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WOMAN’S PAGE Veils Edge Hat Brims, Shade Eyes BY MARY MARSHALL. Thera lovely Mohammedan Tadies Northern “Africa whn still wear a vell ax a matter of relizions principle. They are never in are seen La LACE VEIL THAT THE BRIM IS h PART OF THE TRIMMIT A BROWN STRAW HAT. BROWN VELVET RIBBON STRIKES THIE ONLY OTHER TRIM MING NOTH A BROWN AS their vered public withont completely he 11 ever faces partly hy some sn transparent American for sort of To a that Frenchman o ODD FACTS ABOUT YOURSELF RY VALE S, NATHANSON, B, Se.. M. AL Department ot Puychn Fear of Failing. Another suicide is featured in the Aally columns. A man leaps to his Asath from the fifteenth floer of an ofce huilding. A few davs later a similar suicide is reported. They smem 10 work in zroups veral persons have leaped tha bridge at Niagara Falls. These ware not ordinary suicides and no weasons could he assizned for them Then what iz the cau z * Many persons cannoet stand heights. As thev ascend a to a building they find themselves zrow dizzy. Breathing fe difficult They are paralyzed with fear and some are gripped with a impuise leap. Since our from stronz to happiness in lif the result of one individual occur rence. hut rather a reflection of all our experiences. it is interesting for ‘us and very important to know just what our fears are and thus to avoid placing ourselves in situations where we find ourselves defenseless against our hodily reactions. From a famous dootor's contribution on fear I am Guoting cases in the words of the raons themselves rezarding their fear of hizh places. These peopls are normal peopie like vou and me and vet these fears affact them. Thex rapart as follows: “1 was exceedingly curions 1o know how it waonld feel tn fall very far.” s not PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM Jack and Molly-Coddle. coddle themselves more than women da. There are two ways in which one may coddle himself, namely. by overheaied dwellingz. con vevance shop. and by excessive clothinz. The present fashion pre- meribes less raddling with elothinz than formerly, at least for women. and even the lightly clad women seem less sitive cold than most of the avily clad men are. Tt is probably reason of this comy ive non veness to cold that women are so given to coddling themselves with overheated air as men are. There's u gond reason why women are less sensitive to moderate cold, why they are likely to feel warm or comfortable in 4 room which # man considers too chillv. The reason is that the hody of a woman is better in- sulated than the hody of a man is; the woman A hlanket of subcuta- nenus . every round inch of b my. whereas every square inch of the man’s hody tnally exposed to the gold. unless he wears a waol nmion suit ar some snuch fnsnlation It ix this additoinal padding of suh Mtaneous far that gives the femi nifie form its rounded appearance com pared with the angular masculine fig- ure. Some woman are hut poorly padded. and other things being equal thesa are apt to he hypersensitive to the cold A great many individuals who are well enough or ton well padded or in- anlated with this hlanket of fat are naverthelese hypersensitive tn enld, Men now to is vir BEDTIME STORIES Peter Meets Mocker. Leptic. as he goes abont ring through a lox of doubt 2. Moker The Ts o \,\'nrhm: would da now but Peter Rahbit tn mest Mocker the Mocking Bird and find out how it was that Mocker happened to stay over for th Winter Peter was falrly burning up with euriosity. Barly every morning he was over there in the 014 Orchard watchinz. Always he maw Mocker zo nver to the vine on Farmer Brown's house. That vine was a woodhine and =till held Itz ber- | “HELLO. MR. MOCKER.' E&AID PETER, MOST POLITELY. ries. Finally. Pater ventured early one morning. to go right over hy Farmer Brown's house and sit right under the vin Presently the Mocking Bird arrived “Hello, Mr. Mocker, st politely. m?'flelr;n, Reter Rabbit,” exclaimed Mocker. “What are vou doing over here?" T'm over v veu,” replied Peter ‘au should have heard Mr. Mocker gh. “If I am not myself, 1 car- jeinly am no one elsa” replied ifld{ er. sald Peter, here to see if von for Mocker | are | | matter —unaccustomed nowadayvs o] | veils of any sort, the effect Is amaz | ingly coquettish i These Mohammedan beauties. | am | told, are as keen about French fash- | |ions as we Amerlcans. and thev wear, thelr skirts as short and their stock |ings as sheer as we do. So they ap near with taces discreetly vefled. while their legs, in nude-colored stockings. | are seemingly bare to the knees. The effect is startling. Such conservatism and such daring. Loyalty to reli- gious traditions and alleglance to the | most extreme tashions of a fuz ten | age H lBut there is really nothinz unrea son: ihout it. Mohammed bade the women veil their faces, but not in all | the Koran did he write a single line concerning their legs or ankles 10 now they chose to wear lon awkward skirts, that is hecause they ch to—not bhecause the Holy | Pr regnested them to do so | When such tashionable women p. rin Paris, as they nat infrequently it is the veils, not the short irts. that attraet attention—just lenzth of heer Dlack tulle drawn across a face of charminz contour with duzzling | ndmond eves mins through. So far they have apparently set no fash- jon they are very often seen. Still the vell 1= by n. neins done for. Bobbed and shingled | halr has had much to do with the | temporary lipse of the veil. which iz no lonzer needed to keep straving huir in order. Here und thera amonz the new hats vou may find nne with toof] veil effect. Usually this the | form of a narrow bit of lace project- inz nver the hrim. merely shading the exes ani upper part of the cheeks. ret On zoing down an elevator it ! feel< as though It it going to the bot tomless pit spoken of in the Bible.” “When on a hizh place I always | want to iy off ‘Cannol slean in an upper story.” | Can never under the chande. | liers at 4 theater nor under the ivont | of a =zallery for fear things will drop | on me.” | I have such dread of falling that I ean never np down stalrs en s At the was irreistibly hetween the hars sen if one could ment.’ 1 can sit Aark. top of huildirz 1 to squeeze | railinz 1o | the pave n impeliad the o fall | never walk up on | iron floorinzs with openings as large ! as a pin lest 1 tall through.’ I have worried for vears lest | might fall off the earth Into space.” uld never sit in the front row of the gallery at church. Don’t invite trouble. There's enough of it without extending any special inductment It vou have passed the stage life where you ecan formulate habits and vet veu still have a s<rrong “fear of falling.” then keep away from higch places If. on the other hand. vou are sl veung vou ean nvercoma this tear by graduallv in- creasing the height which vou ran stand until a cure has hesn effectad ICoprright. 1926.) ops in | new | BRADY, M. D. {hoth men and women, but voung wom- {en mainiy. They complain that they | ean’t keep warm when others find the conditions quite comforiable. Not in- variably. hut in many instances, these vounz ‘women are subject 1o hypo-| thyroidism. deficient thyroid land | function. and in many cases they | show a slight enlarzement of the thy roid zland—that is. a simple goiter. Besides heing undnly sensitive to cold they are likely to suffer from frosthite” on slight exposure. They are ahnormally sleepy, hitting the hay long hours ai night and readily drop- ping off asleep in the davtime. They generally accumulate a moderate sur- plus weizht in their late teens. They |like 1o pile on phenomenal amounts of clothing by day and sleep under a crushing weight of covers at night. What they need is just a wee bit of fodin—a proper ration of this indis- | pensable food. If they get their fodin they presentl: hecome normal in all respects. Presently in this instance means in a vear or so. I forgot 1o mention that hesides the tendency 1o excessive deposits of fat |In these young women with hypothy- {roidism, and the oversensitiveness to cold, t is generallv an associated bradveardis (brady. 1 blush to say. meaning slow. and cardia meaning heart). probahly a hody temperature A speck below the normal, and usual Iy & rather pasty, pale or sallow com- exion | hex're nice girls, once the iodin | ra is provided for, and the only | thing I have against them fs the way they interfere with the regulation of the honsehald temperature. BY THORNTON . BURGESS | 'ou can't live up here in the replied Peter. savs I eant?” Winter, | Who | Mocker. Why—why—why, I have heard that Mocking Birds only in the South in Winter,’ Peter, 'S0 von are one of those fellows! who helleves evervthing he hears.” exclaimed Mocker “Well, here I am and I'm alive.” “That's It! exclaimed Peter ea | gerly. “Here vou are and vou're aljve, |and vou sught nat tn he ™" | You should have heard Mocker laugh then. "T'd like to know w 1 ought not to he alive.” said he when he could stop laughing. Peter looked a little foolish. felt a little foolish. just that, Mr, inquired alway:; ran live replied He “1 didn't mean 1 Mocker,” said he, “What 1 meant that vou ought to be down South, and hecause vou're not, ¥ou ought not to be alive. No, T don't mean that. | mean you— you—" ; You mean." interrupted Mocker “that you don’t see how I can find a living up here. Is that jr Peter nodded. “Ve, sald he, “that’s it. How do vou keep warm and how do yon gzet enough to eat?” “You have that the wrong way around.” replied Mocker. “Hating comes first. Bat enough and you'll | keep warm enough. Don't you know | that? Peter admitted that he did. He knew that food makes heat and a warm coat keeps the heat in. He knew that he didn't care himself how hard Jack Frost pinched just so long as he had plenty to eat. He remem- bered that Welcome Robin had said something of the kind. So he under- |stood what Mocker meant. “But where do vou get enough to eat?” he inquired. “Right here,” replied Mocker, “These berries are very good. But even with these I don't suppose I would have enough if it were not for Farmer Brown's Boy. Farmer Brown’s Boy has a feeding shelf just for me on the niher side of the house. | vehemently. not | | demeanor tohe had tuened into a hreezy | narured | zet l4and show So I do not have to worry about get- ting enough to eat. Having enough to eat, I do net have to-warry about NG STXR. WASHINGTON. SUB ROSA BY MIML Finding Out Truth. There comes a time in every girl's life when she realizes that friend | husband or sweetheart is hiding some- | thing from her. It may not be im- | tant—his secret. Lut again it * mean a revolutionary change in | life, and she wants to know the | | Recently Joan state of despair. with weeping. was acting came to me in a Her eyes were red Blair, her fiance, | strangely. For the past | hree weeks he'd left town, sending | her wires euch (il that he'd been called away on business She felt there was something wroas. Bui he wouldn't tell her—liughed off her suspicious questions. nnd assured her that everyvihing was ok stin s manner Wk diferen i vague premwnition warned her that cthing was up. lave you asked Blair any definite questions about this? 1 queried. Of course’ <he inswered me I've done nothing but yuestion him wheneveyr I've seen him. How he can he s mean (o me 1 don't ninderstand “Have you wept a lot while he was und” Well. T contdn't help it 1 to Kecp calm, but the thouzh o mesns to me just made me b en and ery.” i en vou musi change vour poliey. | Don't weep and rant when he's with vor. Jdust be friendly and sensible | from now an. Try 1o crase from his | mind the memory of the scenes vou've made After a while. if his stran persists, write him a resentful-—note and what nzzestod hide her and Blair That hi= lovin, tried | f allj —but not ask ! him what's doan did lever o once <he n 1o realiz feelir to wife ol independent eveninz he told her he had fallen for some one He conldn’t help himself—he wa madly in love | Poor Joan. She had s had time of i ut oh. the velief of knowins She was almost glad when he fold her the bad news. The uneertainiy | and doubt had nearly driven her mad Kven though the truth itter wiis better than endless <uspense. | She mizht have dra on for weeks, suffering tortures. while Blair | huns off, afrald (o tell her, hecinse he cared <o much. Only her friend Iv. impersonal air had ziven him Ze 10 speak I ven rodl about vour man— 10 hear the worsi— it from him ie ference. As lor m ing. ansions. he'll feelinzs. Once vou his that taking care of v he'll st pat One truth olse i want the truth vou are prepared the anly war to v prefend indif 1re tearful. lie to save snap ont vou're capable of | self. come what | the whole story wondering why o his secre: pleasant or disagree he sure to blurt ont Lack of enriosity than etther plead vonr of it may. Just you're whether able—and the who will o snspicion ve vou rt him indifferent he he'll thing more it tears or Mimi will b slad 10 answer ans 1 this niper d entclope ix nrovided A stamped. | Melosed. " Ajan whe s1ad 10 snd Food for Convares | How o Overome a1y ¢ T vou want the rew P Send itamned, Addresed ancelg Canrnight 1978 ) HOME NOTES BY AENNY WREN, When Winter banishes the g enthusiast from hix little kingdom time is apt to hang heavy on hix hands unless he finds something that he can do in preparation for the com den | that | offic {green for ing Summer. Here Is ane su This arbor can he very easily the garage or hasement Winter, so it will he ready Spring comes north again th Imagine what a charming hower it will make with rosez or leafy vines | climbing over it, and how picturesque an asset it will he to the garden! T one wished fo use it at the gar- den gate, the zate itself could be at. tached to one end. hut most people prefer an arbhor in some secluded cor ner where it« heauties and comforts ean he enjoved in soothing privacy. when vear. Clues to Character BY 3 ABERNETHY. They Fail in Mathematics. An executive may increase the effi- ciency of his force by learning to judge the natural ability of persons hefore assizning them to positions that call for intensive calculation. Have vou ever pondered why some | people are expert calculators and oth- | ers. with brilliant minds. fail utterly | in mathematics? No man or woman | with & small-number faculty should aver enter a vocation where constant calculation fs demanded. They may Ao their work passablyv. but the strain on a weak faculty will eventually un. dermine their health. Parents should know that their children possess nat. ural aptitude for handling figures be- fore urging them to enter a_vocation that requires large-number abili The reglonal influence of the rum- ber faculty is in the brow at the outer edge and just above the eye. It be- gins at the corner of the evebrow and extends about one-third of the dis- tance to the ear opening. When large. it tends to fill out and broaden that reglon on both sides of the head. If there i a repression or narrowness there the number faculty is weak Compare the faces of persons von know to be expert caleulators with those who are poor matematicians and vou will recognize the difference at a glance. (Copyright. 1226.) Spiced Vinegar. Mix together one-half a gallon of vinegar, one and one-half tablespoon- fuls of celery seed, one-half a cupful of grated horseradish, one cupful of s.gar, one and one-half tablespoon- fuls of mustard seed, one tablespoon- tul of salt and one tablespoonful ot cinnamon. Cloves, nutmeg and grat- ed onion may be added if desired. —_———— the cold. T really have enjoved the Winter so far. “Where do Peter. That,” replied Mocker, “is & se- 5 sewe Convristi, 10204 you sleep?” inquired | nsually & ury’hirw cy’/u'm‘y’ . ay a Lea ing Itole D. C. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 10, (Petite. and. Gloria S achting a 1926, ey chanmin q A wanaen, noa ncieptd manine. and. plai A woolen ;; de &;Smd&.‘; Fon ten of the Flaminge FHotel , Miarms Beack™ whife crebe printed in a balliant blue FEATURES Hos job 2 ina o rhom has b repis e her v tary | ties in whirled meet | would =he ha | the =t | coula ment: from t she | this all One of o sleepy | 1o con IF'AFFS OF WASHINGTON RY JENNY GIRTON WALKER. or of the Irish azanal T <A nsual color CTndivated hee bt crossed Tive Try Jezation 16 at TR0 it cen has Iy closely associ . Patrick and the ts hard helieve color for centuries it was ved field ot clent rule three Later h of Ireland A on a hlue erowns were cha memory of the a land. and that part of K standard assizned o Ire given a golden harp on a bine field It has been sugzgzested that the bl ing of the the blue of Irel which Ir mous in sonz and poets and trad days when “The Green Fannar floated Sublime o'er the mountaine Innisfail.” crowns D s of een hut my of tell The adaptinn of the green which has hanners of Irishmen in rebellion against English rule is sometimes attributed to Owen “the proudest flaz was horne” in tha early part of | the seventeenth century official or not, a green flag eorge’s cross in the canton was given as Ireland’s in an English | flaz book of 1886, and recognized heen seen in the Roa O'Neill. by whom Whethes with St some foreizn publications of date. For the eolor of the arans N hor Vrae state ed ‘merald lIsle | Ireland’s hiue In 1386 the arms granted 1o the Duke zolden the in Ire gland’s roval end. north and ade the fa any | earlier of free stripe lon the flaz we zo back to the same i1 1th¥s kept thinking was small There would come one Be‘l’imu now, as ddin through liFePuI, go',q I lngin to wonder 1f this is so! Ry greater thun all in Tater IMOLOY O-—OMU==ZD> | | lodge in | chatty, fiuent in | times and ism it Joc an: The HOW FPT STARTED Thi apparition | found in_Duteh |and in German, it is regarded as an A Yer it was i < introduced into our | The word is fathered by <pogelse <poge.” ke “pook | Africa Free State. House of Orange which an orange stripe to the old Netheriands | fag. When the William 1he Silent sailed from the Netherlands for England in 1685 tn become king of ntry. he carried with him the cdiand and his own arms with the motte: 1 will maintain the Protestant religion and the liberties gland.” At the end of that ren- the name of "Oranzemen’ was given to the Irish Protestants on ae- | count of their support of William of | Orange and his policies. At the end of another century Protestant re- | ligious societies of that name were organized, and while Orangemen were | found In 41l parts of Great Britain, | they were especially prominent in | Ulster, and orange became the recog- nized color of the north of Ireland The tricolor of green. white and arange, first used by the Republicans in the nineteenth century. took its plice officially o the vice-regal Dublin on December §, 1422 when the Union Jack was furled and the Irish Free State formally declared by proclamation of King George. son of Lessons in English AY W. L. GORDON. Words often misused: Don't say “T| shall e without something inter- | feres.” Say “unless somethinz inter. feres. Often mispronounced cent the verh on last noun an first svllable. Often mispelled: Capital (prinei pal: monev): Capitol (bullding). ‘monyms: Loquacious. talkative, garrulous. verbose. wordy. voluble. ech. Word study e a word three it is vours.” Let in- crease our vocabula mastering one word each day. Today's word Congenital: th. “He wasa congenital low-brow, shunned by _society.” Confine. Ac svilable. the us by Nothing else brings luster so quick and so safelyto silver, gold, brass or nickel. Buy a can today at your grocer, hardware, existing, or produced at | bors ne untry | practical joke | sible that have hee; me # p o sport o for lar sense if not 1o some practical an apparition | term ©guage through the the Cape of who sounding term of their And with the titions chara and | A | swept zhe a1l | husine: Afrer NEWTON. RY JEAN NEWT e which 1se for shzohiin where it spuk ror In English werican sl h Danish o find the We and the as specter ok milarly our nse o A zh v n in refer i elving found irs wax intn h Hope in rtated the Duteh ne disregard of su ic nf the new our national Jove of it is eusily comprehen wor should and be o people South | like | appre this spook up nism mistake 1o marry Rncr s Troxalind © ife ting up early in an office all {at night to a dinner herself There was 1 one's All that she miss those a0 much a was finding he when Sometimes | maving ' Dossessed her stimnlation of some k heckaned her resentment worked nr alind Nash, Aaving « stenographer to take o caharer finds thar Madeline Browni She shares an aparinent brotes from $rrong 0 Madeline omd ashs ). In the ning aroind wih o iy The first o Aas' i1 ed veantime "finsnl aen "tzying ke’ 1y oA ‘ Sorria position in Aix ofice and She' tells (i wha tmmedintely Triendshop. In inidance af alur in his syss Hoels CHAPTER XLV, Loneliness. more Rose was | Once in the 1 das which & There were no mor pretiie 1to the was nve it s In the n her have she felt nee d eater range hurt her he he waorld were re: She would I sensatin centr: v She lung and = v ever having tow over her. W hadn't she all heer he hs iven up her position de P disap (rm ng. g set and her mind roney. sees 0t iy Tich he rook: nz her ac past & owed hevéelf taxi fo her as= BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR |had? Nicky was only one man and there were plentv of others. Why hadn't she been strong enough to send him about his business, and keep on with her work at the Tivoli? Any- thing would be better than this siew stagnation. The doorbell tlingly, and she rang suddenly, star prang to her feet | Alwavs when the bell rang these days she thought of Nicky, During her first week's absence from the Tivoli he had used all kinds of ruses to ob entrance to the apartment. He sent expensive things at and then when she had returned he had! sent Nawers and candy several days now she had heard from him he wondered it it would not be bet to pretend to be out. She could another lonz siege with p= the possibility of to her. But then it and she was 30 + mager 1o talk to some one ranz again, and acting on she went to the door and it. Madeline and Jack Arm rong stood outside. t| For a moment Rosalind stood per | and stared. the next she Madeline were in each other's In thinking it over afterward. seemed to Rosalind that all the un. 4ty of the last few waeks, all neline the unhappiness had 1o the surface. She repress them, she no » do so, and held fast arms. she cried as if her eak. After a time er into the bedroom outside. Tt was sobbed out had first them gifts For ad he hel he | ce the Madeline ou stayed 1u knew how one, T'va nhappy 1t az he world and that I would work this thing out for my Oh, Madeline. I've been so miser- You can't imagine how awful heen And al happs Rose. vo vour I've been =n sn't seem right ant for jovous nature demands happt Oh s, and Rose laughed bhit s the girl who in spite of one and everything would h 1 wanted from life, = Cheap locked affort t mania he Always Delicious SALADA” TEA Has That Di (1114 g, the et [} " LAVOR Golden Crown Syrup. stinction - that’s the secret of Flavor of an unmistakable distinctive quality- rich, rare and tempting. A flavor of true Southern goodness that permeates, sweetens and nour- ishes---that brings memories of old time cooking and lingers long after meal time is over. The rich, full body of the purest syrups-- syrups that are just nat- urally good, skillfully blended in a way to create flavor---flavor that adds new joy to such old time fav- orites as hot cakes, waffles, to cook- ing and baking. STEUART, SON & CO., BALTIMORE, MD. i ——— " T (OLDE NCRr Oy