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WOMAN’S PA GE FLAGSTAFFS OF WASHINGTON BY JENNY GIRTON WALKER. T [l t Flag of the Republic of Austria. flac has three horizontal tripes of am ax Which bears established by constitution of the 21, 1921, stripes rom the 3. During a bat- ns that year Duke and his brother all their rs. Leopold took Lis white sca ash and holding its center tightly in his hand, dipped the cloth in the blood of the battlefield. The part he held so closely in his hand remained white. He then used the sash as a banner inscribed, *Aus- tria is the servant of Jesus Christ.” The courage of his followers was re- newed and the Saracens routed. As a token of this tory, the council of nobles gave Leopold for a coat of arms a red shicld divided by a “fes§” or sash of white. This was the This is a article 6 ¢ Republic of but the new the ustria, Octobe ry which fixed tb tie with the Sar Leopold 11 of At same Leopold who put the Lion Hearted in tion for a previous in- trian’s banner. Rich- re the honor of tak- ‘ng the fortress of Acre with any of the crusaders except Philip of France, ind tore Leopold’s banner from the walls, trampling it under foot. ard would In modern times the red and white stripes formed the field of the Austro- Hungarian ensign, and of Austria's | half of the dual monarchy's merchant flag. After the separation of the two kingdoms the Austrian republic re- tained the red and white stripes of the merchant flag. The yellow and black of the old imperial flags were discarded, as well as the double-headed eagle of the coat-of-arms. This eagle wore an imperial crown and carried in one claw a sword and scepter and in the other the orb which denoted soverelgnty. The present coat-of-arms of the Re- public of Austria, which may be secn over the doorway of the legation, 1851 Wyoming avenue, also displays an eagle, but it has only one head. Its rown is called a “mural” crown, which symbolizes civic institutions rather than monarchical, and its claws hold the emblems of industry, a golden hammer and a sickle. Upon the eagle's breast is a small shield charged ‘with the colors of the flag. ember 12, 1918, that the Provisional clared a republic of Austria. one of the days upon which the flag is displayed, and in common with the flags of other nations, it is also dis- played upon the principal holidays of the United States. (Copyright. 1926.) DAUGHTERS OF TODAY BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR Martha Dennison at 31 ‘aces the fact xar her hushand has driffed away from Jer, as el as her (o chidren, Arthur end No'aie' She ‘meets an attractiva fucheor.’ Perry Macdonald, and accep o i u.ten fons twi.hout rea izing the dan- attnchment. Perry meets Yacalie and aler sees her dining wi'h Jucien Bart'ett, a married man. bro hir Ar:hur aiso see her, v h he himse'f is &nown chorus gir is little he can siy to Ris s CHAPTER XVI. Natalie and Lucien. fact that Natalie n girl, with all the he was. for all ture. Like most flippancy and e her real lack of he had discovered of knowledge could be assuming th It worked st people, who retaliated by 'n 3 nd hard- ger in such an In spite of the K ry mod boiled, lacking words on their xhould us: n emotion, »s that no nice girl e was just a very did not understand she prattled about in little way, but she talked because the other girls did. and not to be one of the crowd would tra ize her. Aud so she swallowed her compune- tions at things she saw and didn’t like, as she had, for Instance, at the Banning house party. that wi She had com pon Mabel Banning 1d tightly in an was not her husband. Mabel had 1 only six months, and nuinely shocked. Of course she had pretended to take it all as a 1 reality the t her subco she had 2 tha, and ha time. But thing pression o1 were happen wonder, then, ing of He amu much. him? Tk made no other h: Iy no one co than Mart It wa kind of fous mind. That was why nost biurted it out to Mai I stopped herself just in that made their im- , and such things all the while. Small that she thought noth- ging Lucien Bartlett. she liked him very v not be friends with that he was married Even her own friends, and certain- d he more circumspect enough the same that Martha had ne of the greatest advantages of hingle-hobs is htat people nowadays 1dge a girl by the condition of —develop and kold its glori- ous freshness until youth is but o mem~ its soft, smooth beauty over the years to come. Check the wrinkles and flabbiness and keep the appearance of youth with you always thru Gouraups = ORIENTAL CREAM Mads in White - Flesh - Rachel Send 10c, for Trial Size Ford. T. Hopkins & Son. New York wtter of course, but in | had gone deep into | applied to her friendship with Perry. Only in Natalie's case there was more danger, both because of her youth, and because she did not live as shelter. ed a Iffe as her mother. On this even.ng in particular she and Luclen were going on to the theater. Natalie felt exhilarated, in high spirits, as though something gor- geous were about to happen to her, and the gayety of her youthful enthu- siasm drew Lucien Bartlett like a magnet. He was already more than half in love with her, but something, some in- herent fineness in his nature, had kept him this far from attempting any loev making. There were times when in spite of her flippancy, her pert naughtiness, she seemed very young, hardly more than a little girl. Tonight, however, there was some- thing different about her, there was a challenge in her manner. It was almost as if she had suddenly grown up and wanted to make him aware d with | of the fact. Of course Natalle had flirted before, and she had been Kkissed, too, many times. But she had never before felt | quite as she did tonight, possessed as she was by a restlessness, a feverish | excitement that she could not under- | stana. Was it because she’cared too much for Lucien Bartlett? Was that | the reason? And at that thought she | | | | turned to look at him. His rather strong features were out- ned against the square of window. She loved his face, it was so power- ful, a little like her father’s and yet not so stern. She liked. too, the way his halr was tinged with gray. Those little silver hairs at his temples were fascinating, and then the tenderness in his eyes when he smiled at her. He turned toward her now, and in. voluntarily she caught her breath. He was looking at her, but she could not see his expresion in the darkness of the taxi. A silence had fallen be- tween them, a silence that was some- how important because it ~jemed to be drawing them together. (Continued in Tomorrow’s Star.) HOW IT STARTED BY JEAN NEWTON. ““Second Nature.” “Practice speaking with your breath controlled until it becomes second na- ture,” a teacher of voicé culture in- structed her class. And the expression “second nature” is one that we use every day with the very widest appli- cation, when we mean hablitual, natu- ral. In speaking of any quality or habit that has become 8o natural with us that it is a very part of us we say it is “second nature.” The implication is, of course, that it is an attribute that has been acquired through habit or training. And it was in this sense that the expression had its origin. “Second nature” comes to us from the wisdom of the ancients, appear- ing in No. 18 of Plutarc a for the Preservation of Health,’ we find: “Custom 1s almost a second nature.” Fifteen centuries later Montaigne, the famous French essayist, who was a student of Plutarch, said in the third book of his Essays, Chapter 10, that “Habit is second nature.” So we find the apt expression *‘sec- ond nature” to be a survival of clas- sic wisdom taking its place as a popu- lar phrase in modern speech! ‘where MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST Oranges Wheat Cereal with Cream Scrambled Eggs, Tomato Sauce Hashed Browned Potatoes Rasin Bran Muffins Orange Marmarlade Coffee. CHEON Oyster Stew Crackers Tt Slngerreads ot n| %lpud Cream Tea. DINNER Cream of Spinach Sou Broiled Halibut, Tartare Sauce Delmonico Potatoes Stewed Tomatoes Romaine Salad, French Dressing Banana Pudding Coffee. e RAISIN BRAN MUFFINS Two cups coarse unsifted bran, one cup flour, one tea- spoon baking soda, half tea- spoon salt, one egg, half cup molasses, one cup sour milk, half cup raisins. Do not have batter too stiff or yet too soft. Bake 20 minutes in moderate oven. These biscuits have such a medicinal value that they should be more generally used. They are delicious. GINGERGREAD Cream half cup butter, add half cup sugar and one beaten egg, half cup sour milk and one cup molasses beaten together and added to mixture, Then prepare two cups flour with one teaspoen soda and one tea- spoon ginger and beat it in gradually. Bake in_ moderate oven and serve hot with whipped cream. SPINACH SOUP To use left-over spinach, make a cream soup, which is very palatable. The simplest way is to scald milk with one small onion in it, bringing it Just to boiling point, but being careful not to scorch it. Salt and pepper as seasoning. If spinach Nas not been pulped, run through sieve and add milk, removing onfon. The milk stock may be thickened, as in making a thin white sauce, and will be richer if egg yolk is stirred in before adding spinach and cayenne and nut- meg seasoning. Your Baby and Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. Restless, Nervous Child. Mrsa. A. F. K. writes: “I am worried about my 6-year-old boy. He is very restless nights and talks and shouts in his sleep about things he has done during the day. He weighs nearly 45 pounds and is very thin, but he has no appetite. What would you sug- gest?” Answer. I should pay a lot of attention to what he is getting to eat, and would see that he ate three good meals a day which are something like this in content: Toast, cereal, stewed fruit, or orange or grapefruit, and coooa for breakfast ‘ If he comes home from school at noon give him one hot dish (eggs, leftover meat), one green vegeta- ble and a simple dessert with a glass of milk. When he comes home from school in the afternoon give him an- other glass of milk and a plece of bread and jelly and make him lle down for at least a half hour. Stay with him, and even if he doesan’t sleep maks him rest, Let him play then un- til or 6, bring him in the house, make him sit down and be qulet for at least 15 minutes before he eats his dinner. A hot dinner of potato, meat, one green vegetable, bread and butter and some milk dessert, stewed fruit or a cereal pudding of some kind or gelatin. See that he eats it, and one- half hour after his dinner he should go to bed. Tf you find this heavy meal at night still makes for restlessness, give a simpler meal at night and give the child more to eat at the noon meal Thess rest periods seem trivial, but they act like magic in making a child better able to digest and aseimilate his food Mrs. G. L.: The kernel back of the baby's ear fs an enlarged lymph gland. Do nothing about it unless it becomes swollen and sore. Then take the child to a doctor and follow his advice Mrs. G, F. D.: The child should be examined by a physiclan. Perhaps more water dally will do away with the puffiness, but this is hardly a mat- ter for me to give advice upon. It comes under the province of a physi- clan. There is nothing much can be done about the baby's eye watering. It it {s weak it will have to be cor- rected later by glasses. Use a wash of one teaspoon salt in one pint of bolled water, instead of any other treatment for the eyes, for the present. Hot Sandwiches. Hot toast sandwiches are a good way to use up leftovers. Hegre are a few good combinations* Minced lamb and minced carrots and peas with a brown mint sauce or_a tomato sauce. Minced veal with crisp bacon and creamed spinach, or ordinary spinach with a brown sauce. Creamed egg sandwich with spinach ules | or asparagus tips, with or without salmion, or other fish, with peas or celery in cream sauce. P Although he was {njured when the taxicab carrying him to a funeral broks an axle and ran baciward dow= a hill, Rev. W. Legerton of Eng- lan¢ insisted on going to the cemetery to ¢ Tclate. COFFE The background of the Nation’s breakfast table, Dwinell-Wright Co, pom th, MODE MINIATURES Hve you not éften wondered what new idea could possibly be concelved of next and then when sudh a feat was accomplished the idea seemed simple enough? ere 1s just such an ingenious con- eeption—driving gloves with a red faceted stone inserted in the heavy leather of the left hand for signalling at night time. The stone itself. be- comes illuminated by the rays from the headlights of care behind. Another carefully designed pair have straps on the back of the wrists where they cannot Interfere with dariving. MARGETTE. e The largest concrete lined canal in the world, being 84 miles long, is being constructed for irrigation purposes in India. ‘The shape of the shoulders {s some- thing beyond vour control, but their development is up to you. If they are underdeveloped, you can them broader and better looking, if they are bent you can straighten them; if they are thin you can make them round and soft and much more attractive for those times when you don evening dress. It will be mostly by exercise. If you can possibly get a home gymnasium outfit, do so. You can buy quite Inexpensive ones and they are worth every cent they cost. Particulanly, itry to get a set of weights and pulleys ‘for arm exercise. These usually con- sist of a board to screw against a wall, two weights, which can be made heavier by piling on extra pounds of iron, ropes from them to two pulleys and handles to hold by. Some are more elaborate, 80 you can pull no only toward you, but outward, de veloping still more muscles. If you can't buy such an outfit, de- velop your shoulders by standing be fore a mirror, ho'ding the hands on* before you, clenched into fists. Draw muscles as thouzh v u were p'i 2 on weights. Hold them out sidewise shoulder level and pull back the same way. Hold the arms out, with the fingers pointing and not clenched, be- fore you, swing the arms around and as far back-as you can make them g0, keeping them always on a level with the shoulders. Keep the head up as you do these exercises. They de- velop the shoulders, the chest and the arms themselve: For the rest, deep breathing when French Pve l:,amd French girls are pretty. ‘women k‘o‘en their youth, have demanded youth and and French scientists met their made many trips to France zolhh:r;.m h“fl‘:’nd best that she ofters. 1 gained my beauty as a girl in that. ":a ol“h:"n kept my beauty 0 o' offer nm:‘ naips to all—the “’h‘n‘u combined 62 ingredients these four preparations. All toilet counters supply them. And I will ly send you one to try if you will mail the coupon. My Youth Cream Nearly all And French A t complexion shows what e can da The cost 18 60c Also in 85c tubes. My Facial Youth uld' clun:er 1 besuty experts now advise this formula, 2 por for. -is & Prance. cost is 76c. ‘White Youth Clay ew type clay, refined and Vastly different from the clays so many have emq)‘i"' t nsm'ses (ae skin of all t clegs and mars it. moves the cause of blackheads and SPECIAL: - See Miss ‘week 14. Matinee for Seuks 5% 435 tn advance.—Ad in Beauty how they get it Edna Wallace Hopper blemishes. Brings a rosy afterglow which amazes and delights. ‘om- lines and wrinkles; reduces en- la: pores. o gir) or woman'can afford to omit it. It multiplies beauty, White Youth Ch{‘costu 50c and § ] ly Hair Y out The cause ot my luxuriant hair, thick and silky, finer far than 40 years ago. I have never had falling hair, dandruff or a touch of gray. A ‘concentrated product combining many ingredients. I apply it with an uye-drngper directly to the salp to tone and stimulate. No man or woman will omit it when they see what Hair Youth does. The cost is 60c and $1, with eye-dropper. My Face Powders They are supreme creations. No face powders you have used can compare. Mine are exquisite. They comeé in two types—one a heavy, clingi: cold cream powder, in square box, $1. 1 like that best. The other s light and fluffy, in round box, 50c. All toilet counters supply my beauty helps. Send the coupon and I will mail you & sample of any one you choose. Also my ity Book. pupsln i e T ace Hopper, Lot oo A Pacial Youth [ Hair Youth White Youth Clay O Youth Cream For hmdl;a‘f de. FI‘L’I ithout post: !0: ws il incii “Withou Packing chrges, Free sample of eieher [J¥outh Cream Powder or [JFace Powder ‘White—] sh— Brunette (oot 1ina and shade' desired) person, Earle Theater, Wi only Friday morning, BEAUTY CHATS make | FEATURES. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. How to Get the Bile Out. A cholagogue, according to Webster, 18 an agent which promotes the dis- charge of bile from the system. There it is again—the system. What the infernal reglon is the sys- tem? Theodore Roosevelt felt great contempt for weasel words, words which he sald suck the meaning out of what a man s saying. Now &ys- tem fn itself is an honest, straight- forward word, but in the context Web- ster gives it the word means anything you like. It implies, if you like, that bile is rather a bad thing which must be gotten out of the body somehow. In truth, bile is a secretion which serves good use in digestion. It is highly improbable that the liver ever produces too much bile, an excess of the quantity required for normal intestinal digestion. The quaint popular fancy, which some popular physiclans still encourage, that when one's liver forms too much bile one suffers a “bilious attack,” is not to be seriously considered. It | may have been a good general work- ing principle in the good old days of Spring tonics and blood purifiers. | On the other hand, if vou Insist billousness does happen, and that cal- omel and other soverelgn remedies do make the liver produce more bile, how do you reconcile the condition with the treatment? If you have too much | bile already isn't it unwise to maks the liver produce still more? Well, alright then, have it the other way Your billous condition is due to insafficient production of bile. | Buch & functional deficiency on the | part of the liver s concelvable and | ! probably does happen sometimes | though not in the state popularl | called_“biliousness.” 8till, as physi- | | ology teaches, neither calomel nor any other old reliable “cholagogue” really | does stimulate the liver or induce an increased secretion or production of BY EDNA KENT FORBES. | you can manage it, helps shoulders | s well as chest. And the ekin can 1 be kept fine if you scrub ft with “at water, soap and bruskh, especially the back of the shouiue s waicu are alws neglected. Fortunately, the body needs no, more than perfect cleanliness to mdke the skin fine and white. The face, being more exposed and more delicate, needs more atten- ton. i John G. B—When you use the halr tonic the application should be to the scalp and as little as possible allowed to get on the hair. Part your hair in a number of places and massage the tonic into the scaln along the parts. It takes very litle tonie, but it also means a great dea: of massage, Most men soak their heads with a | tonic and then ruffle up their hair with |their fingers and think they have |given their scalps all the attention | that they need. Aim to set the blood circulating vigorously over your scalp and keep at the massage until you feel a warm glow, and grasp handfuls of hair and lift the scalp off (he skull bones. bile. Only one medicinal substance will really induce an increased secre tion or flow of bile for a little while and that is bile itself or the acids or salts obtained from ox bile. The discharge of bile from the live: into the intestine is hindered by ans thing which narrows or obstructs the bile ducts or tends to render the bile thicker. The flow is increased o facilitated by vigorous muscular exer- cise, increased circulation and any- thing which tends to make ‘the bile thinner or more watery. These fac- tors are of no practical importance except perhaps in their relation to the prevention of gall stones. “Puzzlicks” usaleLimericks. There was a young lady of Who was so exceedingly — When she got out of —3— She stood on her —4— To keep her from soiling her 1. Island in the Mediterranean Sea. 2. Extremely tidy. 3. A common article of furniture. 4. Where she would not be expected to_stand. 6. Where she would be expected tu stand. (Note—The eccentricities of young lady from the Mediterranea: will be apparent when the limeric! has been completed by placing the right words, indicated by the number: in the correspondis The answer and another wiil appear tomorrow.) Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” My wife says I'm far her inferic But in one way I feel I'm super: For the shine on my nose And the shine on my clothes Give me the much more polished exterior. You’ll love it the English way IF YOU want to enjoy marvelous tea—made in the true English way—buy a package of Tetley Tea from your grocer. You'll find an old recipe for brewing real English tea printed on the package. For more than a hundred years Joseph Tetley and Conipany have been purveyors of fine teas to all London. And the Tetley connoisseurs! . . . the second you taste TET ORANGE PE Tea you buy in America is the same favorite blend of England’s most exacting Try Tetley’s—and brew it the English fashion! What a treat 'twill be! So fragrant and satisfying it, you'll understand the Briton’s love for his ever-welcome cup! Yet Tetley'’s costs no more than ordinary tess. LEY TEA KOE BLEND In packages from 10c to $125 A real treat for children in this new HEALTH food ERVE Post’s Wheat Meal to the children tomorrow morning at breakfast. Let them enjoy the health of whole wheat in the form of this new, delicious hot cereal that cooks ready-to-serve in three minutes. Children pass back their bowls for more because it tastes so gOOd. Let them have all the want. Post’s Wheat Meal is one of the most healthful foods you can give to little folks. Made from whole wheat, the health grain, Post’ Wheat Meal with milk or cream, fumilhesg\‘:t'amins fo: growth, proteins for body buildin minerals for teeth and bone, bran for regularity and carbohydrates for energy. And it is convenient to prepare. Put Post’s Wheat Meal on to cook and call the family. By the time they are at table, Post’s Wheat Meal is ready to serve, an apgetizing. the steaming dish, Iden as the wheat berry itself. It cooks ready-to- Tell your Wheat Meal Post Toasties Postum Cereal , Ine. Mid:‘i;_}n, M‘ahfifl’f‘?fl:‘m Postum Cereal, T Foets Pran Chteoheams o You know Oatmeal now Itry Post’s WHEAT MEAL The Quick-Cooking WHOLE WHEAT Cereal serve in three minutes. rocer to include Post’s with your next order. Battle Creek, ealth ucts: (Double = Thick Corn Flakes), Grape-Nuts, \ A, ) T W\ T SR a\ AW \ N \?A R A