i e | unheard of hitherto, but owing te irri- &= | sation and other developments, which Any colored shirt that you buy may |are creating a demand that taxes ‘he |fade.” You can take one precaution | present supply. the countey will proh {when buving it by asking the sales| DR, : Ly i tory. Pongee. <ilk hroadelat nd washed with th silk. Hahutai are prohahlx of a the mast the silk fahrics that shirts. They heen the experience that seme of the menfolks huy are There lity of material are fo in mnst he shirts nd sasior grea even more carefully ir will with washing remember, will he ruined as much by perspiration laundering. Dampness causes silk rot and a silk shirt that’s wern often won't Jast very lo ers ned. Any sil hecome vellow Yepe material ‘ as in you to too Flannel shirts shrink unless they are properly laun dered nnel comes pre-shrunk. but a cerfain amount of shrinkage is to be expected. Any coarse or open ma terial is bound to shrink more than a fine. closely woven fabric., While these facts are generally true remember that good laundering will prolong the life of shirts, while poor laundering will upset all rules. e very likely 1o designs s have to utilize labor-saving de- person whether or not it is guaranteed | vices more extensively fast color. The better DECEMBER 1925. 29, BY LEE PAPE. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1925.) Our cook Nora made some crullers today, being one of t best thinzs she makes ony she hardly ever makes them and she put a whole platefull on the sidehord in the dining reom | with a napkin on top them to make a neeter effect, and after a wile L LITTLE BENNY I v trr pare | ! | wen nobody waz hack there I we back to make a inspection. and th T went up to ma’s room and ma was writing me say- i Hay ma cruller? Meentng o somehod can 1 ma ves, and I sed, Can T take i ( v for gondness sakes vou asked me if vou could take one and 1 sed | ves. s0 wy prolong it into an arg ment? ma sed Well how sed My tawking Well. G 1 couldent o meny can T take, ma? T wall. ma sed ma 1 dident axually sas ves. ves, ma sed os van sed | 12 1 sed I sed sed know Im dizz Swrith Ve Jaws Well ¢ 1 Now that's too far. Ive let vou Well came 1 find o 1= 1h Meeni nuckles T was ony MODE the hand. do not eood R PLORENCE DAVIES. of it'as a “when we wanted hu 3 coppe t Lt ox The \taptaptap anging the n rest,” 1 said play on one strin It work gets monatonous and tasks grow deadly. why net methad of the « play a differ Even tragedy diculous if it An amateur tried to produce a of their numb | before the eve dience bhegan Change s self. We ¢ coppersmith and nt tune for a few m finally hec elieved. | utterlv Aramatic compans tragedy which one | had written. But g the au to snicker instead of ta weep. The voung writer had kept hammering on the single string of tragedy, with never a pause or break and the thing finally broke down al together and became honot nous, and then just foolish. For life at its worst isn't like that. There a little shafts of light even throuzh the blackest clo garments are | guaranteed as to their dves. Of all the | colors blue and gray have proved to be the colors most apt 1o be fast Irongees wagh well in shirting, and ny silk that’s found in shirts can be washed and laundered. The results, however, are not uniformly satisfac. Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN | | | “Me and Skinny always keep a note | | about how much’ we like the teacher, so if she catches us we can give her that one.” ) (Copsright. 1923.) “De Luxe:Packaged Ice Cream. ¥ B0OLD ONLYLIN QUART PACKAGES Ac Delicate netwe pss. “Puzzlicks” 0-Limerichs emm— f————Pu h light hair and aves. of water. happened 1o tha vouth ed over the strange wal the limerick placing the the numbers spaces. The by fd b esponding ‘s “Puzzlick.” of Rio Mandel = “Trio Down was scanty, 1t Andante Allegro con brin. 1828.) e pla tead of Emergency Dish. pork thin &l off the rinds and ter made of a gh flour stirred r cling to the k fat uy e pa Stop envying ownersof | tudebaker | ( MAUTS CHOCOLATE ON CUSTARD © SAMPLER s1ze //?\ %~ sSSTN\=> (T =, & Wenatchee-Okanogan PPI e‘ For sale at all Sanitary Grocery Stores and other good retail stores, and the following wholesale fruit dealers, who can supply your grocer: A. A. Leishear & Son 915 B Street N.W. Leventhal & Oxenburg 821 D Street N.W. Chas. W. Heitmuller Co. 923 B Street N.W. Clowe & Davis 903-805 B Street N.