Evening Star Newspaper, April 1, 1926, Page 48

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WOMAN’S PAGE. BY DOROTHY STOTE. SUB ROSA BY MIMI Boy Friend's Advice. All you young wives and sweet- hearts, of course, want to please your menfolk in the the way you dress. And what more natural than ! that you should beg the boy friend to go with you when you pick out the new Spring wardrobe? Iven If you don't actually persuade him to venture into the shop with you, you anxiously inquire whether the blue frock in the window sults his fancy—would he like you to get at one—is he sure? 1hl\' he has any ideas on the subject of women's clothes, they’re very like- THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTO DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX When a Man Has Outgrown His Wife, Has He the Right to Divorce Her?—Carefree, Selfish Bachelor and His Place in World. EAR MISS DIX: I disagree with your ideas about a man divc wife when he grows tired of her. I think when a man develops, while his wife remains at exactly the same mental level she was 20 years before; when they have no common interests; when he has to o outside of his home for any intelligent understanding; when she regards him merely as a meal ticket, that he has a perfect moral right to divotce her and marry some one else, even a girl 20 years his junior, if he so destres. In a case of this kind 1 do not think children make any difference. At best, they remain with their parents only a few years and then go out and live their own lives. D. C, THURSDAY, cing his APRIY MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. 1, 1926, Caring for Her Room. FEATURES. PERSONAL HEALTH BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D ‘RVICE Walk and Save Your Life. Forty-five out of w series of forty- | six patients with too much i their blood and high blood T were overweight A lot of us eat apparently down funeral expenses, wh to be rising year after yea And speaking of big eaters—the eat big and they are big—what wonderful lot of good could do | in the world, this world, with all the money we squander on our getup for | b the next. |, | Thirty-six of the forty-five patients| T with hyperglycemia, high blood pres- | ox one | 0.0 | still kee poin ) ex ; ‘ mine h seem The whole matter depends entirely, I think, on the man, his temperament his taste and, of course, the stability of the girl he wishes to m: 8 AGY sure and high stomachs wei pounds worse. sugar was only a min feature in 50 of the cases of the big caters had actua | diabetes at the time of this Only 12 of them had albun aline or anular w peaks well for the rance human kidneys unde sult A for the digestive tablets. hese poor ginks had acquired ti dignity in the 1t not quite so easy B. I Glucose (sugar) was fo {urine, at one time o c every one of these 45 pat hough only 16 of them had Dwell o1 t Lo have hyperglycem Kkeep you | But | tempt Iy decided views—he thinks he knows just what he wants, and nothing else will do. And his opinion having been asked for, he very often takes ages before giving « to show his approval of any Cresses displayed. Thus the wife or fiance who has begged her man to help her choose new coat or ensemble very often comes home after an afternoon, dur- ing which they've shopped together, o very bad temper, and with her feelings thoroughly hurt. Gladys wept furiously the other day. She and Carl had spent a nice Sat fternoon looking for a sport or Answer: Fine for the man, Agnes, to be able to flit from flower to flower, and, as soon as one rose has lost its freshness, to be able to wing his gay way to another bud. But how about the deserted rose? How about the old wife? Ilow about | the woman who has given to a man 20 or 30 years of her life, who has borne | him children, who has worked and economized und helped him bufld up his fortune, who has nursed him when he was sick and ministered to his wunts when he was well, who has given him a devotion and & loyalty that have never faltered? One mother In order to apparent lack her own room range the fury to suit her taste ing now to “do” help arrange the sm ists which daught of the | of interest in caring for allowed her to re ture, pictures, ete, is always will own room and ller children’s, end abuke DPear. Ann: Even the wear e of glasses comes into fashion’s province! At a dance the other night I saw a girl clad in a lovely fluffy frock, her daintiness ruin ed by a pair of tortoise-shell-rimmed spectacles. Tor evening wear she should have had inconspicuous nose mlasses, reserving the spectacles for tailored = ate “Puzzlicks" uzzle-Limericks— Ts she to be turned out of her house and home as casually as any old work horse that has served its purpose, just because her husband has got tired of her and is attracted to some woman who fs younger and more charming and clever? s her life to go into the discard in order that he may be entertained and amused? I grant you that it is a terrible and a common tragedy for a man to outgrow his wife and for him to come to the place where she hores him to extinction, but even that does not give him any right to divorce her if has been a good and faithful wife to him. nts WhatTomorrowMeans to You knows all about women's BY WARY BLAKE. clothes. for seeing glasses 1 the time. ked him to help me select watled Gladdie, “and all he did was to tell me 1 looked perfectly dreadful in everything I tried on. The only coats he liked were the awfully expensive ones I couldn’t afford. 1¢ he really loved me, he'd think I looked nice in everything Isn't that tragic? But Carl isn't the hardhearted villain he sounds. You see, Gladys wasn't looking extra_good that shopping afternoon. She had on an old hat and some rather shabby shoes. o, no matter what she tried on, the effect was pretty bad. Carl, a mere man, couldn't fizure that out. He just knew Glady's s makes them | looked far from smart, and he decided rd to do with- | it must be the coat. that | So he cast his vote against every it gives the artifice Many | thing she tried on, and she was shovs sell blue cold x to be | miserable. spread in a large triangular patch at| It fun't good policy to take the boy the outside corner of each eve. It{friend along when you're doing your gives a bluo shadow, but so faint it | pyving, ENeY MERru Anout (hhm {is hard to detect it, and it gives| " jfo's apt to be so much more fussy One trick is to make the eves look | great brilliance to the expression. | when his opinion is asked for. He'l Astinguished” by forming the eve- | This is all “make-up” and I do Mot {find all sorts of fault with whatever s 5 brows Into a thin, finely arched line. | advise you to try it unless you are | you wear, ff vou give him. half | _ But he can control his actions. Jfe can remain faithful to narriage The only trouble is. that many wom- | an expert. Perfume, of course, ia | Joina: : vows, Tle can do his duty. He can refrain from putting upon her th en keep the line of their eyebrows the ‘oldest feminine “trick” that 15 | haciies. all the glamour of the|humiliation of being a discarded and outcast wife. And if he s unbappy, why ihis that the eves owel all’ %heir | known new purchase is gona it vou let him | {Hould he not suffer instead of the wife? Why should his happiness be character. Thick eyebrows show | K. B—Your oily scalp comes from | gea it whils you're still wearing old | POUSht at the price of h strength of character and will re- |digestive sluggishness and not from | ghoes and hat, Ana,Helleve;me, Abnad, you, ars wionE. i tHInKHE Ahat theldHilFer ds deem an otherw weak face. Noftoo quent shampoos. It I possi- | SO3UG"0 0 ha' by vourself something | 1ot make any difference in cases of this kind. The children should be while You may vyour evebrows |hle that this accounts for vour face | Lot B2 B0 0 o rim hat | considered ubove ull else. Their good is paramount to the happiness of eithe if you want il 1ot 1o over- | being too thin, even if vou are other- | 1aog, NG beCOM R o & A air of | the man or the woman. Those who hear children give hostages to fortis 4 i { wise too stout. Clear up vour diges- | ¢hoec tie a gay searf around your|that they must redeem with their hearts' blood if necessary, and no one will "Tinted cold cream on the eyelashes | ton and improve your health. and | Shoss tle @ gay scarf around yeur ;L (i Cnildren raised fn o housenoid I whion Thoeeary. and no one will 18 @ trick fo make them seem longer | your face will round out even though | heeh’ s "eomplosens Hows that my | Mother have a better chance of turning out £ood men and women \ham (Hom and the eves er. One of the|you lose weight. o hrertaikben who have been orphaned by divorce s Jatest siuoks 1n Baxis 1s an Senamel (|0 oat eutiin the Al Gnaereceise db | s iy wiikthn 6o bnia iRAicing irons: An honorable man sticks to his bar which 15 rubbed over the entire up- { much as You can, now that the N von certainly Know how to|that he has made a mistake. ver evelids. The skin does not ab- | Spring days have come, and vou will e N o e . ;"or: "»'.:1',:"]':l:h’n-‘.j\-rfl |l):‘cmk:\‘t‘: y;::‘:k‘(!}]ula;‘:Ar:nln:‘l;}fllll:;‘;o\'\lv(\:(]e aifficultios {" Yhereas, it you'd let him come|JYEAR MISS DIX: T haven't kissed a woman in 20 years, and, oh, I am ' = 2 A along to help, he'd have very likely so happy and so seaceful! I live all alone, and do just as I please. I go - turned down everything you bought. | to bed when I feel like it, and get up when T want to, and eat when I &m WHEN WE GO SHOPPING You have to humor ‘em—and fool [ hungry. T have no car to keep up. No gowns or bonnets to buy. No Soctal HARLAND H. ALLEN. through appropri LETITIA 1926 ke m to pu | Aries. Tomorrow's favorable un late in the They then become overcast though not definitely advers found to exercise a strong temperament. During the day the signs denote that all operations in connection with mining or man facturing will be prolific of £00 For, aside from all moral considerations, marriage is & business partner. ship as well as a sacrament, and the wife who has helped & man build up his fortune has a right to share in his prosperity and the position that it gives her. She has carned it by the sweat of her brow just as much as the man has, and it is grossly unfair that she should be kicked out and pensioned off on half rations, which is what alimony amounts to, even when the discarded wife s Jucky enough to get that. In this country the great majority of men who are rich a middie age were poor enough ard humble enough when the most of them who attain to riches and a place in the sun ¢ AT Dre el they doF ioE savor O ladder that their wives make of their shoulders. ‘flf,"'.mj(‘“_},‘,’,’," e o togmany Ot i other hand, all work of a constructive character not only henef- icent, but returns. In the evening the chief thing required te woid the unfortunate temperamen influences that will prevail is se control A girl born tomer tically free from infancy. Later vig care must order to avoid caused by an anemic boy will mot te in his in-| fancy, althon trition and | an abundance of fresh air will miti-| gate the seriousness of m the | illnesses from may | He will, howe : tevelop Temperamentall served and taclturn. The girl w be talkative and, in @ sense. irrespon sible. The bhoy will be serious minded 1 introspective. The girl will_be free a rather callous. The boy will be capable of great emotion whereas the girl's affections 1 | never be deeply rooted If tomorrow is your birthday. signs at your birth were very fa able, and indicated strength of cha acter, tenac! of purpose and ar ability to achieve. Your methods may | not be always ethical, but nothing can hold you back when you have de termined to achieve a given goal. You are forceful but not tactful. You are frank to the point, sometimes, of brutality. Your ambitions are more | practical than ideal and you center all your energles on the attainment of materlal success. You carry your dominating char- acteristics into your home and, though hose nearest to you respect and bly fear vou, there s a marked ence of that affection which char- o many contented families. happiness from the con templation of your success, but it is doubtful if you give real happiness to others. | ErIR e | Fven the farmers from the South African _veldt wear evening dress hen going to a theate; planetary aspects are hurn afternoon. and. . will be influence the In the day the mir wheneve of N they unless it 1s label is one of the fi disorders which day than before i« another normal individ cally fit has 0.10 blood sugar. This in which the bod immedi, combus | organic w alar By eating freely of food, particularly starc sweets, any ofie may run his sugar up to 0 - 0.15 per ce in some i highe any of the su the urine. 3y indulging in violent or st exertion, say in a marathon rur The time tokill MOTHS is NOW! NOW—before they ruin your woolen clothes, furs, blankets, upholstery, draperies. Simply spray with IMPROVED DETHOL. Made by a wonder- ful new secret formula, it kills the moths in closets or chests. Destroys the hungry larvae. It will not stain. Don’t wait. Spray IMPROVED DETHOL today. Simple—Safe—Sure. Fully guaranteed, fore cars people tool | | they felt the need | seldom take | d free, 1L (NOTE 1 important at married, and imb up on the BY EDNA KENT FORBES. to l BEAUTY CHATS bright, and the effect ther startling. 1 do not like it because it also makes the eyes look cold and hard. A small, faint dot outer ridge of the ey look larger, but is ha out the dot showing so plainly Dainty Touches. ¢ well dressed wor sort of wrap There is hardly a self-made man who has not had a wife who cooked and scrubbed and patched for him, who did not sit up of nights washing his shirts and pressing his clothes; who didn't scrimp every penny, and deny herself everything that she could do without 8o that they might rake together the little stake that was the foundation of his fortune. Shall such a woman as this be turned adrift becanse her husband has developed sophisticated tastes and wants to marry some girl who will better match his new house and his new furniture? No! A thousands times We cannot control our hearts, and @ man cannot force himself to sta romanti in love with the woman whose fleeting girlish beauty captu his immature fancy as a boy. ke cannot prevent himself from growing weary of the wife whose mind been unable to keep pace with his own and who does not know or understand the things that he comes to know and understand. prom speedy n will tell nd beauty sugar i uel is provided for | on, to | e You she does not mind giving up her secrets) that there a sorts of tricks in this game of being pretty. Some girls seem to know these arts instinctively, some could not learn them If they gave up all their time to it, but most will catch on to these little tricks quickly enough when very generou: of red at the “Puzzlich.” West e all Yesterday 's w will be er sup- ness d prac sic ring | however, much | exercised in | general decline condition. A voke up he e in of Kknesse normal . the boy wi on lines. | thin in care even if he does come to realize DOROTHY DIX, the T pi ‘em, too. chligations to roturn. No motherinlaw or other inluws to spat with. I Mimi will be always feel well, happy and contented. Isn't it glorious? e wou ARt airteied o thie paner 4 | the bachelor's life is ideal? i i et ST ddrencea’envelopd 18 Incloeed. * Alko'ahe il e Ra e % Y. 2 be Kiad to send "Food for Conversation’ an Answer: It certainly is a grand life, X. Y. Z.. if you don't weaken. But Trbw 1o Overcome Self-Conaciousnass how about the time when you grow old, and have no companionship, no one | come dc;n(n over their forehe: and 3(_‘:"‘;9,;{:‘:\“#9“;,;‘0“ sit about the fire of an evening, no one to say, “Don't others like the reverse. Every hat | How about the time when you ShHUIE S ol o .. Ho i you get sick. and there are no loving "h"\‘nl'l »u:)' ;In”\\P!.'hnut (‘nffll)‘( to keep | minister to you: nobody to bend anxiously ‘.m\\p your ;»”1"‘1«:’“‘ X:,:;:Tsl t e on the part of t eure . . any r e v 55 e YOl plow; hody 1 Ditee on thejpure otithe weerer. [{TS TG Wve ihve i more whether you live or die than if you were a stray dog in an aliey L ad size shouldn't 5 - How about the time when you will grow tired of yourself: when vou will bind at any pofnt. If the hat presses flmplg 1ife no longer be greatly interested In vourself because you will realize that vou dm nst yvour head in any place, it A | have shot yvour bolt, and that all that you will ever achieve in the world you doesn't ’,‘§ “1n|xhp other hand, & nd concentrate on have done; when you will not even have any more desires? Whit then? at shouldn’t slide around your head . - : : ¥ m sires " ) our heag some }“g]\ aim Don’t you think you will envy the men who are building their hopes on Ignoring worldly and_ show, with ¢ Often adjusting the lining ol o b "‘L‘-"lll\ ’_'}r"']lofi; | bright young sons who are doing clever things in business, or making records 3 In college, who are bringing fresh sources of interest to dried old hes IF 2ll my friends would do glad to anewer any inquiries rovided & stamped, BY MR! It's Only Fitting Hats. When run fo yourself t many wor effect and fort entirel. you put a hat on do you mirror before you satisfy it fits? It's a fact that ten will only appraise the) ignore their future com- ! by not examining the | fit. In a famous New York restau-| rant the manager recently noticed | that more and more young women were dancing without their hats. A little tactful inquiry brought out the fact that it was because most of them didn’t fit. Many “nervous" headaches are due also to tight-fitting hats. When you place a hat on your head it should sit ther if it belonged on vour head. Before you go out shopping for a hat, dress your hair| Some hats can be bouglit snugger in your accustomed way. If you |than othe Felt, for example wear your hair bobbed ,it will muke | stretches, and it's better to get a a difference if you happen to need | felt hat that's trifle sn than a hair cut badly, because you will |one that fits a bit too comfortably. probably buy a hat tsat’s too large Straw, on the other hand, often the head size. If ¢ hair shrinks after being cleancd, and it's st 1 cut don't pretty rigid in any event. Hats that The ha should are built on frames are usually pret head tomorrow constant as to size. If the base or crown of a hat either larger or smaller than head it doesn't fit. It's a matter to measure those While the crown shouldn't head, neither should it spuces between the hat and head. No matter what the size of the brim, the hase of the crown should fit close- to the head. The fact t being worn, the s No “ifs” or “buts” in our guarantee. Either you like Improved Dethol —or your money back. Half pint trial size, S0c; full pint only 75¢: quarts, §1.25; gallons, $4. Big combination package containing full El;!’ ;::.‘l;‘i':mn.d.y“lv:nr, $1. At dealers or Dethol Manufacturing an {ll fit. Don't let sa VOl Rt hants _‘\:*l“‘:)“‘(:\:}li': Don't you think, then, as you look into the shop windows, that you will wish ey L i that you had a pretty young daughter to buy pink chiffons for? ad. A selfish life may suffice us when we are young, X. Y. Z., but when we If a hat doesn't fit you, it's better to leave it in the shop for mm“‘ otie are old it turns to dust and ashes in our hand DOROTHY DIX else’'s delight than to try to wear it by making it fit with makeshift methods, Coconut Drops. Mix the beaten white of an egg with one cupful of sugar and add one tablespoonful of flour and cne cupful of coconut. Line the pan with but- | tered paper, drop the mixture from | a spoon in balls about as large as a | hickory nut and bake for 20 minutes| in a moderate oven, belong your as well as is the | simple | portions. bind the leave large s too smail it o high, and it resists Hur attempts pull it down Hats that are too large slip down over the eyes. Of course, some women like hats that sually when a hat s up t Pt OW pleased he will be ata din- anrof ing baked Pink ON! Tender, rich pink that blend so well with macaroni or beaten eggs, topped with delicately browned bread crumbs. Served right on the table as it comes from the oven ~—delicious! Canned Pink SALMON provides a splendid vari- of tasty dishes, as to serve at the for- ::ldlnnetormas home meal or the «hildren’s school lunch. And itisso INEXPENSIVE —not more than 25 cents a can anywhere—it ? can be quickly combined with vegetables, rice, spaghetti or macaroni into meal-in-one dishes for only a few cents more! So STRENGTH-BUILDING and RICH in PROTEIN valve (study the comparison below) and IODINE—for d?: preven- Next time you order, think of "°“i . °f| ‘:.‘:_" Keeps indefinitely unopened, in the sanitary, the importance of sugar in your Aok grocer today for canned Pink SALMON. For diet! 98.9% of its caloric energy real MW and dependability, buy it in enjoyment, economy is available to the body. It gives dozen or case lots—have it always ready on your pantry shelf. you 17.5% of the total energy in TED SALMON PACKERS your diet. YO\I will I'Gllile in- 2530 L. C. Smith Bldg., Seattle, Washington stantly the necessity of pure sugar protected for your use. That is the reason for Domino Package Sugars. Guarantee yourself clean and pure sugars by demanding Domino Package Sugars, protected from dust, dirt and germs by being sealed in per- fect packages. American SugarRefining Company “Sweeten it with Domino” Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, smaller hats_are o-called cloche hats, explains the absence of hatpins on | our Another explunation is ! the fact that women are learning, per- | haps, how to buy hats that fit them. If you need a hatpin to keep your hat on, the head size is wrong. Be of the comfortable marchers in the Baster parade by wearing a new | bonnet that fits vour head as well | a8 your eye. ade the boudoir in negligees—in colors of brisht or pa tel tones. One of the most unusual exponents of this mode is the exotic smoking suit sketched—thvee-picce Prints [ Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON, misused—Don't say Words often " Say cither you or I can do it.” vou mor IL.” ! Often mispronounced — Albumen. | Pronounce the a as in “at.” the u as | in “unit.” and accent the u. Often misspelled—Preparation not er synonyn wact, deery, Word study times and it is crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Nutrition,” that whieh nourishes. '‘Anger and worry seriously interfere with nutrition.” ther —Defame, dispa ander. malign, F “Use word three Let us in- consisting of a4 tuxedo coat of tinsel | brocade. @ gold lame waistcoast rousers—mannish in_cut vet nized by its softly plaited pantaloon: Other negligees more tull and often more flattering emphasize a low stline, indulge ir floating, flaring sleeves, or an abundance of ruffle trimming. MARGETTE. 1 CASH PRIZES Have you a good recipe for serving canmed Pink Salmon? Then it stands an equal chanoce to win First Prize, $600; Second Prize, §100: Third Prive, §40; Fourth Prize, $20; Fifth Prise, §15; one of the 20 Prizes of §10 each and 35 Prizes $5 each. Send in one or as many recipes as you like, stating whether recipe has been tried by you. and how many persons it should serve. We wonld Iike to know your total cost preparing dish. Kindly indicate brand Pink Sal mon you prefer, and send label. Con- test closes August 31, 1926. RECIPE N/ %/ BOOK Associated Salmon Packers, 2330 L. C. Smith BIdg., Seattle, Wash.t [ Please send me (free) .!‘wk]u Forty Ways to Berve Salmon ] Enter my favorite recipe(s) herewith in $1.000 prize contest. made with... s o.......Brand Pink Salmon. {1 Send U. 8. Dept. of Commerce Bulletin * (free) on food value Salmon. and fts beneficial Todine content. Name.. A steaming cup of delicious coffee. You can haveitif youinsist on White House—with the flavorroassedim. Dwinell-Wright Co., Boston, Chicago, Portsmouth,Va, COMP COST FOOD VALUE (Sufficient to serve § or §) Souffle 38 Sirloin Steak, up from .. 65c Veal Loaf .. Tbc Scalloped Oysters__. _ 90c e e Lt The Flavor is Vg' =y P;oa:tad In! — | RSN eSO gkl

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