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WOMAN’S PAGE. Three Tones Are Better Than Two BY MARY MARSHALL. p Mrs. G. S. writes: “My welgh- It is a simple enot rick to com- | color—three shades of brown, threel Yot (0 PE KIS hlrnl{ .:“db’;m;l':l bine two colors agrecably. | tones of blue or a trio of grgys.” Some. | 80 8% FIIICE B0, BIEY SO0 Bon ) And interesting can thus be|!iMmes the dressmakers “Y:‘““’_ ounces. Dou you think he has made a pained Tt Bt i o mre g b€ | the same device. A wood-brown [S6o0: GeERIiTs i tses vty oL A is @ e difficult | skirt, very short and trim, is worn|%000 ERINY e nurses every four with a_jumper of champagne-colored | RS 108 10 (iniies at both breasts kasha that has bands about the bot tom the ind blue checked crepe de chine. the field of color: in the frocks and late Winter and Spring (Copyright, 19" MENU FOR A DAY. BRE AKE. Sliced Banana Cereal with Fish Cakes Corn Cakes. Dry Hot Coffee LUNCHIEON Deviled Lamb's Kidneys Pear Sala Hermits. DINNE Tomato Bisque Hamburg Roast Browned Potatoes imed Cauliflower Lettuce and Pimetno Salad Prune Whip CORN CAKE . One cup cornmeal, one cup flour two teaspoons baking X swder, three-fourths teaspoon salt, one-third cup sugar. Beat | one’ egg until light, add two r [ tablespoons melted butter or Arippin Mix well and add | one ¢ milk Unite mixtures, | i beat until smooth and bake in | buttered, shallow pan 20 min S utes LAMBS' KIDNF 25 Scald six lambs’ kidneys and after removing skins, cut in halves. Melt three tablespoons bacon fat, add kidneys and one NAVY BLU slice onion finely chopped and GRAY CONS cooked 5 minutes, then skim out TRIO OF THIS meat and place on heated dish. COAT AND SKIR Blend three tablespoons flour BLUE KASHA ARE TR with hot fat, stir in slowly one WITH BANDS OF GRAY, and one-halt cups brown stock, THE BLOUSE 1S O cook until smooth, season with BLUE AND GRAY CHE two teaspoons table souce, FINISHED WITH A COLLAI one te \ mustard, dash ¢ AND OF GRAY venne and salt to taste, then Kidneys, and when well ted serve with horder of + proportion mashed potito or boiled rice obtain s 5 Al heinies PRUNE WHIF eolor effects are all ohvious arrange.| | Cook two cups prunes until ments—iike the red. white and blue tender and press through sieve. of Old Glory the Dblack. red and B and one- rreen of the German standard. Tr half cup sugar. one tablespoon These effects are zood and lemon juice. one-half teaspoon thers is more color charm in salt. Carefully fold in prune of thre. o< than in those ut pulp. pile lightly on buttered 1wo. baking dish and bake 30 min- This Winter the milliners have heen utes in moderate oven. Serve making use of the charm that lies in with whipped cream the mes of th 12. The act of scattering drops of a 1 liquid. B. Concerninz. | Atmosphere. 6. Itecess. Decay. 10. Cuckoo. . Small beds. stable period Bodies of water. Note of the sc: e Note of the scale. 16. Foremost }28. A plant. 18. Bind 2. Born. 19. Fabulous bird. 5 1300 Collection of facts. 20. Inhabitants of an ancient region | 31. Beneath. of Palestine 132] Wind instrument. Thus. t Seize and devour, Printer’s measure. . Female sheep. Preposition Wrath. Three-toed sloth | A hypothetical force. Nichoias. . Negative. 33, Ocean { 5 g 4. Tavern ! 26 Astutic shrub | Cranberry Roly-Poly. D B | A rather short biscuit dough should 41. A musical composition for the be rolled out ‘half an inch thick and Rl | spread with a layer of chopped cran- el { berries and granulated sugar. Roll Weird { this up, lay on a buttered plate, steam 16 “Perd | for 40 minutes, then place in the oven T Arlavine cara | for 10 minutes to dry off. With this i roly-poly either hard or soft sauce Down. | may be served. 1. Mentally sound. | 5 2. Girl's name. i 3. View | Banana Toast. e el For nu toast make a hot sauce S ! with one pint .q' h.)r.um: wate gt et i tablespoonful each of cornstarch and e butter, one-third cupful of sugar and e sotiits | one-quarter teaspoonful of salt. Boil i Apinits: until ¢ wld four bananas rubbed through a 'sieve, stir and boil a min- ute longer, then pour over thin, crisp toast ‘The positive relief for SEA, TRAIN AND CAR Sicknes. Stops the nauses at [ years in use. ffs and a deep V neck of he woodbrown kasha and a lighter | 1% Tain” “Bo’ vou know what ihe use of three colors or two tones | 1€ takes one good nap during the day O O oy Thus |and then doesn't go to sleep until 12 we may have mray. navy blue and a |4t night. A lizhter blue—or beige, navy and blue.} o EWer - e Mlue o b »'some.| Since the baby has made a gain i e e ether. ““The | of 5 ounces or more for eight weeks sketch shows an interesting blending | there seems no reason to think he of navy blue kasha with bands of | 1Sn't getting enough to eat. Why not Kusi worn with a4 blouse of| cut down the nursing to five minutes TTHE EVENING S8TAR, WASHINGTON, Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEY ER ELDRED. seems to be in distress. He strains nd gets red in the face and cries out at each breast”. The extra 5 min- utes may be causing the child just discomfort and gas. At least it is worth a trial. A child can sometimes get all the nourishment he needs in 5 minutes of strong nursing. It de- pends, of course, on the child and the mother’s milk supply. We have gone a long ways past the days when a child was nursed for 20 minutes or s0. Stop nursing him for long enough to change Ms position; put him up next to your shoulder and pat up the gas. Have you ever tried to take a long drink, even of water, in one con- tinual swallow until vou felt as if vou would literally pop? Give the child a chance to breathe and *belch” a bit and he will be more comfortable and nurse more nearly what he needs, rather than stopping because he liter- ally can’t swallow another drop. A Low Weight. M R. N. R: A 9-month- old baby, weighing only 16 pounds is at least 3 pounds under weight for his age: and, according to | her height of 29 inches, she should weigh 21 pounds. She is unusually | tall. The five ounces of milk five | times daily is not sufficient for her needs now, and the best way to in crease her weight is by a judiclous increase In the amount of milk given daily, some more sugar in the for- muia (she needs it, being of such a low weight) and other foods added. such as cereal, orange and prune juice and vegetable: Evidently vou | kive her too small quantities of food | 7o nourish her materially. She should be weaned now, and when you wean her has nothing whatever to do with the condition of the breasts after ward: or the success of the weaning D. C, MONDAY, FEBRUJARY 15, 1926. FEATUR ES. 31 MeNaught Syndies: BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. ‘What Kind of Bath Towel? Mighty few women store and say, “Wrap up a bath towel.” We all like to choose a bath towel that is of a substantial weav but our inclinations vary over que: tions of pattern and color and price. Men are apt to prefer a slightly harsh surface, women a %oft, cottony sur- face, and then there is more differ- ence about lengths. The point is that selecting a bath towel requires consideration. Some women are dead set about ' one point, and that is that they pre- fer a plain material. They say that they'd rather have the value in the towel than in the trimmings. Yet about as many women find both value and good appearance in towels that are ribbed, patterned or bordered. There is no doubt that a pattern or fancy border adds to the cost, but it is also certain that it makes a towel more attractive. No matter what the surface of a towel 1s, it shouldn’t be so rough that it 1s downright harsh. Some towels are so harsh that they will raise a welt if you rub vigorously. On the other hand, some towels are su soft that they don’t leave the skin with even a healthy glow. Terry cloth has a good texture for face and hand towels because it stimulates the skin. Some women are quite fastidiou about the minute detalls of towel Borders and jacquard patterns must | | walk into a | Abraham Lincoln. Once a year we take another look at Lincoln just to help us keep a little | stralghter for the remainder of the | time. Looking at his kindl sorruvtw‘ ful face, I thought: “Lucky boy. Your mother and father stood clear and let | vou face life and take it for all it was worth. Nobody spared you. Nobo saved you. Nobody did you good. And vou fought a good fight and you kept the faith.” Lincoln had a hard time. We al-| ways hark back to the boyhood spent | in the wilderness. His father did not say, “Here, here, now. That ax is far | | But it is granted to few to wi You have guessed, weaning “in the sign” is just an lgnorant superstition By this Spring the child ought to be le to take whole milk, and warm- ing it is a matter of choice. Warm milk is more soothing and perhaps it 18 a little more quickly digested. I really don’t think the baby is natu- Rosalind Nash gives up her job as rally small: in fact, T think she is| Alenographer to take 4 position inacaba rer. She refuses Jack Armstrong's ofer of ‘marriage because he s poor. ond after ke has been at the Tivoli a while she begins 10 go ahout with a il set " 1n” the Jack Vaieline Browning, men veith Rosalind 1 Menographers. | Rosalind tries o make up her mind to marry Nicky Blake for is “money. but when he invults her by saying that ahe is weilling 1o 4o anyihs Tor money. “she realizes horw she h cheapened herserr. Nhelearns. (o0 th nen Judge Mer hecause ahe holds u posi Tion in @ cabaret. and 1hen Alien Norris a lawyer whow she hax mel at ine Tivoli. offers her a position in hix office she accepls. In the meantime Jack has inherited money ‘and’ axis Modeline 10 marry him. They leave for Europe. and Howalind realizes that her ideax have heen all iwrong and that love is the only worth tchile. " Unexpectedly, “she ers that she has falien in love vcith an extraordinari] Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLE CHAPTER XLIX. Isabel. Bewildered by the queer turn things had taken, and bitterly as her feelings for Allen Norris, ltosa- lind was uncertain how to proceed. She felt that she could not remain in his office any longer. She simply b could not go on seeing him every da {hearing his voice, learning to care for “I like home best. where it ain’t | him more and more, and r ing all bad manners it 1 sop up sirup with | the while his utter indifference to her. my bread.” She decided to tell him that she was (Copyright. 1926.) | 8oing to leave, that she had been | offered another position, one that paid | more money. If she left, she would [at least be preserving her pride. would never know the truth; he would never even suspect. She would have gone to him fmme- diately, even with the knowledge that 5 she had no money ahead and no posi- Tomorrow's planetary aspects &re o, in view, if she had not been afraid variable. In the morning they are |y bt i o e A Suppose negative and register nothing Aisync- | pe asked her where she was going. tve. In the afternoon they are ad-|( oyl she avold answering him? Could verse, while after sunset they undergo | syotr he 4ITH SERW T iR L wer a very sudden change and become de | ;g trust to luck that he would never What Tomorrow Means to You BY MARY BLAKE. cidedly favorable, accompanied by | o Co Y 5 vibrations both stimulating and en-|“'gpe was scated at her desk one couraging. During the day only rou-|aeiernoon, busy with her thoughts, tine duties should engage your atten- tion, and you should center all your afforts on the avoidance of impulsive when the door opened and a woman | entered. She was a very beautiful { woman, tall and with very pale gold speech or actions. In the evening ¥ou | pajr. sShe was faultlessly dressed, but can safely surrender vourself to the | yu©o 508 WO ST A8y Calind and emotions that you will experience. as | [(LC4 it My, Norris were in her lips Do not 1 af- happiness_can. result. te to manifest vour love fection for the one of vour choice! hoy bhorn tomorrow will he a ] nger to all sickness during infancy | Norris will see vou. Will you give me and this happy condition will be main- | SO V02 FIE G0 talned Jater on unless accidant Inter-|* Thig time the woman laughed, and | parted prettily and her blue eyes re. mained cold. Rosalind stood up. st a. moment and T'll see if Mr. venes. A girl will not be quite & for-| yomehow the souna was lacking in tunate. She will be weak and ailing as | pint! a baby and wlill not completely out- “Oh, T think he’ll see me. If He is grow her physical disabilities until in, I'll go right into his office, You just prior to tha attainment of woman- | needn't bother to tell him. { hood. In disposition both boy and girl | “ghe swung across the office and will be frank and aboveboard. Their thirst for all sorts of knowledge will be abnormal and at times disconcert- ing to their elders. They promise to be fairly amenablo, diligent and their natures will be very affectionate. If tomorrow is your birthday vou are destined to be a leader, if you know { how to take full advantage of your opportunities. Above all things on’ this earth vou cherish your integrity and honor and are careful and conscien- tious in all that you do. Your con- science, which is always on the job, is your constant mentor. “Puzzlicks” PuzzleLimericks There was a young lady named Who swam out to sea for u —: When she started to —3— And kept going —4—, “My word,” she cried out, “ain’t it 1. Proper name meaning a large, open space. On the whole, the signs denote that Frolic. vou should ba a very deilghtful sort Suffocation due to water, of person, with excellent taste, fond| 3. Under. Lacking light. (NOTE—To discover what the young lady said—and why—complete the lim- erick by placing the right words, indi- cated by the numbers, in the corre- sponding spaces. The answer and an- other “Puzzlick” will appear tomor- row.) of art and the finer things of life, and vour love—which is wholehearted and enduring—is a treasure worth having. You exercise at all times remarkable self-control and never intentionally do or say anything to hurt another’s sensibilities. In vour just anger, how- ever, you are scathing. ‘Well known persons born on that date are: Henry Wilson, statesman: Henry Adams, educator and historian: Henry Watterson. journalist: George E. Bissell, sculptor: George Kennan, journalist’ and author: George Har- vey, former Ambassador to England. (Covyright. 1926.) Saturday’s “Puzzlick.” A giddy yvoung fellow of Sparta To headaches had long been a martyr, Till his wife, so they say, Took his latchkey away. He was smart, but the smarter. lady was Ansu meal that’s ready in a few minutes. Gorton’s famous “No Bones” Cod Fish mixed with boiled potato— .nothingtodobutfry! And what delicious flavor! FREE BOOKLET: “Deep Sea Recipes® m-@ Gorton-Pew Fisherics, Gloucestar, Mass, | R 'S Oiig 1, { He | amed of | | [ BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR BY LEE PAPE. | opened the door leading to the inner room. Rosalind, looking after her, Z ‘tie was wawk. | of the family and lighten it as far as | could see Allen seated at his desk, the | e and my cuzzin Artie was wawk-| o "4y hyg' power. The family looked ubiquitous cigar in his fingers, He |ing along jest wawking along, and we| 14 him to help, not to be helped. looked up from his pape at the inter stopped in frunt of chewing gum I wonder what would have hap- ruption and a smile spread over his | slot machine feelin for ourselfs | Dened to him if he had been sheltered face. Instantly he rose to his feet and and helped and given “advantages. it rarwara { on account of not ‘Isabel.” he said warmly, “this is a | surprise.” Then he stooped and kissed | | her. | werk, Rosalind’s heart leaped suffocatinsly and her hands clenched. She stood perfectly still, staring into the inner office until Allen came forward, and without even a glance in her direction closed the door After a time Rosalind dropped into her seat and sat staring into space. Mer vivid imagination was picturing the scene behind that closed door, Strange that she had never thought of in it, and Artie sed, How abou and then maybe come out and give u the m a peece. Meening the cigar store m | had the slot machine outside sed, Well I wouldent axually s: 4 cent in be steeling, Artie sed. All we | our hands as if we was t | the cent o down, he se ng led Isabel. hated her because Allen | ed Isab . 1 and he sed. Wich slot did yYou put{the hairs come back and have to be Norri loved her, hated her because | yvoup cent in? removed a second time: the other way she was beautiful and because she Us still not saying enything, and the |only about 10 per cent return. And smiled with her lips and not with her | man sed, Well, d you know wich | there is no danger of marking the | eye slot? Theres or of them, it must | skin if the work is done by a skilled | After an unconscionably long time pr—— LITTLE BENNY ing a cent to put as if we put a cent in and it wouldent G wizz neither would I. that would is stand heer and hit the sides with don’t haff t another woman in Allen Norris® life. | _Sure. thats rite, G, we Unwanted Hairs. | She knew., of course, that he was not | Sa¥ @ werd, jest hit,'I sed. i ] [ mrried. and she hed somehow mever | Wich we' started to do, and pritty| There are several ways of removing Bietured him engaged. THer own ita. | €0on the man came running out say- | superfluous hairs from the face. One, o e s o Hay, Liy off, cut that out, 1 have | of course, is by going to an electric: worse by the knowledge that he cared enufr Huhhlx-» with that bum achine | needle specinlist and having them Py Rt hut perhAps at this | Without having wit and battery [Kkilled, either singly by the one-needle | moment the woman he loved was in | COmmitted on it _ process (now out of date, but still used | WiEiarins. | Being a long man with short hair, |in small shops) or 10 or so at a time o and me’and Artie est stood there look: | by the multiple needle process. This | . For the first time in her life Rosi- | jng at him without saying enything on |is not only quicker but better. The lind felt hate. She hated this woman | account of not wunting to tell a lie, | first way, about 15 or 25 per cent of of bin one or the other, he sed. 00 sharp for you. That tree is too thick and knotty. That load is too heavy for you. Let me do it.”" Luckily for Abe they were far too husy keeping alive to do anything of | the kind. Abe had to lift his end of the load and carry it or it would not be carried. He must share his burden Of course, he would have been a big | man just the same. But he would have been a big man just the same. But he would have been different. He would not have had the hand-to-hand acquaintance with the stern facts of pioneer living, and the flavor of his understanding and sympathy would have been different. t acting nan will an that , and 1 ay 1 put that would be lying. haff to to make operator, because the needles arg so | WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BEAUTY CHATS match the other thinzs Some women associate blus with cleanliness, and for that reason | blue 18 a favorite color on towels | Red suggests glowing health, and vellow suggests sunlight, so they a in_color and white lso favorites. Some economical shoppers buy toweling by the yard and make their own borders and trimming. For the bath u Turkish towel is almost universally used nowadays There is little which is more lux | urlous than a large Turkish towel with a close, firm weave. Such a towel should be strongly made at the ends so that it can be drawu the body with vigorous puils. Most towels wear out first at the ends. Many people prefer several small towels to one large one because this makes laundry work easier. Others prefer small towels because it is pos sible to have them fresh oftener. size of a towel will depend upon personal taste in the matt 3 tacllitles for laundering and the needs of vour household. Of course, a lur Turkish towel is too large an a for a child to manipulate, but adults usually favor the large, roomy towel when ‘economy permits it. You will not be one of those women who simply ask fo if homey thinge count at all. Imagine getting home with “just a towel and finding that it has an awful color hideous border and a surface that makes your skin “creep’’! few el Our Children—By. Angelo Patri He would not have suffered so much perhaps. He would have lovked more like the Presidents who came after him, strong, dignified, powerful, keen- ly intelligent and effective. But the beauty of the spirit, purified as by fire, would not have shone throu; hose, benevolent eves; the proud hum the man acquainted with grief not have etched itself in the line: his worn face. It is, I know, given to few to wield the power of the spirit of a Lincoln. he power of spirit within themselves. For the growth of a spirit is a lonely growth, and who is allowed to be lone- 1y now? Who is brave enough to suf fer in silerice? Who is brave enough to allow youth to bear the pain of its own growth? Youth has to battle for the right to suffer, and rarely has it the insight to do so. It is not that I think vouth needs no help. It needs all it can get, for each generation fights a flercer battle than the one before. But it is that I object to laying hands on the strug- gling spirit of yvouth, robbing it of its struggle, robbing it of its spiritual trial and then blaming it for failure. My son thought he could go to school on the street cars, but I bought ¥ of him a car. Why not? He might just as well have it. What's the money for?” Lincoln would have walked. And when he owned a car it would have been one he had earned. That's the idea. Lincoln earned his life. His people let him alone to do it and he did. BY EDNA KENT FORBES. which wears it off. would irritate sensitive skins, would recommend bleaching it with either full-strength peroxide or a half- and-half mixture of peroxide and am- I'm afraid this so 1 monia. This is strong enough to dis- courage the growth of fuzz. If it is o strong that it irritates the skin, use it only once or twice a week and rub the skin nightly with cleansing gream, which cannot possibly grow afr. Jennie J. G.—If you insist upon dyeing your hair, you should go to a professional, as home dyeing is rarely successful. Your friends are correct in saying there is often the risk that |a look of triumph in those cold { sales of carcass beef in_Washington. D. or so it seemed to Rosalind, the door | I dont remember, Artie sed. very fine. Neither is the process |chemicals in the dyes will dry out th opened and the woman come out, fol- | Nefther do I, I sed. Being the truth | painful. natural olls and bring about scaly lowed by Allen. He carried his coat | on account of us not having enything! The home treatment is to use |troubl This could even amount to and hat, and was obviously going out | to remember, and the man sed, For!weezers. But first touch the spot |injury to the roots of the hair so there with her, perhaps to tea somewhere. | They would sit at a tiny table while soft ‘music played, she would smile at | your names. him, and perhaps beneath the table | And he went back to his store and hix hand would reach and find hers. | me and Artle kepp on going feeling Again Rosalind felt the thrill of | werse insted of better. Allen’s warm fingers as they had touched hers, and a passion of revolt | swept over her. Then she realized | that Allen was speaking to her; he | was giving her directions. T won't be back this afternoon,” he was saving, and there was a smile on | he love of Mud wat a dum cuple of kids, go on home before you fargat where the hair grows out with a bit of cotton wet with peroxide of hydro- gen, then give the hair a quick jerk in the sdme direction it grows (hairs seem to grow out sideways sometimes rather than straight out from the skin), then once more touch the place with peroxide. This serve a double purpose—it makes the spot antiseptic, s0 no germ can lodge in the half- empty follicle from which the hair grew, and if there is another hair germinating in that follicle it comes in much lighter in color. Some of the fuzz that grows above would be no recovery, However, vou may have unusually fine vitality and be able to stand the test, at jeast for the experiment, although it is not at all advisable. Man Travelers Complain. The Ulster branch of the British As- sociation of Commercial Travélers re- jected a proposal that women be ad mitted to their association. One mem- ber declared that woman travelers ab- the mouth or on the sides of the face | Sorbed storekeepers’ attention o much can be pulled out with tweezers, or it | that the man travelers, following can be rubbed with a pumice stone, them. missed their trains. Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. 3 looked from him to the | ‘Words ofien mis woman and fancied that she detected | Setting hen. Gt A moment later thev had gone, || Often mispronounced: Vandeville, Itosalind could hear them talking and | 'roneunced vod-vil, the o as in “no, ughing as they waited for the ele. | 1 4% In "ill e e Then the daned foF tho ele. | “Often misspelied: Emigrate (to move e ah 1mvr\ note e and one m; immigrate (to B g move into). note | and two m" onsrisht e 5 s Synonyms: Economy, — : S thrift inued in tomorrow’s Star,) Word _stud. i times and it crease our v one word each Ostracism or fava of ostr ir used: Don't say “a “A sitting hen” is cor- 1926.) frugality, “Use a word three ' Let us in- by mastering Today's word: exclusion from Intercourse . '“She was afraid of the wall cism that these people were y to erect about her. 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