Evening Star Newspaper, January 6, 1926, Page 26

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26 WOMAN'S PAGE.' THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1926. FEATURES. " \Dorothy Dix. I‘[uttgtainq Ostrich E}’.(:wau‘(- the Hinting Girl, the Girl: With a Past,| JI’OZC@S fifl.@ Cmfid@ When Serving Soups and Savories l BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. { Soups and savories come ai two € {he stomach and prepare it to digest tremes of a dinner. The soup is the| move easily the dizhes that follow: the ’ first or one of the fir<i courses and| other is (o be an integrul part of the savories come near the end of the| no ood served at t ) s Weenino G 4 sotie farl 3 2 avor ne 1 ¥ e | hou oo "servesd ai the ineu the \\ eeping (_)'ll"], the Domestic (,'ml and e Why s it that they ave usually ) sider in 4 substantial dinner the Girl Who 1s Just Near You. ( 2% | Savories. . 1§eumd of Two Articles, || Savories come toward the close of a folll! g the women from whom o YOURg man ~|x..::j'|]‘.|:.;\lu.:;::l_,;:a;:;v | dian angel to deliver him is the Hinting Girl. She i dinner. They follow the dessert, but come before the fruit and ceffee in holds up every man she meets with a pair of innocaat-looking blue eyes that § | England. There the courses named bid him stand and deliver just as effectually and efficiently as if he were look- have a different in ing down the harrels of a couple of blue-nosed revolvers in the hands of a reaning. For ince. Usweets” is used instead of dessert. while what we call our fruit come ix called dessert. The savories e placed on the menu to help diges tien by stimulating the gast uices The dessert is not stimulating, but highway robber | You will find these cheerful workers, spn. where vou least expect them. { The very highest society is filled with girls of undisputed position, and un | questioned morais, who ruthlessly plunder every man they meet, and vou | will never encounter an i ¢ bandits of more 10 be feaved than th viduz something piquant is and o canapes. the parlor. Welsh rarebit, golden buck. erackers 1 tid cheese or something of the sort Did vou ever wonder why one girl receives so many morve presents than ve served. Both soups and savories { another, and why every man who passes lays some offering on her xhrine? | y have distinct significances and impor Take it from me. this is the result of science, and not mere chance. | tunce. thevefor in dinner menus. Observe glosely, and yvou will see, when you call, that she steers the i | conversation artfully around to the latést play. and before You know it you huve offered to take her to it i MENU FOR A DAY. B | Also. she has let you know that violets are her favorite flower, and the | H | dute of her birthday. Before Christmas she artiessly confides in you where i BREAKFA | there is the jeweled vanity. or the handpainted fan, that she has set her Oranges | heart upon, and she couldn't shout it at you any more plainly if she bawled weal. with Cream | it to vou through a megaphone that she expects vou to come across, and will mided | think vou a piker if you don't Hashed Brown Potatoes | Popovers. Coffee | Beware the Hinting Girl, son. She is the woman who is accessory before | the crime of half of the embezzlements of trusted clerks w | A LUNCH W i who if she zot her dese would stand in The prisoner’s d S e | Welsh Rarebit! Sanawich | of the poor, weak, trembling boy who has stolen to buy her jewels or to give Ish Rareb dwich 1 use. her a good time. et Altliough the miller's third: dsugh And she makes (he sort of wife whose husband rises up and sits down N Spi to a neverending chorus of “Gimme! Gimme! Gimme ter had no idea she would gain the ime: Gimn PPotato Soup. the summerhouse to dream about it against than sinning. Probably her morals are just as good as your ewn 18t Loin of Pork. Crgnberry for e Hitls time viile Bhe rested | son. but even so, such marriages rvarely turn out happily. For we have (o fac ice. She was wstonished o cee the richly | the naked fact that while a man may love a womin well enough to forget and | Escalloped Potatoes draped couch, the blazing fire in the | forgive her indiscretions. society. which is not in love with her, remembers Creamed Onions. Mashed Turnip. firaplace and the pretiy little table all | them all. And it reminds her husband that it recalls them | Blueberry Pie. Coffer set with tasty things to eat d the writing over the fireplic The man who marries 4 Woman With a Past is pretty much in the sane zzler to be hix cashier. le hopes | n the cash box—a situation which fix as the man who hires a reformed emba said, “Of comforts here partake e ! he will run straight. but he keeps an e thy speech beware POPOVE. Two ¢ »s milk, two cups tlour . 4 i T mx]y”;» e cups tlm" SOF Icomtoytn Sh partake, but of | uu..q‘ul make n..l-nmn..q ie felicit o i . et <ot aut Al S anahe dewara ihe supsatad] ) course. there are women who in thelr wild oats K} . it is b en the better it will be ui even while their hushands are dey nions, there rarely coimes a € in which they do not throw in their | ing their domestic cabbag for me. and « should alw s and mh‘)v.n_euranlfl.tj,mumun!_ ‘ and. levely evening wack, of white ! i careful of his speech.’ umily <y BAKED APPLE SAUCE. { wives’ teeth the Kind of farmers they have been D Pare and core apples and cut s anesa ¥ for iilie taller's vonne i catnich with i thi. in the back. . inquarte Allow: one ‘GupAl | eut Hangiten Inted Sith » Do ot | The truth is that it takes a big man and woman to defy the conventions 2 in thel o utie ey - fss @ O cup water t foe. SmHRRENRONGOHIAT: (orher ekl | e R L el oy eE L g D e oL e | - - — R — ¥ e e || Woman must Keep their skirts clear nd farge it i . fo = 3 deep dish. Apple sauce hales nan must keep their skirts clean. By ane is @ good rule, son. for | TecatEes Tisa Sucis tha Rea (Copyrikht. 1926, 1 it means the purity of race. the integrity of society. and a lot of other things T ST Wed. for the Jonz cooking in %nm keep this old world zoing | lIO IE NOTLS oven develops a natural o ~y ! | | sweetness of the apple. Cover IODE MINIATURES | | "hen there's the Weeping Girl. Whenever you meet with a gentle, sweet, | ¢ Tt ol and ook ont audl one | sott. babyish-looking littie girl, with a chin that tremiles, and Lig eves that | BN SO DV DR Cu hal 1\4.‘1'4[1] If the: l:-.u.}\”!t‘m e L overnow with tears at the B o G a0 ban oy ik duciEe) BY JENNE WREN. L R the steam will cause them to Bobbed hair has cer ¢ | nose zetting red. fiv, son. fiy. She will fasten herself upon vou. and when you | Rosalind Nash foolishly gives up | prejudiced in he ¢ Dunst Andis mushy will be the order of things. Can vou - try 10 make a getaway she will clifis to vou and weep | llere ix an interesting and original| ler job as stenographer, although | His face was in A ey the result, but moderate cooking | | ¢all when mademoiselle oniy arranged | Virentment of a bav window. It was| Madeline Browning, with whom she |way. and he w aced as they are I hole in a de ft uncurtained. for greater en 7 k aged amner ious. Cldere fitvp. Lt othe {ix such a good thing. You will stop 1o wipe her eye sver with | ment of the view, and the drapes are| suade her against it. Jack Ar place of this kind, isn't it?” he asked Genenl Akt caseritn S En el wpples cook in the dish without You except the lon; My vears of rainy matvimony when v will have to | hung against the walls o° the room | strong, a friend of Kose. asks her |after a momer i e hine haltrint. Tl Sicine | deal with a wife who can’t be reasoned with. or cajoled. or coerced into « itself. The straight, narrow valance,| fo marry him. but she refuses. She Rosalind looked he s e, Tl domo Qg niak enpls nything she doesn't want to do. beciuse be so afraid of starting is determined to sce life and marry | seeing no particular x Iodsefpeoment iplice Mihey o ol o | another treshet of teass s money, @il vho lakes o job at the |should deny i, answered i the a \ve equally common 3 might zo further and do worse than marry the Domestic ( w while asks to meet her “One has only to look at you - ner is to prepure the stomi nER NS e o one Snint hot zone, it is a_comfortabie thing to have to fall back upon CHAPTER XV. rolled, you haven't been hy t ! ilk, onion to taste, salt and SH11 one hust confens - - ) want to do with your e tabile ey Too e heattier aidhe Iolilc, somion _ € one niust confess. that the Do is apt to have only a z 2 ith = Sl ciut e i e aule rrn SDDeT. one Ablesnadn bubies | bread-and-butter conversation, of which a Bt e o ol Rosalind Decides. n that moment Rosalind fc s course should be a thin sort - a co P Onion 10 Snilk o EeU davor vour stomach is developed 1y walk wearily when the | 1 ' Rosalind as she stood Hot youth rushed io the <omme, bou or something f the L abotetoes. o udd | Domestic Girl begins to iny nio two that she cooks - efore Mr. Rogers t i Lo b 5 . 4 wh = ter, salt and pepp in i for yvou under a cshaded 1 2 s v ivid way, she told him what i et e a b gt . N rea o serve ke N = ) | » wanted. And 1 the while he sa oup must be an essential element i | common crackers. halve them . Lastl ha for s 1 it land listened. puttin e TN itter and_ brown in oven. or ol 5 ; . once in’a while, Lut for the most res chowders. cream 1 cut bread into small cubs and paosvEa RS : sl 0w ! mus Ecl ¥ing no e e | ] femainiovey th an of propinquity which unites them to ludies they couldn't othersise have scen : o e 1 d at nctions for soups—one 1 to warn 5 through a telescope A o o petane 1y get wit ! ! Somehow our very nearness o the people with whom e thrown L Ry onee 0 20t hav von't want it and her tresses awere never iouched | every day keeps us from getting w perspective on their faults i sabilities (e ai = detiLtter o o od rushed 1o Rosalind’s face = o le(.m she stepped out of i { and habit deceives us into thinking that they are nore necesar 1o us th \ 1 ki Ik ]’ & Those \\m;]wl\ lAL"‘lZ' s she never to - UL NOW —Wherever i micror proinipis | they are. And so we drift into the mismated mar s that keep the divol Buvewelliy he selq Suulinsanulp G fibesc WhE 18sC{d [ W. BURGESS pocket or purse to tease her hair into the words. she nd herself follow- sorry I've bored you. 1 was so inter a sleek., smootii coiffure. However herefore. if you perceive that Mamie. whom you thought vulgar at { g X S ECr Ot DHONIDE Sstus e CORSHAR T SaiErh el many @ comb is suspended on i ribi 1 | no longer gets on your nerves: if you vbserve that Sadie. who hored yo H an On the contrary,” he returned, Silly Quariel. his great claws, and all the aboupthie neck, redenibling a.long. at 1 first met her. is beginning to interest you with her chatter about w The cak ts were ove I'm very much interested myseif B e e locket when not in use. he wetual | aid” and I said,” and you discover that yvou have quit being shooked were Hngtcine o I've enjoved hearing vou g - that, wil e R e omb is cleverly concealed inside and | by Carrie’s gum-chewing and Al 8 grammar. then, son. pack your trunk { L0 its embrdidered notif, ‘seems ex T lestra. was playir e Sou LIE S our h S s 3 can he calied into service at a mo- | and leave while the is good. Otherwise, the Girl Next 1o You will actly the right finish d a togers led R me.” Rosalind returned _ Hov v’h'- Snow "'w It quite Lid ments not MARGETTE vou sure. ‘ > E or scheme of U 1o« the ta man | _ in he smiled exactly. 1 tie two fizhters. Deter Rabbii was o | B o At Ehe e She iy a e . ou wiy IS unique. The walls are rose to his feet. Rosalind looked into | don't think it would do any good way by thum ociedfhal lie Sinoal Gl of thet W know vou are and a million warnings could not save vou from youn Almost orange. Some Of t a swarthy face. the same face shel -I'd like to ask vou a dues n the old log « ow log 1 deep snow. He sa 7 M Seliiay 3 has been painted u vivid blue green.| had seen durin, e dance just a|She said a little breathlessly 'h e oe s U Stadght and his eves looked as it hat Tomorrow Means to You (Copyright. 1826.) DOROTHE DI and the wing chair shown has a cover | short 1 Age. The. eves, ‘under | did yo3 ask to meet me mself at all ere trying to pop right out ¢ S of Llack-grounded linen patterned in aeavy brows, were dark, the jaw heavy | He was silent a moment. o warn Jump »”‘} 1 ‘]”“;" e BY MARY BLAKE. i ” brilliant ovange. bluc green and blue but strong. It wasn't a e that evenly ! busin of his ind he could hear . P country by anof Communication | As a foil for all this delightful color | she liked, but the man’s manner was | You'd be interesting to talk RO Hoot's bill, ‘Tiee or o : Bistory of Dour PAME |teiveen Trance and Fgiand was |the doupen sre DA velrotesn. with | soamasty Seforeniil T howed o hinking. He didn't | Reddy velped. Peter knew then that Capricorn. i 5 . rather close |uny su ty relieved by | Mr. Rogers made the introductior are you? nger was o Looty had reached Reddy with bill o o e e The name of Nevil, or Neville, was, | an or blue-green v and 3 moment Tater Rosaling toundl] - Poes thati matter Of course, it Y ot Sl claw |'n:» { hetary aspects of tomorrow | BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. of course, French in its real zin. | ance. herself alone w hil . matters. I think it only fair that you I REdy ho Ce Ly poste oniVICH L0 hage i cto | P z the name siven to : — - ) o s Rt et My name is Allen Norris.” he said . i 1 had beg Reddy had let g0 ccop hetei ; a town in kind. He asked Rosalind what she he sai F Aty e it oh.oh: dioha llr"st.u D o ilar thefeasly part of the| VARIATION—Nevit, "f\"‘"'“'- Poitou Neuve Ville” was the le S 1 S GHIa e (olie n e A .:‘x“"‘-"fl tely, “and I'm a lawyer. [ rose Hooty. Reddy sprang up try e & -mx-"“;‘ 2ble, there are | RAGIAL _GHIEAN — Auglo-Bermas | French of 1t. There is uo telling, fn Apple Snowballs. that she was not hungry, he dis-|Came here tonight because I was w again. But he mnis Ll e P e R the individual case. whether it#was| Wring out small squares of white patched the waiter for sandwiches and | bored. and then I saw vou dance a in the snow looking up ol s ening he 1190 —A locality. . brought into England as a family |cloth from hot water and lay over a { thought I'd like to talk to you. There's Mooty perched in a Aot l"_‘,)‘,‘ L I':'. “0{ One of the premier (hings about \name (n the Norman 1 of ‘““de |small bowl. Spread freshly boiled must eat_something.” be said | 9he more“thing 1'd like to say to you veach. Red ten o (ht 0 et | tamily names is the masner in Wwhich | Ncuville™) at the time of William the |one-third inch thick over the cloth, | with a smile. “Surely have enp: | Eouire 10eatistic, romante, and youlr appeured no o I ey | many of them develop in one country. | Conqueror. or later. In some ¢ fill the center with a cored apple, and | per after working through that stren. | EViNg 1o come up against xealisn N < it Tooty's w 1ad lost one frcumstances it is advisable not | And_under the influence of one lan- | it known to trace back to indf. | fill the center of the apple with rice uous dance act.” .l won't be pleasant. Life isn% like tI big feather and.some of the others | (o atiempt anything new or original, | SUag€. from place names in of viduals who did cross to Kngland |and a f butter. Tie the cloth| “Yes. 1 generally have something MOVies. you know, and some day yvou e e S i 2 o mtempGanvihing inew or orlEIALI (ot ienvang Tangunges with the conqueror round and steam for twenty minutes. after 1 get home,” Rosalind told him. | find that out for vourself but that wing wouldn't be as good | nature. und, if it B ivouded. mot| Yet upon second thouxht it is But in any event, once in England, | Serve hot with pudd; e made by | Her self-assurance was returning. | 190} the Tother o a lohg Gile.cEat | o trave] succeeding centuries and the ten. | creaming one-half a cupful of butter | After all. what had she to. f The | the dav's ordi-| S0 strange. when you consider ¢ appear to he aware of nary duties with circumspection and | state of affairs which existed in Eu. (encies of the English speech which |#nd one cupful of sugar. Add flavor-jman was ve » busy quarrel- | conscientiousness rope in the latter part of the middle | developed from the mixture of Nor. |ing: Just before serving, add three erate. Ther: juries. Girls born tomorrow wi man-French and Anglo-Saxon changed | tablespoonfuls of boiling water and|should behave like a courteous, very consid- | (Continued in tomorrow's Sia was no reason why s elf-concious | did ose (o were ( to think of their i be, during ages. “What right had you to try to steal | infaney, not as healtoy and Str a [Feudal qunits. widle piillisexistent | tintoiNevilissand Nevil the mrefixeay| 20 e smtceiover theibeaten whice]ischtalgtal.f Besties now chiac ans tud {0 (zechotagakia las asslgned itrads v dinner?” demanded Reddy their parents emay desire, but their|and sirong. were being subordinated | “de” being dropped in the course of |Of 0N €58 met him she felt that she had been | commissioners to India t wasn't 3 time. you h dinner: it was ine, | recuperative powers will enable them let me alone | would | to attain a boisterously healthy girl-| of kings. The migratory invasions (Copyrizht. 1926 é 2 it retorted Hooty hood. - They promise, temperamen-|of Western Europe were over, popu 5 > S “It wasn't yours, 1 per tally. to be very truthful. loval and!jations were settling down, peaceful - i /’u tong hefore you did, and e cutspoken and will succeed in hoys'|arts and the middle classes were Railroad on Ice. = declared Reddy. pastimes und sports and scoff at those | riging, commerce was increasing,| Duving the RussoJapanese war a : ) national authority in the persons e 1 Hiaor hen why didi't you catch him? nebally provided for theii own #ex. | mevchants wene travelfug from one | full sized broslimuee - ou : e | e i | s 4 om Il sized broad-gauge railway w WHAT RIGHT 11AD jeered Hoot You know as well as They will he endowed with plenty of | country to another. often settling |Luilt across Lake Batkal in easte STEAL MY DINNER™ DE 1 do that vou didn't have a chance in | comimon sensc Hovs born tomorrow | down in other lands. and skilled | Siberia. on the Ice for a distance of 2l the world 1o cateh that long-legged @ will be normally healthy, and any a oriers being sought fro ore! than 30 o DDY ~ Woicer. Te was pinving mih vou. | ments iv which fhly ey hpsubteet [P0 LSS QUG ToNHIE Feam Pee seR B Do Hiiop That i« what he was doing, plaving Will be of a minor variecy. They will | ' DU L ! e with you. You were just floundering be beautiful at times, evasive, and | e was Jucky for s | ahe - snow and he was having more impulsive than throng-minded. | “I w \ e " | = »“‘ ! 1 tell you, he was If tomorrow is your birthday youj | = 1oot FERL.C B W QULY | o adn't heen warned?” are rather disposed to be exacting and T ! y Hooty b, but turned (o domineering and. if vou do not get o , o | stare over at Peter Rubbit. He had | Your own way. prone-to lTose yvour ¢ air. Like a fash b and [ G5 emembered Peter, Peter didn-t | temper and make a foolish exhibition | Fuckmsahl andasii famps dodged (i o second. He dived into that of ancer. Your violent outbursts, as SHnRINE SRR e T v log before Hooty could move. | Sudden as they are unjustified, have | | g W i feo <nn thia e B dodie within Hooty and Reddy took up that | 0ften caused amazement and given N dged. and this time he dod within wrrel again. They called h f 1o others, especially those who | Ny e 2 mping distancs of Redds Like s and each stuck to it that | Lhink well of you This condition is | — | red flash ““;f‘}‘ sprang FHadaione 1 robbed of a dinner by the & MOst unfortunate one, as vou set| | cen ho snow he cortainly would Ruve | other. And all the time the cause of | £reat store on the opinions of others,| susnildumpa R BCE S O\ R heir silly quarrel. Jumper the Hare, nd, but for your “brainstorms.” in-| | ered and once more Jumper dodze was sitting snugly aidden under some | Variably make a good impressio | % Now Hooty the Greai Hormed O8I | hemlock boughs, thankrul for his ex- | You have strong ambition. but. left +d wheeled I,W| turned and struck se and chuckling as he listened (o | (0 vourself, seem to lack the perse 1 czain Just as Jumper dodged the tind |GG quarrel over him serance to march on steadily and per | me and Reddy Fos sprang wough sistently to vour goal. You need a i 11006y 80 close that wne win brushed - spur, in the form of a companion, who - Sor Servse e Saalxd Reddy’s nose. Instanily Reddy snapped My Neighbor Says: . will enter your plans with enthusiasm up Sauce TR M:‘]‘”hmlr?: !.'[x‘.:\..” .1-»'(::;\‘ Tine. Palivacy ospalisd BN ;{mm ate You to consistent effort and | wing. He merely had a mouthtul of | | ing furniture should always be | | domestic life will be happy, and vour he big, Stiff feathers. Instantl burned after they have been hopes will he realized. If you have a | ooty began beating him with that used, or they mlai\' be put a\;‘,n.\' different sort of mate the reverse is| | L ke 5 i iher great wing, and those blows | | in a tin can, with a cover, but likely to happen. | | oesn” ood! irt. All the time Hooty was striking the receptacle must be kent out Well known persons born on that | . 1 D i t that taste g = These words : Reddy with his hooked bill and with of doors. It left around they dateare James . Angell educator | | are music to every housewife. They make may ignite spontaneously. and author; Williim Henry Rishop. | i T ot vare s sl b Gy ey Blenop. Basty (Cocoa and Delicious (Phocolate (Cake her proud and happy. for bathing, sofien i with | Leuise Imogen Guines, author and g And the whole family will tell you how good borax. poet: Mary E. Wilkins. author: Adolph | Py When piecing fur be sure to | | Zukor. motion picture producer. | BAKER,S | Campbell’s Tomato Soup is! It’s made from ' fit it so it all runs in the same . . : I send out poems direction. In thick fur, where | | our own exclusive recipe. So this wonderful the direction is not easily seen, 3 =5 . | an j i am; ’ every mail brush or rub it and see in which Lessons in English | i ' flavor can be enjoyed only in C . phells . 2 . But back they come — direction the hairs lie. Cut fur | Oa and OCO te i All the goodness from glowing red-ripe : from the skin side with a knife. S : : | - = they never fail . and never with scissors. g Y. Lo GORDON: | tomatoes, strained to a delicious puree and The best way to clean win- | | | | - = The postman TIngs my)| dows 18 {o use very hot water | . Words often misused: Don't xa_\] : f hich | blendefi with gOIqm butter and tempting Bl eany o 6 hicn Tive been added few | | e ‘came near ‘Vinning.” %oy he Delightful foods and beverages of hig | seasoning. Serve it often—and start today! . : drops of kerosens. With tms | |almost won. = Well, that is wash alpane at a time, then | Often mispronounced: Metric. Pro. ua.h ure and hea]thful. | 5 polish with a soft, clean cloth. | |nounce first syllable as “‘mes | q ty, p | 12 cents a can Clean pictures and mirrors in '\nm;fi" misspelled: Infallible. Note | : the same way. he 111 5 Bread will not dry quickly it | | Aberration, halluci _WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. mixed with rice water instead | | delirium, dementia, ESTABLISHED 1780 - | of milk or water. | | Olive oil and salt will remove S a \{:rld lhl“e? DORCHESTER, MASS. | white spots from furniture. < s yours. us in- s i Try cutting hot brown brea | | crease our vocabulary by mastering . -8 (T PONTREAL with a string. It is much easier one word eacl v. Today's word— - . e e e ray tham with a | | Felicitate; to congratulate. ~“She was Booklet of Choice Recipes sent.free. Knife. felicitated on the success of her ef- forts,

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