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WOMAN'S PAGE. -THE . EVENING Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Rosalind Nash stenographer 10 S radenie 2 ane “Rares an apire 3 “'H.a to » Rose. gires up her job as tike @ position in a Browning. with ent. does Arnieronp, Rosatin and Rosa fnd oo der o inarry money Lyin to piny d young 207 One named pays her atten e tact” thar Le Tring here teline o et ha<Been o vai ris sonds ner a see Wim for'a's the little French dinner she had worn during her Rosalind went out into the ning room. rose and black dec ations of the Club Tivoli had never comed so heavily ornate as they were might: the atmosphere, a combina Acco smok he ich food, had never seem ting: the whole room had ed g0 crowded Still in zown that ~ong act, corner admiration 1urne hispered com heads she Tonight noticed noth. ng: she looked neither to left nor ight, but continued on her way to- ard the small alcove Allen Norris usually sat He rose as she approached the table n wely held the chair Yor her. A oment later she had sunk into it d. with elbows propped on the table he forced ances et well feed out nees ¢ direction the turn 1d ne e the n her 1ents ent by. a smile as thei The single word was a Worms. Just hecause a child’s ¢ it coughs in the night. looks dark mnder the eves and bites its nails, e is no certainty of worms, ad- ertisements to the contr _ The ne sure indication worn: to fnd traces of in_the netimes h: still tches S ptoms at hav worms, worm s direc n dirty foc - fruit he very tack n the wther is infected and because of un leanly habits has infected the baby. \When a child has worms it is be. suse some such thi A ng ause he h eaten too el - and candy. When he 1d be medicines e system vegetubles and by nnot < the the child of them (0 be used Cod L liver oil is' given to children om early infancy as a _routine asure. 1t is u preventive of rickets T ritiohal dis sed, it is be ed, by a la n essential amins. Cod liv way be given liree times f day in very small doses. ur or five drops for the baby of o or three months, and this amount may be increased tv one-half teaspoon. ul three times a day as the child rows older. If the child is suffer- = from an active case of rickets he amount will start with five drops © day. which is increased by one op_each day until the child is tak- three teaspoonfuls daily, divided ) three doses. The oil may be given re or after a meal. It the baby given this oil early in life he will cldom rebel against it. Older chil- dren will. The ofl may be given pref- 1bly in some frult juice other than mge. It is a shame to spoil what < such a useful fruit by putting cod liver in it. Grapefruit is better. Orange Juice. Cod Orange nd is glven to young chil make up these lacks when re beipg fed on prepared and foods; or when the mother's milk has become deficient in mineral qualities. Dead foods are those in bich some vitamins have been killed heat. Orange juice fs laxative and 12y be used for this purpose alone. It 1y be started in teaspoonful amounts liluted with the same amount of bofled ater. The amount may be increased autiously as the baby grows older until he canstake the juice of half an range daily. It depends largely on how laxative is the effect. When You Go Again Use The RED+STAR+BUS 10 PHILADELPHIA WITH STOPS AT Baltimore and Wilmington Lavieg Wosdward and Lothrep’s Btars AskNir. Foster, 14th St..20ar Prana Ave.N.W., Capitel 8a.m. Every Dy 3p.m. FARE W Philad | Waskingten io Balimere Washington to Wilmi FAGIOL SAFETY COACHES INDIVIDUAL 3EATS CONVENIEAT COMFORT STOPS Weabward 8 Latbrr's sod ot Rod S ' Phons Mals 175 P _ | think that he could inthuence b has happened | treated by | sice is rich in minerals and | FOOD AND HEALTH BY WINIFRED STUART GIBBS, Food Specialist. Was there ever a family that did | not have its enjoyment increased or hindered according to the character | of its nelghbors? This is natural and | easy to understand. What we do not always understand is that there is a fundamental principle involved. a principle that ‘“works” in other re- lationships besides the human. A good fllustration is to be found in the relationships existing between the various foodstuffs that enter into | the composition of our evervday lishes. Not only ave proper combi nations conducive to attractive and appetizingness, but they also con- cribute to the actual nourishment as conveyed by the finished dish. tabiished custom is a falrly safe sulde in the beginning. Such custom has had its beginning in considera- tion for the esthetic, S0 the attractiv ness and popularity of such combina- tions may usually be counted upon. The upto-the-minute housewife, how- ever, desirez to go one step beyond mere attractiveness, visualize the nutriment by the attractive combinations. Why not begin with everyday meats and their standard accompani- ments, using these combinations as pegs on which to hang many bits of dietary information? Meat and potatoes.” The words have come to stand for the ABC of dinner planning, but in these pro. gressive days no one is content to use the primer indefinitely: we crave promotion to more advanced text hooks! Therefore, we offer the fol lowing list of foods that make “zood neighbors” from the dietary as well as from the appetite point of view and it | The list is adapted from the work of v that none of | 4 specialist who makema specfal study the men she had known smoked ci- | of meats and their place in the zars, not even Alvin. she watched | dietary. Allen Norrls the absurd idea flashed | Good neighbors for roast heef and | cross her mind that a cigar loc broiled steak are baked. boiled, seal- more solidly dependable than a cf loped or mashed potatoes: cabhage. jette, just 4 though a an celery, caulifiower, string beans, wa | smokedl a cigar had more to his o beans, beete. spinach. tomatoee, o) acter than a cigarette smoker. plant. corn and sweet potatoes. Tt {course, the idea was ridiculous, will be noted that practeally all e Ul Dot pake it \:-'.c‘l;.q'!-te;.pofl which thoge mentioned ment, a smile touching the gravit e i ,..Nkf.','.'j( "'v‘ff,il his mouth. “how is evervthing is partly because the flavor of good beef is satisfyingly simple and at the same time savory, thus lending itself to many combinations. In other words, beef is a good neighbor for a : | | g Dear Ann: We read of the perfect oval face. and we know it is lovely. But the pos. sessor of this form of beauty shoulc let well enough alome, if you know what T mean. She should not oval neck lines, and so have too much of a good thing. The contrast of a long straight neck line is much more stunning. Yours for vain repetitions. LETITIA. wear represented (Copyright challenge for him to.do his worst She had been determined to speak | Arst. | He did not answer at once. tighting a large black cigar, struck Rosalind sudden: He was who mo- | aped up in Rosalind. So he was determined to make her speak, to force her into the open, to make her €at humble pie before him. It w STAR, She wishes to | { who sits down and lets her support him. and it humiliates her to death to flnd | out that all that she means to her husband is just a meal ticket. vegetables neighbors, and vice versa. But this is only the beginning of the sto Beef. like all animal food, is acid in 1ts final digestive reaction and the reaction of practically all our mmon vegetables fs alkaline. The ‘neighborliness.” therefore, of leef and vegetables Lespeaks n pleacant | welcome for both from the varfous | ans of the dige-tive svstemn. These s can. it i true. accomplist d the <traightening out ¢ digestive complications, such i t about by the unwise giver of a feast. but they are always« zlad to be relieved of part of thic | care. lave {Just like him. He was so big, so e | dently used to command, domines |ing. “And vet what right had he to that lite, @ perfect T o do? « tell me * she flash petulant child. 1 of th fact '~ headache 11 day 1 ve tried to sing look " he commented slowly. his dark eyves traveling delil crately ove i ut it a tiredness than tesh, if you get wh: 1 mean.” How extraordinarily penetrating he was! He had pierced beyond her petty |little lie and was seeing into her heart | He knew that there was more to it !than a headache. He. who knew her htly, still knew her well enough to_read her like a book? In spite of her proud determinatior d come into her and tell her wi n needn’t be afraid that 1 was rotten tonight ed suddenly like a am already had a blind shouldn't | “You we not all seen ‘‘perfectly 200d" social gatherings spoiled by the lack of sympathy of common in terests existing between the guests? | Just o may the food guests invited to get together for the purpose of nourishing an individual make or to tell him nothing. Rosalind felt her | Mar. not alone his pleasure, lur hix lips quiver, She huted this man, and | comfort. and even his health. s well! vet he had an unbelievable influence Xow this matter of proper ision over her. Even with the knowledze | of iabor between food neighbors ex that she disliked him, she had an ab- | tends far beyond the acid and alkaline sire to pour out her it to! forming stage. Beef. the type taken anon | for our illustration. possesses It w cellence the power of body bu ] hing | but alen nd unaided nnot prop- ind the Tict | erly regulate the processes going on | within the very body it has helped | to Duild. So its good neighbors, the | vegetables, once miore step into the | breach and presto! By reason of | their mineral salts they keep the | | blood stream flowing, the organs of elimination functioning and the whole | complex interchange within the body | in working trim { “Oh. no.” she said flippantly, “I| So much for the merest hint of| love the excitement of it. It isn't | What we mean when we speak of the fair to judge me by a single had per-| importance of good food combinh. ! formance: do you think it is?" tions and of a balanced diet H | Her attempt at defiance had brought (Covyr 926.) | the color to her cheeks, but she ftelt = the te: throat feit co 1. that he | ridiculous about him b I was wondering,” he said in that deep voice of his, 4f you weren't growing a little tired of all | this. T thought perhaps your lack of | spirit tonight might have been the re. | sult of such a fecling. Rosalind forced 2 laugh, but even |in her own ears It sounded forced, arti | ficial. < Creamed Finnan ‘Haddock. | zoing to She wis o foolt-at e « ready some flaked cooked fin. | expression in his eves that she could ["4n haddock. Melt an ounce of but uot fath, Perhaps it was pity . But in a saucepan. and stir in a tea | Atterian: sy sShomia Ko pits i he | Spoonful of cornstarch or flour and | didn’t need his pity. she wouldn't have | hree-fourths of a gill of milk. Stir it: she wanted nothing at all from him | Until boiling. add the fish. cook fo: B about five minutes, and then stir in | 1 TEat by « beaten egz. Let the whole thicken. | y g but do not hoil after the egg is added. | Eggs With Sweetbreads. i Have ready a medium sized sweet- | Winter Salad. bread. parboiled and cut into dice, and Soak some cooked beets in vinegar. add it to four well heaten eggs. Add | tint some mashed potato pink with |balf a cupful of milk and salt and| some of the vinegar and mix in some |pepper. Melt two tablespoonfuls of chopped_celery. Heap the mixture in |butter in a saucepan, pour in the mix the middle of the dish, stick a few pale | ture and cook until of a creamy con- green celery leaves in the top as a |sistency, stirring constantly and not | garnish and arrange overlapping | letting any adhere to the bottom of | K | H (Continued in tomorrow s Star.) s of beet round the ba: For Women Who Demand Loveliness BLU‘I. Moon Sflk Stockings are so fine, so beauti- ful, that they instantly appeal to women who in- sist on the best. Blue Moon Stockings wear longer because they are full fashioned, made of pure silk and have patented gartec strips to take up the strain. In colors new, subtle, exquisite. Next time you go shopping, ask to see Blue Moon Silk Stockings. Ne. 1 veight purestti. full topsandesies.§1.65. No. 200—Medium weight, pure silk, “Il g—hl--l. Lisle lo':'ul woles. No. 300—Hea: full In-hlon-? ervic Lisle tops and soles. $1.¢ No. 408—Chiffon weight. fine ollk, full tIi!o“a‘. Lid soles. §1.85. No. 500 —Chiffon weight, i 3 puresili, full fashiched. SUL fram 10p to toe. §2.15. = No. 600—Medium weyght, full fash- ioned service stockings. SiTk from top to toe. $2.15. Colors: Black, White, Skiny French Nude, Grasel. Atmosphere. Jenny. Pesrl. Blond. Cinder. Gun Metal. Rose Beige. Rose Taupe. and Silver “LONGER WEAR IN EVERY PAIR Patented triple garter strip preventsruns. (D boy he idown the child's morale. 'it is to be ruthlessiy robbed of its hard earnings and have them taken as :. WASHINGTON. . D» ey DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX : z ; wite or EAR MISS DIX: Wil you decide which one of us i right, my wife Db s been married six vears, and she has never met any of my people. But she says it is wrong for me to go to see them and have a good time, while she sits alone at home, and that I should not go whe e {8 not welcome. She“says that it is nine months since I have taken her to show or any place. ; She gets mad hecause 1 don't give her any money, or make her any presents, " Well, she has money in her own right, and she owns the hoyse and all the furnishings. 1 have never laid out a nickel In our house for anything, and that hurts her, She thinks I am selfish becauso I spend all my money on myself. She is as clean as wax, and at one time would h given me all she had, but no more. e She used to be cheerful, but now whe sits and cries all the time, and she is mad because I bought me an expensive radio which T have at my place ofi business, and she thinks that [ ought to buy one just as good.for home, which L cannot afford, _3Which of us is right? HOSBAND: z =4 a 3 i ze in any Answer: Why, I think you would take the blueribbon prize in any selfish-husband class, for, according to 3'ourlown!!howms‘ you take every- thing from vour wife, and give her nothing in return. You live in her house, eat her food, let her bear all the expense of the upkeep of the home, and You don't even make her the poor return of taking her out now and then to the movies. Pretty soft graft you have got, vt If your wife owns the house and you don’t have to pay any rent, thank Heaven for your luck. You are that much to the good, anyway. But fO{ 'h‘-. sake of your own self-respect, and becuuse you Want your wife to respect vou and look upon you as a man and not as a dead beat, pay all the balance ‘o the household expenses yourself. 5 1t isn't possible for a waman to feel anything but contempt for the man idently that is the point of view why she has hecome melancholy. * She sees that you are stingy and selfish, that you show her no consideration. that you have no regard for her pride, and that she is merely a convenience to furnish you with free board and lodging 50 that you may have more money to spend upon yourself. ur wife has reached, and that. is| 1 think she has a right to resent your visiting your people when they will not receive her; as she has & right to resent your aponging upon her, even if you are her husband; and to resent vour general lack of even common civility to her, because a man should. at least occasionally, show his hostess some attention, if only as some sort of payment for her bread and butter. If you don’t want to lose a good thing, you had better get busy and make vour wife a few presents and trot her around to places of umusements now and then. DOROTHY DIX. IDEAR MISS DIX: When 1 was married T was a frail and delicate vounx girl, and my husband, who loved me very much, would not allow me to lift a hand to do any kind of work. 1 was kept in cotton wool, so to speak and he practically superimposed the housework on his own work, as he coulld not afford a regular servant. As a result, everything was left undone or half done, while T lay around idle and got fretful and peevish and nugging. Finally T asked myself one day what my husband would do if I should die. and the awful answer came to me that he would be bound 1o be relieved and glad. Well, that woke me up, und I rolled my slecves and went to work, with the result that I got well and strong, and am cheerful gnd happy. ind my husband calls me his partner MRS, GOODWILL. H Answer: I print this letter for the benefit of the many discontented slacker women who are always writing to me, moaning and groaning, be they have to do their part in matrimony These women would rush to the divorce courts and demand their freedon if they had married husbands who refused to work and support them. They would have a perfect contempt for their husbands if they spent the evening whining over their jobs, and telling how sick and tired they got of sellinig 500ds, or doctoring sick people, or trying law cases, or laving bricks. But they don't recognize that, if it is man's husiness to make the money on which to run a house, then it is the woman's business to make a com tortable home, him food and i clean and comfortable place in which to live. Nor do they fuce the fact that « woman's work is no harder, or more monotonous and that =he i» just as much a quitter if she complains al ! be if he complained about his wish to call my readers’ sttention 10 one other point this shusizes, and t that is wood for ubout nine-tenths of the ail women. This zoes for both body and mind. There is no other ise equal to housework. You can get evers known system of ymnastics | in cooking and sweeping crubbing. and there is no such preventive of sickness as not having the time to be sick The women who have rothing to do except 1o think about themselves cag always hunt around their svstems until they find some deadly complaint, real maginery, or they can acquire nerves, and the only preventive of this is to keep 50 busy that you haven't leisure in which to develop symptoms Furthermore. the only happy people are those who have the consclousniess | of knowing that they are doing their part In life. and that they are of some real use In the world, so T commend the example of Mrs. Goodwill to all frail and neurotic ladies. DOROTHY DIX. I am engaged 10 4 young man who has supported his| since he was a small chill. When he went to work as a little rried over hig entive pay envelope to her, and he has been doing so er since. She buys his clothes. and gives him a couple of dollars a weeh, 10 Lie seems satistied. | have tried every way in the world to make him ses t this cannot go on, that we can never be married unless he has his own (¥ 1o handle himself, to be used f 10 hiave the courage to demand his rights to support herself. Do you think i tellow like this is worth while, or woul you look out for somebody with more spunk? DISGUSTED. Answer: [ think the spunkless one is certainly a poor outlook as husbgnd, for & man who i so completely_under his mother’s thumb has had every bit of courage and initiative crushed out of him. He will alwavs be afraid of his mother, and put her before his wife, and expect his wite to kowtow to her as he does. And it is never pleasant for the wife to realze that she plavs second fiddle to the mother. Certainly it is the duty of children to support their parents when they need help, but I do not think that parents have the right to take their children’s entire pay envelope from them for this makes the child nothing but a slave tolling for the benefit of its father and mother. That takes all the heart out of it and crushes all the ambition. t MISS DIX mother His mother'is strong and well able Tt breaks Even where the child's whole wages have to go to the family support it is better for the child to give the money with its own hands, and to have the senge of being a benefactor and the pride of being depended upon, thar matter of course, and without thanks or appreciation. DOROTHY DIX. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, us to live upon, but he doesn't seem | 1926. FEATURES. 47 What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. Aquarius. Tomorrow’s planetary a until noon, distinctly adverse, and | during this period abstention from | argument is essential, as your per ception is liable to be clouded and| you will, figuratively, be prone to “strain at a gnat and swallow camel,” which will. on reflection. mal vou ridiculous in vour own eves. as well as in those of others. In dhe afternoon and evening the sig note better conditions, especial efforts that call for determination resolution. In spite of the snpersti tion usually connected with a I'rilay it 1s an excellent occasion fo- .at riage, and the indications promise partnership of unalloyed happines: and contentment. Children born tomorrow ave des | tined, according to the signe, t enfoy during infancy perfect phys:| ical condition and wactically com plete immunity (o sickness. They | will “flourish like the green bay tree and. grow up into health: an-| hood and womanhood. The one sreat danger against which to cuard i be accident, as they will he fea und prone to take ~hances 1 amentally they will leave, on th: whole, very little to he desired. The will not. of course, he perferi (what child is?), but they will have fewe Imperfections than the averaze child. | They will. not be materially success i ful, but will both find and radiat happiness. I tomorrow is vour birthdas, vou spend altogether too much of o time in “‘dreaming drew wnd bujld ing air castles. It i of purse, de- | sirable to have ambitions, Imt werk is the only thing that will < wuse them to be realized. If v wish to @ Y measure of stccess, you m to be visionary anil practical. and, ahove all, show u resl desire to labor. You are, unfoftunately snobbish and set too hizh family connections, and choose your friends, not their {ntrinsic merit as men women, because of their po sions or social standin You are very gencrous. but gifts are too fndiscrindnute .and could accomplish better resulrs Ly exercise of prudence My Neighbor Says: Chopped dates and peanut butter mixed to a paste make a delicious fllling for sandwiches. When laundering curtains of voile, scrim or ny material which has to be ironed, if they are folded so the selvaze ends are together and ironed they will_hang perfectly even and straight. For mixing flour and ‘water use a fork or egg beater to make it smooth and free from lumps. To remove black wagon « machine grease and tar apply ordinary cooking lard to the stain. Rub it in well and after a short time wash with soap and moderately hot water. Bedsprea®s which have grown shabby may give long and valu- able service as sounding cloths for the dining table. If lemon is warmed before squeezing, nearly double the quantity of juice will he ob- tained. On washing day. in Winter pin handkerchiefs and small ar- ticles to a short piec of rope with €nap pins in the house and attach to the clothes line by a clothes pin at each end. Easier both to put out and take in than by the old way. Headquarters for the New BlLVE MODN —Because they have a patented reinforcement down the sides of their lisle tops which prevents tears and garter runs, you get “longer wear from every pair” of Blue Moon Stockings. And ‘they can be purchased at Kann's in five different grades and fourteen of the smartest shades as foflows: . Skin, Atmosphere, Peau., French Nude, Jenny, Blonde, Silver, Cinder, Rose-taupe, Rose-beige, Black, White and Gun Metal $1.65, $1.85 and $2.15 Pr. Boxes of Three Pairs at - $4.75, $5.25 and $6.25 Street Floor. The Daily Cr 0ss-Word Puzzle t"pon. fo Afternoor tallan ize of a fox One of t Tnclose: Execla Distre ‘ified particles sw of Abrahan e degree (abbr.) instellation (abbr Let the children vote at breakfast EVERY mother knows it is often a problem to persuade children to eat the nourishing foods they need. How tites rebel! frequently delicate little appe- Post’s Wheat*Meal is the solution of this problem.’ In this nutritious, whole-wheat cereal, we have combined quick—cooking convenience with delicious flavor. Let the children vote on Post's Wheat Meal tomorrow morning at breakfast. Watch their eves sparkle as they discover that flavor. See how 1u1ckly the bowls are emptied of this golden cereal and how soon they come back for more. Made from whole-wheat, Post’s Wheat Meal has the food values of the wheat. It contains, with milk or cream; vitamins for growth; pro- teins for body building; minerals for téeth and bone; bran for.regularity and carbohydrates for energy. And so convenient! The truly quick-cooking, whole-wheat cereal, Post’s Wheat Meal cooks, ready-to-serve, in three minutes. Order it from your grocer today. Postum Cereal Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Michigan. Makers of Post Health Product: Postum Cereal, Instant Postum, Post Toasties (Double-Thick Corn Flaker), Post’s Bran Flakes, Post’s Bran Chocolate and Grape-Nuts. You know Oatmeal . . . | now try Post’s WHEAT MEAL The Quick-Cooking WHOLE WHEAT Cereal ® 1026 P. C. Co.