Evening Star Newspaper, April 26, 1926, Page 23

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FEATURES. WITH SCAl In considering the assortment of mearfs t ave 1 I sizes, terials corations, one feels like exc of them in 1 words s fami'tur abont hooks: “Of the ng of m: searfs there is " “Fortunately the fashion for with ontdeor costume one. cosLuming Moreover by t Plext manner possii -, other reason for the penu serafs is that women ¢ from lengths of itahle Purpose, and <o 1 completeness of attire that is smar Today the matter 1tehin trimmings and searf plements the other will i it one com discussed, as this is a feature ( i heing ac cented in Spring and Sunmer vog: Also the essembie hat ix featured, that is the one with the searf coming from it so that neckwe and hat are or uched Trimming The searf witl reckband and fuller ends lend wimirably to this idea in the ruched scar: and hat nd. i )t e center of th 1 s folded oad pleats for a length sufficient urse, fall In fulness when the pl op.About the nes 1is sewe ruchine o T ¥ rch fin ishes the se org or thin =ik is used : the neckban The ruchinz matches the color of the s Sometimes 1) ex 1= obtained hy t but not invariably e ruching. Whatever the color of the scarf and the ruchir it is exactly dupli the hat The band may be d by A Lesson for Chatterer. of the e Chatterer the Iter chief maker. ile just « fled any lenzth of tim in_mischic plannin not be satis- prides himself on kno Zoing on in the G sharp eves of his are alws for things which are no bus bis. He isn't satistied unless he ix JUST BEFORE MRS. RED CHATTERER. poking his busine. nose into other people’s Now, Chatterer had heard Thun- derer the Grouse drumming, and at the first opportunity he hurried over Thunderer. Yon know, he spy on travels in the trec tops, He has regu Tar little paths through the tree tops NING WAYS THIS YEAR. motif, either square or oblong, or. the motif alone may form the hat trim- ming. Checkerboard Effect. checkerboard effect, m: by we nds of narrow ribbon per- pendicularly over and under horizon tk o< 4 stunn ng neckband ot while such trimming suits e hat admirably. Ribbon Trimmed. le this t Another deco ive trimming is made of bands of ribbon sewed at cular intervals and in perpendicular lines to ends of scarfs and the rims or brims of hats. The distafice be ceen vibbon bunds should be the same as the width of them. The {center perpendicular ribbon should be 1trast | painted hats + land corre BEDTIME STORIES | !sure the way was cl | all jaway and almost at once disappeared longest and each succeeding length on the sides be shorter, o that a grad- wated trimming results. Tips of rib pointed. By the way, if v do not know the ex way to get boints exact, let me suggest it. the end of the ribhon in half through thwise center. Make a nar n and turn the seam inside bens e Itun a blunt point or a stiletto under it and poke the tip until the turning is perfect, and the point precisely in the middle. Use the same tipsended rihbon trimming on the hat With Hand Painting. third method of decoration” is usual. It consists of painted, wbroidered or stencilled motifs on nds of scarfs and on the hat. Hand- re decidedly in evidence 1< well as hand-embroid- ered ones. xo that the garniture suits both the hut and the scarf pleasingly Uy this season BY THORNTON W. BURGESS drumi; Mrs, ( . he raced over to ouse. When he would 1y to follow keey n the end he did dis. Grouse's new nest ed himself. t is neces. - for me to do is to watch until rs. Grouse leaves the nest. She has to o eat, and if 1 can find out just when she does go eat, I'll do a little eating myself. I'll eat those eggs and e'll never know who did it.” So Chatterer watched from the tree tops until he had made up his mind that he knew all of Mrs. Grouse's movements. He knew how often she went to the nest and how long she stayed away. Then he was prepared to get those eggs. Ko it was that there came a morning when Chatterer was at his usual watehing place as goon as it was light enough {o see. Mrs. Grouse was sit- on her nest quite covering the Chatterer waited patiently. Tt was almost time for her to go for breakfast. At last he saw her look this way and look that way, to be s clear. She looked xcepting up in the tree s. Even had she looked couldn’t have seen him, « well hidden. Satisfied that well, Mrs. Grouse slipped every way where he w there, sl for he w was from sight under some little hemlock trees Now, Chatterer had thought about those eggs o long that he just couldn't possess himself with patience another minute. Hardly had her tail disap- peared when he was racing down from tree and making straight for those eggs. Tle had just reached the nest when without thing knocked him rolling over and over. Ileels over head he went. Such pounding as he zot. By the time he anaged to get his breath and dodge Of course, it was vy enough for N as a S ! | behind a. tree he was as sore a squir- him to find Thunderer, and for some | '3 aver lived. Mrs. Grouse had re. dime he vat up in i {reetop Watehig | urned unexpectedly. Chaterer had . s i ’ i sson. was, never time Chattever w learned a lesson. Tt was, never to be 1t was ail ab i . as | have said before, there ¢ little escapes those sharp ey of tterer P'resently he discov ered Mrs. Grouse quietly watehing Thunderer and thinking,she was quite hidden. Then Chattercr’ understood it all. “He's just showing off e Grouse,” muttered Chatte: sir, he's just showir off befor He trying to nake the 1 zest thing d. Seeinz he reminds s about time for her to 1 certainly would like some My, my, my. how good 'l 'keep an eye o Il do. Ul keep M= Mrs her in me nesting. Rrouse eggs they would taste! her. That's what an eye on her.’ And that is exactly what Chatterer did_do. _Bvery day when he heard - TYREE'S roR N INTERNAL AND EXTERNA\L L AMO=0U O=--TMW~--12> 5 wondering what | oer1ee # & anything. (Copyrizht, 19 WONDERFUL FOOD FOR CHILDREN New Oata is a real improvement on oatmeal The Kellogg Company bas just placed a marvelous new coreal food on the market which is winning universal praise from women. This is New Oata, the first real improvement on outs in fifty years. It is a remarkable achicvement, blending oats and wheat to create a delicious taste that wins instant favor with everyono. In addition to its wonderful fla- vor, New Oata combines the valuable health-building elements of both wheat and oats. The result is a food that is particularly suited to children. New Oata comes ready cooked. All that is necded is to heat it three min- utes in boiling water before serving. Prepared in this way you get the full nourishment of this delicious hot ce- real and all the flavor—that combina- tion of the keen relish of oats and the delicate goodness of wheat. New Oata has wonderful texture. It never has the soggy body of ordinary oat foods. It is always light, always melting. All grocers sell New Oata. Try a package today. 9, NEW OATA = Ready cooked for you IN WHICH HATS ARE ('(L\H:L\'EDT she | ) the trees, | warning some- | THE EVENING ‘STAR. WASHINGTO UB ROSA BY MIMI Is Louise Lucky? thinks Loulse Is a darn kid. Loulse is engaged to Charles, has been now for a year, and during all that time she's seen him every evening of her life. No matter where she goes, what she does, Charlie is on hand. If Estelle and Louise go to the movies together, Charles cither tags on behind or shows up to take them home. Never is there the slightest doubt in 's mind wher wandering | boy is ‘tonight. He ys there— |4 ht where cun keep an {eve on him. | Estelle leads a different life. She's jengaged to L v, and Larry's sys- tem differs trom Charles’. e has at least three cvenin eck devoted to clubs, and the four others are dis- tributed among evening business ap pointments, family duties and Estelle. The result that she spends one. elle find. times. She fretfully demands why fu time he can't tie the can to a few clubs and spend a few more minutes with her. But he poipnts out that his friends are so numerous, the only chance he has of secing them is at club meetings. Would she want him te give up his friends? S0 she sees him two or three times \ week, and tells Louise what a lucky irl she is to have her man always with her. that scant comfort some: But we wonder which girl is more | 0 be envie 1 Why doesn't Churles | ¢ his eve. | inings off7 Why is he perfectly con | tent to dance attendance on his lady fair, whether bhis presence is required or ne Because he hasn't any other ests—he hasn’t any other friends just has Louise. 1t's all very pleasant for her now, but she has 30 years more of his con tinued society coming to her, and she may well begin to ash herself ques. tions now Why hasn't he any friends or out- side interests? The man who hasn't any friends is unnatural—there's somett wrong somewhere, The man who hasn’t any outside in- inter Te terests ix apt to prove dull in the years to come. Istelle can m confident that her man is all right. his n ous friends prove him to be a rej guy His outside interests will keep him interesting to her Louise and Charles other evening after evenin ing for each other and with each other—what will they have o talk about in a few mer. ular years' time? Estelle may be K vorried - but she's also kept interested Beeause Larry is away so much, his evenings homea will e ali the more vicing < she can trust her man, the girl to he envied Whether Louise is lucky or not de pends upon how much monotony she nd ink it over. Are mueh of your husband-to-be’ Give him a chance and yourself, too and see how much more you appre ate each other. HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. you seeing too | Mr. Businessman first met this deep- { seated, leather-upholstered ea. chair {at his club. Later he saw it again in \[rh(- showroom of his office outfitters i | and bought one for his own private {office. It proved so luxuriously com- | fortable, so satisfving! asculine x\l\fl | substantial st hated to go | home at night and leave it there, “inally he told Mrs. Businessman about it. She, of course, did not llke to think of Mr. Businessman being more comfortable in his office than in his home, so she complained to the interior decorator about it. The in- terior decorator investigated and then felt guilty that such a marvel of com- fort and good looky should have |escaped his notice. ~He I in- | stulled several in his studio—and the | vogue was firmly established! | i | that every woman | | | | Alfred H. Smith Co 418 West 25fh St., of his | [ Jer- Rerheff, Paris ROUGE and LOOSE POWDER VANITY Treasurcs for Your Children DorothyDix|=: You Can Give Them Love and a Brave Heart: Can Teach Them the Joys of Reading and the Thrill of Seeing Things. Tlll-} bitterest cry of poor people is that they have nothing to give their children. The fathers and mothers who cannot buy imported finery for thelr girls or sports model cars for their boys and send them o expensive colleges and fill their pockets with money feel that they come empty-handed to their children and have nothing to give them. Yet the poorest man and woman who bend avdve a cradie have it in their power to bestow upon their babe treasures g0 great that their worth canrot ;he computed In dollirs and vents, and that will bring the child more pleasure and happingss i ife than they could purchase with all the wealth of the Rothschilds. Ior there is no price (4§ on ‘the most precious things in the world. They are equally free to prince and pauper, and more often the beggar gets them half her time wondering what Larry's | {han the millionaire dobs, doing. 2 il For example, there is love, a close, intimate, personal association. And He. of course letx her know in a® enderness, and understanding. Poor parents can more casily give these to general way where he's going, DUt|(jeir children than the wealthy can. And the child that has them fs vich beyond the dreams of avarice, and the child that has them not is poverty- stricken, although it has all else besides, The mother who rocks her baby to sleep on her breast; wi arms ave always outstretched to gather her youngsters to her he never too tired or too busy to listen to childish confidences; who ~ui e tender rt; who is rounds her little ones with u brooding atmosphere of affection, gives to her children far nwre than does the vich mother who gives her children nurses and governess and pony carts und fine clothes and costly playthings, but who | does not give them herself; who bestows on them everything but the things that a child wants most and needs most—mother love and tenderness; the real mother touch. | Not lonz ago a very rich young man fizured in a disgraced scandal and [ the one excuse offered in his defense was that his mother was dead and his father hud never given him anything except money. He had never had any | affection bestowed upon him. He had had no parental guidance. When a little lad he had been put in a school and kept there without even being visited by any one who loved him, without even going home for vacations. ile had been just a pitiful little millionaire waif for whom nobody cared. THE lot of such a child is infinitely worse than that of the one whos *parents are in such humble circumstances that they can give it perhaps only the plainest of food and clothes, but who do give it a real home that is full of close. warm. family life. The fathers and mothers to whom children are grateful and whose memories they revere are not those who bequeath them great fortunes, those who leave them the memory of « love and understanding that never failed, and of a childhood that was made sweet by their No matter how companionship and the privilege of growing up in a peaceful and ¢ home, and that is something that few rich parenis can give their children. Another gift that you can make your children is that of teaching them how to read. When vou do that, you really don't need to do much more for them, because you have put a magic coin in their hands that will buy entrance mto all the doors of delight and open to them all of the portals of romance. No one who loves to read can ever be bored or lonely. 1o or she has only to open a book, and, presto, he or she has for company all of the wit ind wisdom of the ages. Gay adventurers, beautiful ladies and gallant entlemen beckon, and one has only to follow them into realms of enchant {ment. All of interest, all that informs, that thrills, that amuses is the | property of the reader. Now, reading does not ulways come by nature. as Doghe Often it has to he acquired by art. but any child can be taught to like to read: it can be given the reading habit, and no other gift can possibly be bestowed upon it that is half =0 valuable or that will bring it in such happiness, or that will be such an ark of refuge to it in times of trouble. o ok rest parents can make to their children is to teach them how to see. Most persons go throush the world as blind as bats. They never see unything that isn't directly under their noses, therehy they miss half of the fun and pleasure in living There are men and women to whom a sunset is just a phenomenon of nature that happens every day: to whom a crowd is just a jam of people; who get nothing out of travel but inconvenience and missing the particular kind of breakfast food they prefer, and who loathe rain because they get their feet wet and hate snow because it is messy And there are other men and women who see the glory of God in every flaming sunset: who thrill to the fingertips at the drama they see enacted in every crowd: to whom travel opens up a new world: to whom every rain is a symphony and every snowstorm a poem Which gets the most out of life. those who see or NOTHER gift that the po those who are blind? © too dull Those who can get pleasure out of little things, or those who and dumb to amuse themselves? These who are sensitive to every beauty in nature, who appreciate music and art and literature, who get the last flavor out of good cecking, or those who find evervthing flat and stale and uninteresting hecause they have never been taught to wce the underside of things? Finally, the poorest parents can teach their child towurd life without which all the balance is cinders, ashes and dust. For | disappointments and trouble come (o us all, and it is only those who. have been taught how to make the best of their bad bargains, how to ¥augh at misfortune and mock at fate, who achieve gny real happiness in life So cheer up. you parents who complain that you have nothing to give your children. You can give them love. You can teach them to read and to see things. You can give them a brave heart. These gifts are worth more than money. away from those who have them. ren that brave attitude And nobody can take them DOROTHY DIX. “Puzzlicks’ Puzzle-Limericks. Cleopdtra observed: “That false —1— Of the asp many ears may —2—; What a fuss they all —3— About that poor —4—! the poison was sent me by — Story. Entertain, Manufacture. . Reptile. Post. (Note—After working out Saturday “Puazzlick,” presuming that you got it. vou will naturally want something easy. So here's one with no tricks it, though it does throw a new The answer will appear w and another tomorrow.) Saturday’s “Puzzfick. There was an old man of Calcuita Who had an unfortunate stutter; T would like,” he once said “Some bub-bub-bub-bread And some bub-bub-bub-bub-bub-bub- butter.” e Prices realized on Swift & Company sales of carcass beef in Washington. D. C.. for week ending Saturday. ‘April 24, 1926, shipments &old out. ranged from 11.00 cénts in 1750 cents ger pound and avéraged 10.46 cents per poun ertisement will want to own! NOW, you can carry in this Vanity, without spilling, thie same exquisite Joase, Djer- Kiss Fuce-Powder you use at home! And there’s a Rouge Compact—in just your color! A double mitror, too! One side for detail make-up— the other sideforview of your entireface! Can you imagine such an aid to beauty for just $2.502 The Case is charming, of em- bossed, nickel-silver with rounded corners. You can fill its loose powder com ent as many as 30 times from your Dijer-Kiss Face-Powder box! Dijer-Kiss Rouge Re-Fills at your favorite store, LS mpany, Sole Importers g2t York Clty’ Qe MONDAY, "APRILi 26, 1926, and | |is an excellent opportunity for execut. | ing contracts and agreements, twe de- | on her dances more than on any talls of which have been carefully | other girl in the reem. There s worked out at some previous time. | a certain air about her, a certain After noon. it would be expedient to | mysterious coldness that piqued the | parents’ cherishing. | ana'n poor you are, you can give vour children love and|\hich thought it did. | ' Surround them with the proper en WOMAN’S PAGE. 23 'SONNYSAYIN THE MARRIA BY FANNY Y. CORY GE MEDDLER BY HAZFL DEYO BATCHELOR CHAPTER 1. The Captain of the Team. It was the night before the Hamil- ton-Burbank foot ball game. Jean Ainsley come New York that afterncon as the guest of Merton Thorne. She and essle Reede were sharing a room at the ernity house and both girls were getting ready for the dance to be given that night. Jean sat on one of the bheds drawing on a pair of very pale mauve silk hose. She was rather silent and thoughtful, for her, but Jessie did the talking for both of them. This was her firsc visit to a fraternity house and che was ex- cited Iy dear, that shade of mauve is perfect, with silver slippers, isn't it? So much better than gray. Oh, dear, I'm not going to be able to do a thing with my hair. [ had it sham- pooed this morning, and it's too soft to_hold a wave.” Jean llstened abstractedly. The mauve stockings adjusted, she w wriggling her slim feet into a pair of shining silver slippers. They had silver buckles trimmed with black enamel. Jean had been faifly excited about them when she had glimpsed themn in the window of an exclusive little shop, but now she hardly looked up from “Wonder why ‘ey keeps th' tookeys on th' highest sheif?” (Copyright. 10260 What Tomorrow Meaas toYou BY MARY BLARE. at them. ler thoughts were vague and confused She had attended too many fra Taurus. ternity parties to work up much ex- Tomorrow's planetary aspects, while | citement over coming to Hamilton. very favorable in the forenoon, ave | Hamilton was, after all, one of the adverse later on. There ix not much | smaller colleges, and, although she time availuble for concentrs effort | liked Merton Thorne, there s noth on new ideas, but if anything along | ing very thrilling about him. these lines has to be attempted it | after ail it wag exhilarating atte should be started at as early an hour [ #4ny college affair. She liked as possible. It, according to the signs, | feeling that where e he 1 Men cut was instantly popular. in confine attention to rontine work and [ admiration. She treated all men great effort will be required in order | alike, so that no one knew where but | 1o exercise self-restraint. as there will { he stood with her, and then she was e present the temptation to speak | so lovely to look at and she had on the impulse of the moment, | such a flalr for dre ways brings, in its train, con-| That afternoon when she had eerful | gaquences of an unpleasant variety. | stepped off the train she hadn't an Children born tomerrow are des- | idea that this party would he tined, according to the signs, to suffer | different from any other. She from a variety of minor ailments dur- | looked forward to a good time them | ing their infancy, but these will all | had expected a lot of admiration eld very readily to remedies and | some gay flirtations, and then at need cause no rm After the vicis ‘v childhood, they prom- | up normally and achieve | u healthy iuatiur Temperamen- | these children will be rather v 1. They should not only be dis cipiined but great care should be taken fraternity tea, she had met—H ton had brought him up to introduced. “dean, allow me to present Conrad Morgan. He's going to win game for us tomorrow, €0 be nice to him. She had turned langhingly to meet situdes of e tse to grow vironment. as they will be rather in- | hin, had found herself looking up at different to an attitude observed bY | «ix feet two of brawn and sinew, had many parents—“Do as 1 say, but not v as [ do.” They will excel in outdoor ports, but will have to be taught at u very early age the principles of good sportsmanship. I tomorrow with a natu Willie Willis | birthday vou, that is not in vour humilit BY ROBERT QUILLEN, keeping with yvour inherent ability, are rather disposed to hide your light under a bushel. You possess excen- | tional intelligence, but. through lack of | aggressiveness, do not make such | practical use of it as is possible. You | do not seem equipped to make a niche | for vourself, but are too reliant on others to take vou by the hand and push vou forward. You are a. great thinker, and very introspective. Your views on most matters are. sound, but vou ecannot express them with facility or felicity Your sincerity is never doubted. Your lovalty is recognized. Asa natu. | al gequence, vour friends are many, | and they can always rely upon vou, | s you can invariably depend upon them ) The affectionate disposition that is vour che acteristic makes for happi ness in yvour home life. . = N : 2 e A “Me an' Pug didn't have no glue In Shanghai. China, now are 13904 {5 make feathers stick in our hair, Japanese, 5.570 British and 1.942 | by molasses worked purty good.” American residents (Copyright. 1926.) Ask any user her reasons for selecting Rumford. One will probably be its reli- ability, another its uniformity and a third its economy. Rumford is made from the purestingredients, scientifically combined to give perfect baking results. And remember, with Rumford, you have not merely a baking powder that pro- duces cakes, biscuits, muffins, etc. of that fineness of texture, flavor and appear- ance sought for by all good housewives, but it is the baking powder that adds the nutritious phosphates of which fine white flour has been partially deprived in the process of milling. Rumford ACox_,npany, Dept. A, Providence, R. L. the | stared for a moment into a’ pair of dark eyes, and then quite suddenly her soclal poise had been shaken. Something had happened, something that had never happened to her be- fore. She felt the color rush up into her cheeks, her pulses fluttered. For a moment she had been at a loss as to what to say, and then her usual manner had asserted itself, and she saying something about the » then she had been dazed and E med, and now as she dressed for the dance, she was try ing to ascertain just what had happened. After all she had met any number of good-looking college mien. Why should she feel any different toward Conrad Morgan than anv one else” But the fact remained that she did feel different. He had stirred some- thing in her, something strange and wonderful and rather frightening. She couldn’t understand it at all. Jessie's chatter broke in on ights. ‘m finished at the u can take my place. How hair, all right? I wish I could as calm and composed as you are. But then [ suppose u fraternity party is an old thing to you. It's different when you've been to a great mang.” Jean smiled as she rose from the bed and crossed over to the mirror. Inwardly she was just as excited as | Jessie. She had never before looked forward to a fraternity dance as she was looking forward to this one, not even her first | (Copyright, 1926.) her the mirror now and ) ix my stay (Continued in tomorrow’s Star) Lessons in English w. L GORDON. } BY Words “She s “likely. Often mispronounced: Temperature, P’ronounce tem-per-a-tur, not tem-pr: tur. nor temp-i-ch Often misspelled: Modiste Synonyms: Argue, contend, dispute, | debate. discuss, wrangle, question, | Word study: “Use a word three |times and it is vours.” Let us in crease our vocabulary by mastering one word each day Today's wort | 1dealistic; pertaining to an ideal: co | ceived perfect. “It was but the often misused liable to come Don't sa today.” Say | idealistic dream of an artis S | ind new eraft are used every y |in the Oxford Cambridze boat race JUICE OF LEMON WHITENS SKIN The only harmless way to bleach the skin white is to mix the juice of two lemons with three ounces of Orchard White, which any iruggist will supply for a few cent: Shake well in a bot- tle, and you have a | whele quarter-pint of the most won- | derful skin whitener, softener and | beautifier. Massage this sweetly fragrant lem- on bleach into the face, neck, arms and hands. It can not irritate, Famous stage beauties use it to bring that clear, vouthful skin and rosy-white complex- ton; also as a freckle, sunburn and tan | bleach. You must mix this remarkable | lotion yourself. It cannot be bought | ready to use because it acts best imme- | diately after it is prepared. | " THE WHOLESOME BAKING POWDER Every housewife should have a copy of that popular cook book “Southern Recipes”., Sent free. ’

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