Evening Star Newspaper, January 21, 1926, Page 43

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WOMA N Effect of the New Ensembles BY MARY M TARSHAL LSS = b o TR | The ensemble and its very spreading the never stopped merits ] By had | color idea had its obvious faults, idea women who to consider the [BLE THAT SHOWS NOT TOO OBVIOUS ARRANGEMEN THERE IS A TWO-PIECE BEIGE CREPE DE CHIN A MARRON-COLORED FLA UNLINED COAT WITH CLIPPED WOOL COLLAR AND CUFFS. THE TAM IS OF BRIGHT GRE VELVET £cheme of what they from wearing colors swore at or killed each other into con- sidering the possibilities of color harmonies in an entirel* new way e very fact that the idea of the en- semble caused as much comment as it did showed there were a lot of wom en in the world who had been guite lax in this matter of considering the zen eral effect of their costumes. They worried over details. staked everything + hat, a frock. a coat. and never pped to consider how the thinzs they wore looked tozether wore chanzed and tones that ODD FACTS ABOUT YOURSELF BY VALE S. NATHA Department n? Peyclo'ogy Learning Via the Eye. When vor nd was putty zan life vour 1 Slate. a impression hildren zo throuzh life handi e fact that they have cen shown how to study in zreatest results are taree kinds of people in ear-minded | There the world—eve-minded, 1 motor-minded t us take the eve-minded person He i< an individual who learns through the cve. There are some artists who are much eve-minded that when they do portrait work they have the subject sit for an hour and they study him closely. After he has left the ar- tist hegins to paint from memory. This is possible hecause the person | can carry over the image just as if the | ect were standing before him Some musicians can memorize an en tire musical selection by remembering h note stands on the written 1o zet the 1s it An actor recently told 4 psychologist that when he memorized a play he was inctly eve-minded that later when acting his part. he could actually gee each paze and mentally turn each finizhed " as he vour al paze are exe-minded only e Aand Your Baby and Mine BY MIRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Self-Confidence. self.confidenc husy all such quality working we nd vet mnst of us are lonz snuffin out any in the child. If w are shut him off suddenly when he is in the mi airing his pet schemes. If he starts to do a piece of work and doesn’t accomplish it as quickly or as deftly we ourselves eonld do it snatch it out of his nds and Oh. you are so stupid let me do that.” If he starts to talk finish his remarks for irks us to have him #ay what we know And then after ye treatment when he zrows into the Aifdent dolescent period and is awkward, gruff and backard we sigh and bhewail the t that he would he all right if he only had a little self confidence day st oo we it n company him. because take so long he wants < of this sort of 20 too far in encouragzing will be a cock thinks whatever cater importance One may a rhild. and the result aure little parrot wh he has to say is of than what any one else can ntter. Of this caliber the spoiled brand of “anly’ child: but children can stand a Jot of pparent spoilinz and still be. come ind halanced. What they can't beinz constantly frost hitten Whenever finish the workinz upon stahle stand i has desire to child s laboriously stop to remember that he is going to learn @ lot just by com pleting a task bezun. Not only is he getting the practice in doing the task jtself, but he is zoing to have the glow of s.aisfaction that comes when a task is finished. Thwart this satisfaction #nd vou develop a child who constant lv bezins and never ends what he be Zins. Let him finish his sentence plete his thouzht. It makes herent speech and adds to respect And ehild's one the task a and com- for his most of all it builds up the self-confidence. A person im- | hued with confidence in himself and | his abilities is capable of inspiring that confidence in others, and such persons are the successful ones every- whers . Currant Jelly Sauce. :jelt two tablespoonfuls of currant eily in a double boiler. add two table- | #poonfuls of grated orange rind, two ablespoorfuls of grated lemon rind. one tatespoonful of horseradish, three {ablespoonfuls of lemon juice, one-half 2 cupful of orange juice and one cup- ful of powdered sugar. Reat for 1 minute. Serve at once with cold or | hot chicken. turkev. duck or roast' mutten. Iniversity ot Pennsy | two. Then came the edict from fashion that every part and detail of one's costume should be considered not sep- arately but as part of the whole en- semble. That was three or four years ago and women seized upon the idea as if it were entirely new and had not always heen a principle in the dressing of a very large number of well-dressed women. But they ¢ too far. in violet, pink. green or some other You met these women every where—at suburban card parties, at country sociables. drinking tea at smart hotels, lunching at your club. There was something naive in the wa their clothes matched. Now it has become apparent that among a number of very well-dressed women this idea of the ensemble it has been so popularly interpreted has become a trifle passee. These women take as much care as ever to see that the details of their costumes harmonize and go well together, but they work out this harmony with con siderable astuteness. There are con trasts that are more harmonious than matching fabrics The costume shown in the sketch zives an idea of this new sort of en- semble. There is a two-piece frock ot beige crepe de chine worn with a mar- roon-colored flannel unlined coat, with clipped wool collar and cu A note of striking contrast but one in perfect taste is also struck by the velvet tam. which i bright zreen (Copyright. 1924.1 ied this simple idex My Neighbor Says: case of frost hite warm air, warm water or fire should be permitted near the parts affected until the natural temperature ix nearly restored Rub gent the affected part with snow in a cold room. and make applications of Ice water. Nothing depresses and ries a sick person more than an untidy sickroom. He may not know the cause of the depres. sion, but it is a fact, neverthe less. Keep sickroom clean well aired and pleasant. prepare your patient’s food carefully and the sick m will always 1 a pleasant place Beeswax polish is splendid for linoleum. Scrape two ounces of heeswax and one ounce of vel- low soap into a porcelain-lined kettle and cover with turpen- tine. Keep the kettle at the side of the fire till the contents are dissolved. Stir with a stick. Save all the paper bags in which bread and dry groceries are delivered and use them as gloves to slip on if you have to poke the fire or put on more coal when making cakes or pastry. In a no Women became symphonies | i bodies | | be When plaster is loose or brok- | | en. a piece of white cotton cloth | | pasted over the place hefore pa- | | pering will make the wall as | | solid as hefore. | {those of exce | NSON, B. Se.. M. A i | nine satisfactory way to learn the eve, and it therefore velop this particular Eve-mindedness mav —the concrete and the verbal 1vpe some one should say the word “housc what do vou see? Do vou see a red brick building or do vou sec the let rs written h-o-u-s-e? 1f xou see the | rouse” jtself, i. ., the buildinz. you have concrete vision. while if you see the word instead vou have verhal vi- sion. Manv people think they are eve-minded when they are not. Here is a method to make 4 sure test: Draw a 4-inch squarc, divide it into 16 little blocks and then put a letter in each little square. Look at the squares for Then close your reproduce from memory the letters ax they appear frontward. backward, di agonally or in any other scheme in’the figure? If you can do this vou are truly eve-minded. While the shape of not necessarily prove clusivaly. nevertheless stronzly eve-minded well-formed the huck of the memory through de 1y £ two kinds 1t is pays 1 vstem of = he 4 minute or ves. Can you the head does anything con people who are usually have a development evident in the head ic in this Drain that the =eat of i supposed tn be lo. of It ezion visual Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN | their | the dollar. {and fast i tain {in | eream and fruit i what | least | may | can | what | nt | zrapefruit or oran THE EVENING FOOD AND HEALTH BY WINIFRED STUART GIBBS. Food Speclutist. In the daye of early settlements our ancestors did not, one fancies. pay very much attention to the season- able character of what they ate. Food was food, something to build firm and strong. repair the wastes of taxirg pioneer life, and keep up a supply of energy or driving power at one and the same time As luxuries multiplied with the de- velopment of more complicated condi tions, however, it me to be a sign of enviable prosperity to serve straw berries in January or Winter fruits in mmer. Luckily. common sense pre valls today, considerable extent. that we realize that the appetite appeal. the quality of the foodstuffs and so on are zreater when the va rious products are caten at the proper season. But have this vet as is we an- re- not when not said all other aspect of the question lating to seasonable food that covered in such a summary. Custom produced habit at certain sea have said There is we has 4 meneral ons, simply because of their supposed appropriateness for those seasons. While to 4 certain ex tent this is &l to the good, a brief in quiry into the facts may help the housekeeper to add considerably to the food value of her dietary, as well as to its palatableness Among the foods that first occur to one as apt illustrations of these points | are salads. citrus fruits. fruit drinks, ice creams. frozen puddings and ices. Practically all of these foods have so definite an appeal 1o the Summer appetite, thev fit in well to the Summer scheme of living. that their value as Winter foods is often looked upon an incidental. Fruits and ices are is true. included in the cata logue of choice Winter desserts, but they are usually designated as supple mentary delicacies. The wise house keeper will revise this notion some what, so that she will come to realize more fully the Winter health value of wods that are popularly supposed to be at their best on the Summer menu Salads first. Selected with due re ard other dishes on the menu salads will contribute something hard 1y possible to any other of foods. Others may. it is true, con tain a share of the minerals and vita mins so prominent in salads, but none cavries perhaps that combination of peals that distinguishes artistically made salac it o Citrus fruits are for Winter hreakfast Nmit their serving to it is true but let us the breakfast Se. The wholesome acids, so helpful in reducing the acid ity of the blood present in rheumatic conditions. and the mineral salts, vi tally necessary for strong bones and an efficient body, should ideally make their appearance at more than one meal. Moreover. these elements mas called pre-eminently repair fouds bodily repair Just as impor in cold weather as in hor. We accustomed 10 thinking that we must have more <y food in Win ter than during the dox davs, but we 1re apt to forzet that the rava cold in the system are just as deep as heat and tant Practically he the applied same line of to th heverizes <hinz 10 the the close of a meal may he the temperature in tonic of the amconstitutes one o refreshments of \Wir <honld not. perhay this “tatement to physiolozical facts. 1 stimulation. each inherent in zood portion of their traced 1o their the well nse of ice in Winter normal per ne matter and may lees are refr: <on at he f the diet atempt the minimum freshment = f these zen er One auality a e appetite efully is @ ~ffects the action on and the zeneral that follow heir Bliened bical ense a Get the Facts BY FLORENCE DAVIES. | nearly a hundred years Ameri- collezes have been striving to the American woman. But in reality, have they done for For serve her? They have offered her the education devised for men. If the coat did not the client, they tried to pull or push. stretch or squeeze the client into the coat made for another Is u man reation just what women want women have zained polit qual ity, perhap + et ter fit tional firm + stop and met That is aps cduca willinz cont < would he nre the enston ez three-vear vhit Smith womian ond her present-d iy problem commendable this <vrely Tta Just compl for find rial se1 for Today lezt for ubject they mate like hoi brief 4 re themeelves investi. them this the probl is more centiment. A few women frer their marriaze. be » lave their work. But in he crux of the matter i he In order to live hushand the 1 iew. But up e wonld tical task m of woman than 4 matter linz to ha and of johs cause they d most cases 11 up to 4 cer nd wife de k of earning the standard share Lincome | ean 1 would housework who works live in a work.” This she helieves to he rather done outside hetier work sAys the way md hire the the woman home. “We it we botl true. But in | many cases she is mistaken Now. if the colleze investizators will | take that problem into the laboratory and solve it they will be doinz ankind an invaluable service, How much wom does 4 woman ! earn outzide the home hefore <he will 1 knew purty well whether Genesis was the one the whale swallowed or the one that killed folks with a jawhone.” (Copyrizht. 1926 1 “Puzzlv'cles" Puzzle-Limerich s | my Sunday There was a poor chap in —1 Who used to run hither and And trom thence back to I'ill no one knew 4 The poor fellow really had —3 Island in the Indian Ocean Poetic form of “there. The point indicated At what place Betaken himself. schaol lesson | hreak but 1 couldn't remember | cash which will make the extra hard | ing even. or show halance in <hip worth while? That is the question One woman who h; tried the ex periment of workinz outside the home nd paying a housekeeper says that a d servant will consume the price of her wages in extra food. waste, care. less orderinz. extra heat. light, etc Another puts the fizures in round numbers and savs that she must earn $30 4 week before she can pay maid’s wages. the extra cost of house- Keeping and make up for what she would have saved in sewing and other ways by staving at home But this is all guesswork. is the best financial proposition for a woman who would solve the budget problem? Shall she do it by decreas- the outgo or by increasing the in ! come? —""Thare is no sense to it" is | what you will probably say when you have completed this limerick by plac ing the right words, indicated by the numbers, i the corresponding spaces. But it's a good limerick, nevertheless and notwithstanding. The answer and another “Puzzlick” will appear tomor- row.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” A fisherman, proud as could be, Brought home some nice fish from the | “eu. “They are smelt. dear.” s he turned to his brid ‘So my nostrils inform me!" he cried aid she. Parking With Peggy “The only kind of a love nest that interests a girl nowadays is the house that ‘jack’ built.” = Many answers his problem, hut ween based on have been made to most of them have guesswork. their | of servinz certain foods chieflv | combination | standard | not | nourishinz | pice teday is 100 hard | have to( the | Which | STAR. D: THURSDAY. JANUARY 21. 1926, EEATURES: i ofn all, white. cont farhiened i urool haa, \’Jflnfi"n wrover. ik~ Ny now M-Namght Syndicate. Ine ] te yarr Jlouwrens. ~«yv : P, full aleeven,. es Lo of w cnt‘}ufim, nufalle !M, dancin Ailiren and embroideny ’flo\‘j L Ry ribbon | | g The Bureau Drawers. Toddlers have an overpower osity. They are out 15 o be seen. the more A bureau drawer is a treasure Iiverything in it will come floor and be thor zhly That niakes thinz< hard for housekeeper It would not explorer ceuse 1 set limits or ) . tion. There that the shaken the is 0 ers are Doses of vestization {eager discov woa stack of one of which for a There is veu in the hewine unin tin 1 hin th an folded Tinen or 1o like zinzham iy 1af i< in the dr one here full of strinzs of discards hill beads, feather furniture zenerally sense traininz and to his ewn ound 1 The best wan | of 2 bureau drawer 1« little cabinet of his own n wh him A dran odds buttons folders inz hazs fe and tie tor Dlorer is to let him It shou curi that merrier trove the i the +ir n “t cot hand fine field limits the ex to protect the seerets hive th Int DUl eas odd It is hest the ometh from him he wi Keep the e the 1is ¢ ol about hir how to hout les held o neonle he h I n it 5w thinzs his he t he cannot pull dy inet it there presence must key ar o the t over 11l the hidden w The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle 2 | Across. | 1. Boasted. . South American plains An antiseptic Mountain nymphs. Decimeter. Before. | 19. Own (Scotch) i mall point | atriotic organization (abb A single time. . ‘Auditory organ. Paradise. S. River in Bohemiia. 1 Not wet ‘own in Hol Domestic pe _ One side of @ coin. . Plunge. . Mine rock . An article of fcod (plural). . Meshwork. Moving wagon. Negative prefix. . Indefinite article. Yore. Hawaiian hird. . Carrier. Complete. Gets up. List of names. Pown. 1. Spanish hero. | 2. Inhabitants of part of Italy. | 3. A hypothetical force. 4. Victor. Printer’s measure. 6. Conveyed by deed. 7. Verse. : 8. French unit of square measure. . Repaired. 10. Father. 11. Worshiper. 12. Point of the compass. 17. Utter a loud noise, 20. Frozen water, Whirlwind off the Faroe Islands. ’3. Confusion. >3] Lubricated '7. Pointed nhjec A meal Hail® te Measuring devices, Spreads over. Asfatic sea. Vehicle attached to a lecomotive. . Doctrines, . In time past. Pay Ara Over. an garm no attention to. nent. Three-toed sloth. Engineering Negative Pronoun. degree LITTLE BENNY RY LEE PAPE Pop was smoking < his_pipe with ixpression. and ] ed not sailers Hornpipe r smoking. is it pop it= Cerly Maple. the tobacco for sattistied op. that wer = puffs ropipe Name e me D se Simkir pop sed shor We! Ident t man derby did 14 nd the ined of my his Yes pine 15 the her lite it kethook. it & he " nd hees Mame losed his eves and ut through his nose i <ed. Well G, pop, why dont vou je Saflers Hornpipe. and if vow-de it at leest vou can say nded enuff to try it wat is all this deep stuff em why all the propaganda in fave of Sailers Hornpipe, come on. out with pop sed Well Yee coped up in tin © foil. 1 4 mess of tin foil my bet me. he wo comfort <aving tin gods, tor teh the tew Lins of r pipe. woe is me, for hive children. pop sed. And t one hand over his eves and sta shake his shou he thawt No 1w Ah. 1 h rs up and down wax erving. and 1 p. T jest w 83l har! rejoiceth Apple Delight. hread leen nar nhle ver il o N deep howls with ma e - 20% Women’s Suits Plain, Fur-Trimmed and Ensemble Cleaned or Dyed This Week Only FOOTER’S Cleaners and Dyers 1332 G St. N.W. Main 2343 Delicious at Any Meal Cod Fish Cakes PPETIZING break- fast, luncheon or supper ready in a jiffy. Gorton’s famous “No Bones” Cod Fish mixed with boiled potato— nothing to do but fry. vou wis THIN ICLE : Rosalind Nash gives up her stenographer to toke 2 posKion cnharer Madeline Browniny i) Ve whares @ apariment doss prove. mor ‘does Jack Arn iy o mary Rose, s Torothy Rienarin® ho stax onee in 1he o it “foe and who Kos arried men " ane. Nicky Hiake, licex her bt peals io Bosanind. and o attraci hiy ap B ix e tor CHAPTER XXVIII Drifting, That at sang her Joined the Richardses table in the restaurant ight the Tival Alvin n Later Alvin and songs to she | and 1 over | while she was danc that she saw Allen Norris not seen him since that nizh remembered ment the things he Like Madeline and J ad her about Strang had ta lecture her She remen his looks, b by his had impressed was ne he had reckoned with the had « wa m slight She hac she come resent he had warn he, a perfect handsorr of ¥ He =ht zo0d The las neing I have e1: tonizht T hope hr I'd The leading like 1o make N The Faults of my | friends [l SR T el i condone Are 'Llways the ones Which resemble my own. ] 3 S /*”) BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR Blake's part vith Dor Dorot I don't’ understand mean.” Rosalind s:id quick I reminded £ e s still away, ye rning tonight he unhapp much as . Thatquick--and vour brass, " silver.gcld and nickelshine !l like new, with a lasting ‘ £3 luster. Buyacan == today at vour | grocer,hardware, S"(AR‘NE: druggst or Auto ' shop. “Z . w5 The Whole Wheat (;ereal \ Enemies Destroys her popularity. banished —casil has | [{ There's no excuse for usl i now. Yor an easy. pleasant way || been found to acquire a clear. soft 1| fine-textured, heantitul skin. Trac || tically” every” family in Raltimore to I| day uses this scientific way to skin | health and beauty. Thousands of |l women in Philaldelphia and Wash || ington call this a “Miricle Cream 1| so wonderful have results been from | using it. Doctors and beauty ex || perts by the score praise and recom mend it Over 80000 jars were used last year alone If you are troubled hy N Advertisement. any of one Which of These Four Skin Your Beauty? Here are four common skin troubles which seri- ously mar a woman's appearance and very often injure Yet now each one of these objection- 1 able skin conditions can, in almost every r, quickly and forever! case, be NOXZI TNONZEN FREE—\ Cream. dust wend wdress and 106 to rover Nddvess: Novzemn INUE. Baltimore. Ma e somple jar of Novsema mailine Chemical (o 0XZEMA “Feel It'‘Heal”

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