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WOMAN’S PAGE Question of Side or Cross Saddle BY MARY MARSHALL It seemed for a time as if the ques- i of side or cross saddle for wom- en had been settled for all time. We took riding breeches as much f granted as we took voie or tbe THE SORT OF THE AMERICAN WEAR—BROWN ND TAN THES, RIDING OUTFI GIRL LIKES T TWE! COAT BEDFORD CORD WITH A LIGHT and the e side saddle see: seum. It seemed talettes or pu like to be reviv Now Intere saddle h and as horsewomen, its effect in France. about ridi i 1 her body 1 pesition, whi of course, ther the side of the that way— saddle Eritish and tha the y ladies mily ride pote: But the chances are that you prefer the cross saddle. Most Americans do. Judphors are in much favor with the {energetic voung horsewomen. As cvery one knows, they are shaped like | any riding breeches above the knees, |but extend to the ankles, titting closely the knees, calves and ankles, making high boofs or puttees unnecessary. | Once they were so unusual that oniy | an occasional tailor would know what {you meant if you asked him to make them. Now they are sold readymade wherever smart riding things are sold, and - ready-mades can usually be {fitted with very little alteration. | "But the favorite riding costume of American women still remains the con- ventl or lace closely around the knees. Put- tees or high boots are worn and there is a slightly shaped facket with man- nish shirt beneath. There are no end of novelties ny of them in enough taste, bul this conservative riding costume sill seems most dis tinguished looking and genuinely smart. ni Lt 1026.) IAK Orange Juice Oatmeal with Cream Ham and Potato Omelet nge Marmalade Coffee LUNCHEON Cheese Souffie Stewed Tomatoes Hot Graham Muftins Pineapple Sauce Fruit Cake DINNER Beef Broth Croutons Broiled Honeycomb Tripe Lyonnaise Potatoes Pickeled Beets Lettuce Salad Mayonnais Cotta Choe GE MARMALADI I o Four oran sliced thin. enough water to cover. Boil until ver soft In morning. Add equal 2mount granulated ur and cook lttle longer. soil in water they are sonked in over night lemons, night in CHEESE SOUFFLE Melt two tablespoons butter, add three tablespoons flour, then pour on gradually, while stir- ring constantly one If cup scalded milk. Bring to boiling point and add one-half teaspoon salt, dash cavenne and two- thirds cup & cheese. Re- move from fire and add well- beaten yolks three eggs. Pour ture on buttered dish and set away to cool. When ready to use, fold stifly-beaten whites three ¢ turn into buttered baking dish, stand in pan hot water and from ake to 30 minutes. Serve at once. COTTAGE PUDDING together two table- spoons butter and one cup powdered sugar, add heaten volks two eg eat well, add one cup milk alternately with three cups flour ixed and sift- ed with two teaspoons baking powder and half teaspoon salt; fold in stifffy beaten whites and bake, covered, in buttered tnold until done. Serve with cho Cream late sau The Daily Cross-Word Puzz]_e (Copyright, 1926.) Grotesque carved stone. Thus . Amount of surface. (abbr)) tion . Kind of | . Concernin; ot 9. Colle . Exi 3. Depa 34. A on 5. Masc . Mother. . Mount (abbr) One who follows the Hindu ortho- dox school of philosophy. Down. . A mine of weslth. . Indefinite . A Southern & . Discourses. Affirmati ate (abb . Southern State (abbr.). The solar disk. . A hypothetical force . A month. Chum Liberated Silver (abbr. A certain conic section. . Inhabitant of an ancient district of Persia Preposition. Small block of metal used with a bolt. College yells King of Bashu Western Indian | Ourselves. Wrath. Periorm. . Run about. . Morning (abbr.) Myself. Prefix; into. Note of the scale. “puzzlr'cks" Puzsle-Limericks A Scot from the land of the —1 Liked to golf in the bitterest He golfed with bare —3— For pants, If you —4—, All wore out when his knees knocked —5— A low, hardy evergreen shrub. 2. General atmospheric condition. 3. Main joints of the legs. . Meec with approval. . In immediate juxtuposition. (NOTE—If you've ever wondered twhy the kilt is so popular with the the other Scots this limerick may sup- ply the answer. Just put the words irdicated by the numbers into the cor- | responding spaces. The answer and i another “Puzzlick” will appear tomor- row.) Saturday’s “Puzalick.” Sald b‘: gardener shrewed of Bar Har- r “1've often trimmed vines on an arbor; ‘With a little finesse 1 could snip off a tress And start out as & young ladies’ barber,” riding breeches that button ; good | MacPhersons and the Crichtons and | THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MO LITTLE BENNY —_— BY LEE PAPE. This afternoon pop brawt home a buntch of flowers all rapped up, hold- ing them in back of him and saying, ‘Wares your mother, Benny? Upstairs, I sed, and pop sed, Well keep her up there till 1 have time to arrange these flowers and serprize her. Tell her the story of your life, he sed. And I went up and ma was jest com- ing out of her room, me saying, Walit a minnit, ma, dont go down yet, I wunt minnit, G, ma. Wats all the ixcitement, was that your father jest came in? ma sed. Wen? 1 sed. O, one day last week for goodniss sakes, ma sed. And she started to go down agen and I sed, Hay, wait a minnit, ma, I haven't told you yet. Told me wat, wat is ull this grate mystery? ma sed. 1 wunt to tell you wat happened to Puds Simkins, I sed Well, wat was it, get it out of your isistem, ma sed, and T sed, Well Puds { was walking along not thinking | envthing and 3 ladies stopped him and ked him if he dident remember who nd Puds had never eve fore so of ¢ ideer, so they must « he was somebody elts. I don't call that a very choice peece of news I must say, now get out of my way, I wunt to go down stairs, ma sed, and 1 sed, Well walt a minnit, ma, T wunt to to Shorty Judge 11 tell you sing to happen to vou in a minnit. ma sed. And pushed me out of the w: down and pop had the flowers all fixed in the blue vise, und ma sed they perfeckly bewtiful and fixed them : thawt Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON Words often ‘she seldom or ldom If ever come: Often mispronouncy e Pronopnce the second “o” a 1 10, and accent second “0,” not the “n." Often misspelled: ~ Correspondent (one who corresponds by letter); co-re spondent (x+ Joint respondent in a di voce suit). Synonyms: Refuse, reject, { nounce, discard, decline, dis | diate. | Wora | timesand crease our vocabula one word each day. Tod rd: Reminiscent; ing recollection, “The quaint old pictures were remi: fscent of days gone by." mis: Cond ns deny, re. wn, repu stug U it your: word Let i three us i ering “ by MODE MINIATURES There has been much conjecture of late as to the role that felt would play in Spring’s millinery pageant. Would velours continue in popularity in of rising temperatures? Now | { { | the question is satisfactorily un- swered by the appearance of new felts —differing from those we have scen | for the past few months in manner of {brims. Invariably they are faced with straw. These are the hats which promise the best for ear i Crowns are still high or creased or round—the fmpor ter being that = W be use ) under brim MARGETTE. HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. ““God Save the King.” In this song, the national anthem of Great Britain, we find written o page in the history of England. There hus Leen contention as to the origin of od Save the King” one version being that it was written in the early seventeenth century, by Den Jenson, poet laureate. However, the theory generally accepted by authorities today iz that the words were written by Henry Carey for James II, the extled king, and that the song was re- vived and sung during the rebellions of 1715 and 1745, and then silenced by the failure of the Jacobites, until it re- appeared with the reading, “God Save Great George, Our King,” substituted for the origin, “Great James." Although Carey himself was not known to have lald claim to the au- thorship of the song, his son, born in ear of his death, took up his cause, and so brought fame to his name. In fact, on the strength of this contribution by his father he asked a pension of the government, which however, he did not obtain. Henry Carey s known to have the song on public occasions, in 1714, by which time it had acquired the charge to “Great George, Our | King. It is interesting to note that the phrase “God Save the King" has re- corded usage in a patriotic sense 200 years earlier than the song whose title it is. It appe; in * e Papers,” Vol. I, p. 184, and under the head i"l—‘lele taken the Lord Admiral, the 10th day of Angust, 1545,” we find | the following: | " “The watchword in the night shall be thus: ‘God save King Henrye'; other | shall answer: 'And long to reign over us.’ " The music of “God Save the King” | has been generally conceded to be that of Dr. Bull, a famous composer of the reign of James, (Copyright, 1826.) sales of carcass beef {n Washington, D. C. for week ending Saturday, February 8. 1026 on_shipments rold out. ranged from 10.60 cents to 17.50 cents per pound and averaged 15702 cents per pound.—Advertisement. Life sometimes seems a barren field | That far and grey around us spreads, But uvnexpected little Joys Like crocuses Prices realized on Swift & Company | to tell you something, wait a i of | rse he dident | ell you wat happened | she | and went | ODD FACTS AB BY YALE S. NATH Department of Peychology. The Death Fear. vou die ws de Others he tnto the When you door mall, sume pevple say. leve that body of an others, that + lan the life vo live after this 1 speak about reward for hav tn the 3 nime never after-life is passe another that you when people n uther words, lke the ments are quoted “Up to 14 [ | deatn without sons whose state- could never think It can- must all die 1 life, and I not, must -, that nnd give up this beautdf would ery and cry.” “I used to cr ute and w ipelessiy abandon 1 ause I s far worse at night.” “Deems death so unspeakable terri- ble that I cant i or think of it | with a stead “I struggl sank satist 4 against drowning, but d and curious to learn the BY M Upholstered Furniture. ¥ebrnary Is the big month of furni ture sales . quite naturally, it is the month of all the year when house- wis are ing the most furniture. A great mar women, no doubt, have been saving the pennies during much of the p vear in order to in: dulge a good pie of upholstered furniture for the lving room Jjust at this time. And it certainly important to make sure that a plece of upholstered furniture is of good quality. Any- thing less will soon begin to look shabby and show bumps in the cush- fons, if in fact it does not become rickety and tumble down. If ever you bought a cat in a bag, {you do so when you buy uphostered | turniture, because so very much of | the quality in every sense {s under the | eurface and can't be examined without {ruining the chair, lounge or settee. {That iy the paramount reason why, no matter where you buy other things, you ought to patronize for upholstery a thoroughly reliable dealer whose word is as good as his bond. Of course one wants to know what ! 1t 1s important to have the dealers's guarantee about, because all of the furniture which even the best dealers | carry is not of exactly the quality | you desire. !|” The first thing to think about is the | construction of the framework. Is | this assembled in the most substantial | manner? Were the woods used those | well adapted for the purpose? And | were they thoroughly cured before |using? Are the exposed parts made of the genuine wood, such as ma- hogany or walnut, which it is finished to represent? Of course you can often get a reasonably good chair in imitation woods, but if you pay for the real thing, et positive assurance that it is being dellvered. Next, inquire as to the quality and | number of springs used. Is each | spring wrapped separately, to keep it | trom sagging, and are they suport- ed underneath by a substantial qual- { ity of webbing? The stufing” materfal will usually come in _one of three classes—all-hair, hair and moss and allmoss. The all- hair is best and most durable, also most expensive. The combination and the moss flllings, wh>n handled well, make a very satistactory upholstery while they last, and some of the lead- ing makes are now getting surpris- ingly good results. Whatever the outside fabric used on your upholstered pleces, be sure ANSON, B. Sc, M. rding to | FEBRUARY 38, 1926 McNasght Syndicate. Ine. N OUT YOURSELF \ Cniversity was inte 15 to 2 Its horror t is the me is + | muelancholy, and not a T grew ird on the eepless, lost Iy afraid of my slowly by 1aemd = Acryg. “When I be | personality i th my fears of death, . ceased.” Ho afraid t to school th and became 1 hat the in the future Leen 3 father T fun tails and suffer and over as much as if it were r. ery of | e - thoughts. “After o Fave lived thelr 1 | Every one has ! with | as 1 should. { Often some little | Will help you. Or perhaps you e make one up which will hit more closely and s problem of unhappin our case ur great WHEN WE GO SHOPPING HARLAND H. ALLEN. | that 1t i& covered with muslin under- | neath, else it will not hold its shape l'»'4911. and the filling hatrs will for ver pester vou by working up 1h the cover "he cover) ftself, you can ex amin both for suitability of color for the kind and guality of ma If choosing a napped goods velour and mohair. it is well to select one which does not show finger marks too readily. The velour is, of course, the less expensive, but remember that each comes in many different qualities. Velour has even several different grades for each of linen Two other very popular coverings for furniture now are chintz and tapestry. Choose, of course, the color combinations you like best, but don't fail to make the common tests for quality of the cloth. In this way, most of all, you may escape being “taken In" by some apparently ex- traordinary bargains offered by ques- tionable dealers. Cmbe}ry Bombe. Pick over and wash one quart of cranberrles. I'ut them Into a sauce- n with one cupful and a half of water and one cupful of sugar, cover, land cook until the berries burst. Press through a sleve. Boll together for 10 minutes one pint of sugar and one pint of water. cupfulls of the cranberry pulp and freeze to a mush. Whip one pint of thick cream to a solid froth, sweet- ening with two-thirds of a cupful of powdered sugar and flavoring with almond. Lne a mold with the frozen cranberry, fill the center with the prepared cream, cover, and bind the edges with buttered muslin. Bury in ice und salt for three hours. Egyptians Wore Wigs. Egyptian mummies have been dis- covered wearing wigs, and sculptured relics found at Nineveh disclose the fact that the ancient Assyrians also TYREE'S TIMOLOT O=~OMN==Z> formula lke this | three different fibers—cotton, silk and | When cool, add three | | slight 1§ It ater and 4 distressed over them Prickley Heat. | This is essentiul Summer months, | it babies are |even in some heated hov out in sm | which cause the m | 1f the baby is not © | bas areas of rough, red, pim {on the forehead, under the armi on the groin, the mother may safely | decide that the rash fs hing more erious than prickley heat and relleving the child of . voolen, clear up the rash by liberal 4 frequent applications of soda water anad 4 powdering with common starch Dirt Eating. of ur tite rticles is typicul of cble-mindedness, though children t dirt are not ull imbeciles. The habit may be due to some lack |1n the dtet: u a lack of calclum | tme) and the first attempt at cure should e through the medium of diet, |adding greater quantities of fresh ! fruit; whole grain cereals and green | vegetables, as well as milk (our best | source of lime) to the child diet. Then he should be mechanically restrained from getting at the dirt, by Keeping {him in a pen or in bud cases of tying his hands =0 that he cannot get at the 11 dirt unextable Cradle Cap. | Most babies have a scale of dundruf? on the top of the head which should not be sc fine comb, |as this m ritation and | makes the dandruff harder to cure. Every day at the bath time wash the i head well with castile soap, dry and rub into the scalp warm olive oil, or in persistent cases, warmed vaseline. At night do the same thing. This treatment will shortly cure the trou- ble and at any rate even if it takes |time it is the only method of treat. | ment. g Those Endless Symptoms. From the Loulsville Courfer-Journal. “You can't have everything." “Some of my lady pa seemn to beife that theory. ventured \\\‘.-?‘/ ts would | FEATURES PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Diametrical Reactions. This first letter is dated December 28, and comes from Perrysburg, N. Y.: “Dr. Brady: This extremely cold | weather prompts me to write to you about the falecy (sic) of your doctrine that exposure to wet feet and cold Lave (sic) nothing to do with catching 2 cold or “cri,” as you cull it. I now am suffering from a severe sore throat as the result of sieeping with my door open, too much exposure to tresh air and extreme cold that goes with it. Indeed, 1 often wonder why a safe and sane and conservative newspaper allows you to waste S0 much space with your rubbish, and the worst part of it is some people actually take ‘Dumb Dora’ col- umn serfous believe your stuff, which proves i« menace to thelr health {when ‘they follow your teachings. ! Have you graduated from nuine | medical college f the same fakers you write about? I hope ou take warning from this letter. If ou don't I shall endeavor to persuade s6 with your 0 doubt the author of the Iq!l(-r\ | could muster quite a numerous fol {lowing for such a movement, for there Jare a lot of old fogles who know what he thinks about the air is so i & few of these old fogles are practicing inedicine. Old togles in medical p find 1t easy to doctor folks who know | what this man knows; it suves them | considerable worry and diagnostic con- lcern in cases of sore throat. Wher {the all cold” happens to * |into” diphtheria or measles or s thing it is all right with the | Well, that's one reaction. Two Fists. Heddle was u sturdy young chap, square-cut sort, reddish I of freckles, deep set gray eye He played hard and lived On his block there were on hild —one the the others younge: quarrels and all went well ur was enrolied in the prin Httle fell varying I arying h erftunce an: i recess brought Heddle ted toward the and red that a , what h & faucet Heddie id the T bell just the had to get in li grip anyway the way { calml sam |H But the faucet holdt much 1 result was a draw mussed-up boys. and | b says they must call these | <es ‘dashing’ because they | » much like trac aits.” | the frying pan. fused by names that imitate. Thereis only one Gorton's Ready-to-Fry—=made from famous Gorton’s Codfish=No { | e 1 ) | ~ - A two well | BRADY, M. D. i8 another, dated December 30, writte: in Cleveland, Ohto: g nk you for your letter on the subject of colds, ete. The sound common sense contained there in 1s 1 valuable a: any home, “The letter is now belng circulate number of my friends with whor I have had many ‘gument on the subject. “Allow me to ish you the best ¢ luck and good rear. health for the new The letter r land corresy to by nde: yut the infections, called . ) for short, how you catc bronchitis, tonsilitls and Low you hand around ilin: among you ite-s, and then ft g vice on the n n o detai aolproof illnes dire, ment of such i ing the re tions for the fcine for ch i simple Ku g0 L0 ord with ild b t in ar addressed to t £ mount the othe I The | T {s arme Apples and Figs d 1 1 X app 1 two quarts or 15 mir utes e ove crushed ice wi top. NAM FADELESS 3 Successful Dresses, coats, suits—curtsins, cushion covers, etc.—dyed simply and quickly Fast colors by boiling. Dainty tints by | dipping. Norubbingor messy handling. Same package tints or dyes all kinds of materialinone operation. Price 15ceats at your dealers. 'se Putnam No-Kolor Blesch to remove color and siains. Pree lllustrated Booklet: How e Beaurify Hundreds of Things in Home and Werdrobe. Address Dept. N MONROE DRUG CO., QUINCY, ILL. How I Get My Week’s Wash Snow White — without a washboard! HAVE a way of washing that makes my clothes whiter, sweeter, cleaner thantheyhaveever beenbefore—inhalf the time, with half the work. And this method actually saves the clothes — and my hands, tool I just soak my whole week’s wash for an hour or two, or sometimes I put it tosoak the night b efore, in rich Rinso suds. Then I rinse he clothesin clear water — and they come out spotless, cleaner than I could rub them. Yetl don’t even touch a washboard. Rinso does all the work—loosens the dirt so that it floats away in rinsing. I don’t even have to boil the clothes, because Rinso whitens and sterilizes without boiling. Sinceusing Rinso myhandsarewhite, soft and smooth instead of parboiled fics bar-soap scrubbing. And I find that my clothes last much longer, be- cause I don't have to rub them thread- bare against a washboard. I just rub cuffs,hems,collers, etc., gently between my fingers—and all the ground-in dirt vanishes. It's wonderful. Ask your grocer today for The granulated soap thatsoaks clothes whiter —no scrubbing.