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27 FEATURES. iy s MOTHERS BEAUTY CHATS AND THEIR CHILDREN. How About Your Back? : , then they taper it into a peak at How do you look from the back? neck. It is a particularly good wa WOMAN'’S PAGE THE EVENING AR, WASHINGTON, D. C 'ULSDAY, APRIL Women Who Have Unusual Tasks in Government Service BY ALICE ROGERS HAGER SUB ROSA BY MIMIL Queries as to Gigolo’s Successor BY EDNA KENT FORBES. BY MARY MARSHALL. Making Furniture Grow. Not very long ago offering _prediction the bell-shaped hat that practically milliners were | erate interpretations is very different concerning what sort of hat would replace the cloche— from either cloche or gigolo. The lines of this hat are softer and more to succeed on that account than the high-crowned hat that was once of s a successor for the cloche | s Dheen dear to the hearts of French milliners ever since. This is a season of many shapes. While small hats seem to be the per- sistent choice of well dressed women for all but special occasions, large hats no longer look eccentric, as, they did a season or so ago. Turbans are still made for the benefit of those to whom they are becoming. Sometimes they are Egyptian turbans with narrow ribbons hanging at one side to strike | the Egyptian note. Cloches are still to be had and there are toques of all sorts and a variety of berettas. These new berettas are wide at the sides— a fact which makes them very gen erally becoming. (Copyrizht. 1926.) ! beautiful homes in New Winning Over Daddy. Dudley writes that like to horn in for a minute. He's not poverty stricken, exactl: but “working in New York that daddy way some day. nicest gir come en; But he's business is unprintable. You see Diana, the girl, is on the | stage, and his family, being one of the | Ol Gu ran't their son’ They Wwhen he wrote telling them frank! all theve w to be told they we nearly prostrated with the blow. Th had planned he was to tak of a big think of allowin connection with the dram: business—he L though he's generally becoming—much more likely | &Ware this is a_column for girls, he'd in his father's business with the knowledge millions are coming his met the in the world, and he's be. ! aged to her, and what his | mother and father think of the whole | are living in the West, and such big things for him— his place at the hLead ! was to have York, Paris Dr. Edith Hawley. Dr. Edith Hawleyr specialist in food economics in the Division o ics, Bureau of Hom C which is not, by the way, y, | g 0. | 1y | | oy | Econom- | liked California and decided to sts awhile and to complete some of her education while in residence there. So she added the course at the Santa | Barbara State Normal School of Home | Sconomics, and then returned to | Berkeley to teach domestic scien for two years By this time she had become serious- ly Interested in foods, and 1917 found | her at Columbia, working for fir: her A. B, and theh her A. M. Fol | lowed one of the most imj phases of her preparation—a nutrition | research assignment with the Associu- | tion for Improving the Condition of the Poor in New York City, investigat ing the calcium needs of children The A. L. S. P. has a home, called “Car oline Rest,” 20 miles from New York. | and here Miss Hawley spent three years in her ward and diet kitchen. practically cloistered with _the Does your your Kl nec Is the | clear color about it. The hair, grow smooth and without wr kin fine and firm and a he back view is so im portant, yet few women bother much instance. nicely, and is | because it | behind and Try it and see whether If you are shingled B0 to a hair dresser ol in three weeks o | expense is the only The one | of an otherwise ounds the head so niceiy one can comb it o to be trimmed. unfortunate fortunate ou will have to once That. part great thing the bob and the various | g, ‘oo PREENIe - FOTUREER | S kinds of shingles | make heads look in front. because it I nds that dra clasps that th have s n done. s to The style is v s done away geled down the neck, with Wispy | atraiq of | hair; ir properly and that hung in lop sided fashion in a A good hairdre back the head look roun slim where it is short it is plain. Faris there shingling, v] In has just re tired of combing the hair ‘m Be creeted it Petomnc loose way in the - . ear and dear 1o yea country during the World armed forces, and partici 1 <ome one | served | | War n [ tarly if he where it is flat, attractive where rick in coma_in. | a new v comb it all t friend will probably serubbing well up into tbe A B e sving. The restlt| One mother sz | to the center of the back, where the of the experiment was to prove defi-| Our little son was beginning to be | nitely that the little people need u |too large for his writing d and fixed amount of milk over and above | chair which had been given him when all other essentials of diet, a larger | he was quite small. ‘We adjusted this " amount than most of them receive | furniture to fit him by getting some s {the shock, they wrote him a letter "kt the end of this period, Miss Hax- | rather long wooden door stops with | | that burned the pages it was written P ley went to the i Research Foun. |the screws already attached and fast- | flon. o9 s dation at Leland Stanford University. | €ning one of these to each leg of the | They assured him they'd never 4 5 and here, in 1924, she took her Ph. D.. [desk and chair. A coat of varnish of | speak to him again if he took the| coming to the bureau almost imme- |the right shade was then applied. The { step, thut he'd be summarily dismissed dlately afterward. idea could be carried out in anything | land, Wisconsin, and many other | from the job he's holding, that they'd Now she Is taking the 4,000 records | that needed heightening. ates, with great loss of life and de- | never be able to hold up their heads collected by the Bureau of (Copyright, 1926.) struction of property. Kires destroy & again, TCORomIcA. from. 14 States, and more timber every Year in this coun-| He had sent them a picture of Di- g the food consmption e ehiche o try than people use. We talk aboul | &na, which they returned unopened. DR. EDITH HAWLEY. figures of the farm families studied Clues to Character druggist will supp the rapid way we are using up our | This, in spitc of the fact that he told i e and their types of diet. She is find- | 2 2 1 i (e L forests. If we only used them it would | them she is the very finest type of | jcal title, although it is an intriguing |ing the very interesting fact in this | S i foet'a few cents not be 5o bad. But we burn them up. | gitl. one'—comes to Washington after re. | connection conslderably more | e A THIE NEW BALLOON |1t I8 just as sensible to light vour| Now, he wants to know how to an-|markable training in her fleld. Born |food is consumed by the food pro-| tle, and you have WROUGHT 1N BLACK | Cigarette with a hundred-dollar bill as | swer their letter. He is hurt and an-| in Jowa, she spent some time at Tabor | ducers than by the average of the | whole quarter-pint of the most won PAINTED IN COLORED |to Start a carele: L4 He wunts to tell them bitter | College, a pioneer offshoot of Oberlin, | rest of the population, although the derful skin \hitener, softener and 2 B :;nelnlil oulr for re slm‘n'ed lhg\{x(r:ri[ ‘f ,:5‘ \\“' e nd (l;vn umg‘hl ("hu:;l for a_while | m; Surll.\" of !h‘P"|’.\rm ‘lllms beautifier. | accidentally, but m rpediby | NO: e ‘ ou've | jn order to finance desire to|in certain nutrition elemen: 2 is s 1 There 15 a stition | 80t to remember that parents | “ramble.” Through many parts of the | reasons for this are not yet cl acter in the face also rules in the de ”—\}frflflf UHI : \,\ffl_”.»”‘e::;zfnm it “improves we old, and their views are naturally { Middle West and Northwest she pur-| defined, but are expected to include | lineation of character by the hand. | ","“1‘_‘ ;“‘? UIC 1oty ikt | off in Spring. This improvement con. j RUrrow. sued this interesting way of combining | larger percentages of waste as well as | Every minute appearance in the hand hands. It cannot irritate. Famous stay sts in burning off all the beautiful You've got to try to make them feel | husiness and pleasure, until, in 1914, | larger actual consumption. Dr. Haw- is as significant a: n observed in beauties use it to bring that clea little Spring flowers and leaving u | better about the whole thing. If you|she “landed” at the Summer ley's findings will be published by the |the face. Hard labor and certain youthful skin and rosy-white cor | blackened waste behind: it generally | Write them in unger, you'll not only | the University of Californi bureau when they are finished. | kinds of labor change the hands and | plexion ; also as a freckle, sunburn an e “;'"l'{:‘"“»" buins the iaurel ;‘I',‘('j]‘f‘(’l';ffi,“"“"‘ mEICs Sl o g but it cannot | tan bleach. You must mix this r Cloche. 5 and - |and azalea bushes, and it may easily | them 3 g all ¢ LBl fotion yourself. Tt cannot 't loche, came and saved tho day for | cpread in o wind (o @ real forest and | WhY not try a different tack? Why WHEN WE GO S Produce the form of another ty il bl S cloche, said every one. But before |destroy tens of thousands of dollars (1Ot Write, saving that vou're deeply Where the bone is dominant in the | immediately after it is prepared. mrapy months had passed the gigolo | Worth of wood. grieved to have caused them so much goitr .. hand, you may be sure that the law of mm At prep seemed to los ething of its appeal | "Even if no serious results follow |Suffering? Say that you can, in a the straight line, the . and angle . And again milliners began to ask |Such fires, the humus 'in the | measure, understand their point of HARL. | governs the shape of the face. This Orchard Whlt(‘ themselves and each other what would | 5oil, which' it has taken centuries | View, but that they must reelize you | shows that the ruling powers of the with LARVEX and they are gafe anv- £ where for an_ entire season. You don't have to pack them awa Clothes can be left closets. Moth-worms will 1 chil and London. His wife was to be ‘ chosen from among the best families of America. And now he’s announced his intention of wedding just a little | insignificant nobod. i SPRINGTIME . TRY LEMON JUICE When the old folk recovered from TO WHITEN SKIN The only harm- less way to bleach the skin white is mix the juice of two lemons with threr ounces of Orchard Spring Fires. The newspapers bring reports of terrible fires in Massachusetts, Ma: BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. HERE 18 CROWN FELT PLAID. Love of Poetry. The same law which reveals char every woman wore and which still shows its influence on the shaping of many hats. Frankly, milliners disliked the cloche. It was so practicable and serviceable that it was not profitable. Finally the zigolo, a very natw ? “The Boston tea party, you will re. call, was the one where they didn't pl-© bridge at a penny a point.” No longer need you BY THORNTON W. BURGESS Every cotfon thing you own s, of course, safe from moth-damage. For moth-worms won't eat cotton. Every woolen thing you own can be made equally safe from moth-damage with LARVEX. For moth-worms will not A Bad Night. Why docs the darkr So olten ~cem ouble It Mrs. Grouse (Copyright. 1926.) sk tor. Horlick's'. Gt {2, The ORIGINAL - 4 halt « 7 Mdlted Milk 4 sees by day and sleeps by CAME TO THE HER. HOOTY THE OWL ( TREE JUST ABOVE and handsome pattern. On a sand | ground it displays tones of plum, pur Only an expert can tell anything about quality in bread, con replace the gigolo. | of leaf mold to create, is burned out in | haven’t done this deliberately to hurt BB ™ o ' & " _!mind will be turned in the direction e K010, e across |a few minutes. In the place of our na- | them. Sizing Up Your Spring Suit. | short-waisted woman. (lave you ever |of weience or mechanism, and the 5 Bt Sgrs tive wild flowers, which cannet leave | Tell your father that you've always | noticed that sizes are designa strongest traits will be a love of order the statemeni that the casquette ; held hi o 4 In order to size up your suit for |ey, bers for regulnr A oo would supplant the gigolo—also that | Without humus, will come up ugly, | 1€ld him model of fairness andf 1T = oW WHEL s YO0 L nuimbe or regular and that morality and conscientious T e e W | thushisosts. tried in every way to emulate his ex- | Spring you must know what size You | numbers for stouts and odd numbers | ness will be the dominant principles in Elolosthtements which might be s | As I write this now, a fire is raging | 4mple: that vou know e will consider will most Hicely titce. Many a WOILER |fop Hort walsted models? the character. little ~ disconcertin vou did not |in the woods not haif a mile. away; | this auestion from every ang R LT “‘"[ Suits for young misses are sized 14.| When the hand is long, with fingers know that to al! i " 2d purposes | fortunately it is going to rain, other fore he takes any definite action. doesn’t fit her, simply 1 ¢ {16 and 18 he 18 suit is equivalent |of moderate size and length, it pro. the casquette and the balicon shape | Wise nobody could now undo the crimi- | Write that you can't understand the | ,‘"‘;‘;““f‘ I {to about a 36 in a regular woman's | quces the best form for artistic efforts And your clothes are always available. e identical—t the ‘caBqueite | inkl \owbpk' of iame, careless “peraon | PIcture's beins unopened, since thaty anc sou Perslt r, SRV RE 0TI joult. Foung girls should not go ol |fov it glves strengtn: and’ flexibility Never wrinkled. Never smelly. For i lone. of thEFkioRl Srivportant ofetha|iesiziy, SwHIh dMiiventans Snot \only | YOull Indicate they hadniit given Di-[amoddl o yours eote 0 Fay & SE | of thely_depaciment, becduse th with rapidity of movement. With this LARVEX is odorless. halloon shapes. woodlands but nearby houses. Such |ana @ fair chance—they hadn't even with which you ave apt to be GiHab-; usually find women's suits are hand is associated a character pos LARVEX fs harml d mon Here really is cffange—for the |is the nature of the “‘improvements” “”}"““;“ "1' S‘l’*’ ;“h"""'rtl;“l‘ face "ho“‘t‘rhlmmt;-d a:)_\ u \]umln.“ li""‘ lvv!haf‘- full and long for them. There sessed of more emotion and affectior et Gt qp“flnd :!‘n::r:x\;;hr;"n“mf ; . acan iu ik 3 > e NGRRe Hies the lack of character they suspect. |on the other hand, that you must | junjor sizes, too, for vounger girls, | tha Ol o ToEie TR & 3 S A ne- Welhin shom SOCk tn G inic SIME TIPS -1 HAAEISTa, e [ Sake. cour letter sound. as thoigh | Mecensrily, selectn Buitiinthe siie You | an thay ran s dses 18 10 Aol hr | | o o & A gt it trates the wool fibres and makes anything | you expected i ntal blessing in j sizes and suits are If you have an overgrown yvoung lacking in organizing abilit This woolen mothproof for an entire season. the next mail. Appeal to your father’s {girl to dress, your problem may be hand is found on lovel 2 Mothproof every woolen article you B Y i sense of and Rand him all | zes are measured uccord- | olved in a “fappe own with LARVEX. Then you will know | }lh-l‘_\n-\r-llv o "I'\‘-n‘ HeibugHbit ling to l:xc Iu]M measure, ”“;l for (I):.'u provides cpildish models in lar; they are safe! f o 't respond. he oug 0| reason it takes a ¢ well propor- | and these are 12 p 6. o v 2 | feel fairly cheap. That’s better than | ioned woman to by Shlibeit i I: i u'sn“(‘)-fé e e e b | just making mad. Alw try | which doesn't require alte; 1 = 50, Once ¥ou have the atomizer buy terrible voice of his and then instantiy | S0ft s re you turn on the!yegular sizes run from 31 to 44 inches Eggs and Spinach. LARV E“: “:“kl;'m .;:om.ze;hu, Or save lixtlen with his wonderful e: That | heuvy {bust. The measurement x;muhl be P R :_"r":‘;e’—",“!’a"u: Lo d"““'”d:;a’"- sudden “hoot in ihe ness wakens taken over the clothing which you | ° ° e g " ke Pt the little people who may be sleeping will wear with the suit [RRBIORSI I8 a i SElIRf o T e - somewhere ne it ‘s apt to malke |, Mimi will beglad to snayer any inauis Stout women are needle: sensi [dish and rich in iron. Be eat any woolen thing mothproofed with o b 4 CORPORATIO! P e L e Hax ne |one or two start and, rustle a leat or | St e Tone T ictored. © "™ tive about their propertions, and some | lightly, add salt and papr LARVEX. BIOOMEEY. ¥ ! B L R “Y two. Hooty's great eurs catch the 4 of them actually resent being shown i s That is the beauty of thi time scares ~ou ot night =AU least.|very faintest rustle of u leaf. or the g | stout sizes. They would rather crowd i“"“""‘""”"“""b‘" il and r* Y e L A el o e S o e Hibtte | scratching of a claw on the tark.| | THOME NOTES | | preomtortbly into a regular model [ teaspoontul of butter. Turn into a ‘/' — Food Lt i e oris WA AT e cc it isn't so : Then his eyes, made for seeing in | that doesn’t fit them. In most s | hot frying pan and cook over a moder. . @ - endko | the eating. Moths themselves are harm- people of the Green Iorest and the | garkness, are quite sure to find the s thait i stout s are tactfully called “stylisb | 4t fire, stirring constantly with i ~ Forlnfant less. They merely lay the eggs which ‘ireen Me: who sleep during the | gne who made that tiny noise. { g e stouts.” These are made for women |for " As the egg begins to thicken | ‘ A Invalidi batch into moth-worms. prevents moth-damage because day and come out at night. But for ! “yeoty hooted up there above Mrs. Y WRE! | | who are large throush the bust. The¥ | aqq two tablespoonfuls of chopped 8 the other little people the night is full | Grouse. It was a terrible sound. H 5 sizes 4215 to 541;. They ar= S . caopped a Spray your woolen things thoroughly —IT MOTHPROOFS THE CLOTH ITSELF £ fears. and really there shoalan’t be 5 g e come in sizes 4213 to 5415, ey ar= | gegsoned spinach carefully drained i No Cookin; © 1936, The Larves Corp. of fears. and really there 't be |eyes flew open instantly, but she didn’t | New patterns and color combina- | %0 cut as to give extra length from |4nd stir to a light creamy mass. This | Nourishing—Digestible—No Cooking. tiose who | MOVe: which was very’ fortuante for | yons in cretonnes are always interest. | the shoulder to the waistiine, and thed | dish may be prepared in five minutes. | The Home Food-Drink for All Ages night, She | 1or; For auite a while all was allent. }ing. hecause they. open new vistas of [are & great boon to the stout women. | It seemed to Mrs. Grouse that her|gecorating possibilities. Here is anew | Manufacturers have also designed heart was beating so Joud that Hooty | suits which are specially adaptable to | et h)ear it. ‘.\h‘e "nm;: kn((;;v Just the l.clmrb‘wals(od flg;llred du o have | where he was, but she knew that he ! such a figure, vou'll find that vour | was vomewhere near. Then he hooted | suit run in odd numbers from 41 | |again. Poor Mrs. Grouse! It seemed | to 59. This model is designed through now that her heart had stopped beat- | out_to_conform with the lines of a | |ing for a moment or two and then | i s - = |egan to thump again. She knew now U z, | that Hooty was in the tree just above {her. It was dreadful to have him so !near. She just felt his great eyes look. ling down at her. Of course, they were | doing mothing of the kind, but she | couldn’t know that. Oh, how hard she | | tried not to move the tiniest, tiniest | | bit; and how she dreaded hearing him hoot again. You see, that voice was 0 sudden, o loud, and so altogether | frightful, that she was afraid_she would move in spite of all her efforts | not to. | After the third time Mrs. Grouse waited and waited and waited and | dreaded to hear that voice again. It | | got sv that it almost_as bad not ! to hear it as to hear it. When she did | hear it, she knew where Hooty was. | | When she didn’t hear it, she imagined cannot see in the dark. o she Sits |that Hooty was very close, indeed. By tight and trusts that no one will see |ang by, after what seemed to her half | lier. But she tometimes has some |ine night, Hooty hooted again. This | great frights. More t once she | time his voice came from a long dis hias heard the footsteps of Reddy Fox |tancé aw BB Re ol fio 15 he has passed very close. Then |ihe faintest of sighs and settled hersel | Plish blue, purple, soft yellow and u | she has held her breath. But frights [on her eggs once more. “Such a |8rayish green. ! are a part of the daily life of the it- | fright + she murmured, “such a dreud. | This cretonne suggests a room with | tle people of the Green Meadows and | ful fright! 1 do wish Jolly, round Mr. | cream-color plastered Gl the Green Forest. | Ban W P iland cream-colored woodwork toucl Reddy Fox, Ol Man Coyote and |page o3 hUrry up and get out of ; 3y, 2 line of biue. The drap y obeat are bad enough. | But Hooty the Owl wasn't wishing |Slip covers for the easy chairs would 1 the minds of some | anvihing of the kind. You see, he | be of the cretonne itself, bound in | )eople is Hooty the OWL | hadn't dined yet in spite of all his | plum-colored alpaca. The under cu > Hooty flies o silently | hooting. ; ins would be of ecru organdie and inything to give warn- s np sk rellow bound 1 spite of all i dark green. The sofa would be cov ered in plain plum-colored velvet and | the rug 4 plain dark green Wilton. of these little This is becau There is neve ing that Hooty is near. his care, Reddy Fox will oécasionally rustle a I But Hooty the Owl like a gre shadow in the midst other dow He seems to float | rather than fly. ’ at one night as Mrs se, st, asleep on her nest with her under her, was dreaming the happiest kind of dreams Hooty the Owl ne to the tree jus above her. He didn’t know she was there and, of course, Mrs. Grouse didn’t know that he was up above her. It_is Hooty’s way to hoot with_the PICKLES are serve (Copyright, 1926.) < = Vacum cleaners now are Leing sold on the installment plan in Algeri; What this little seal on your bread means fo you * - . Wiar s i that causes you to insist upon one kind of bread instead of another? You probably could not say which was which—if it were not for the wrappers. No one but an expert can tell, just by the looks of the loaf, anything about the whole- someness and purity of the ingredients; about the skill and care with which it has been mixed, raised and baked. Isn’t it the name of the maker that decides you—just as it does in the case of almost everything else you buy for your home? On the wrapper of every loaf of Rice’s bread you will find the seal of the City Baking Institute. What does this seal mean to you? It means that the loaf on which it appears has been tested by skilled experts and marked 100% in quality of ingr~dients, in perfection of baking. L L Convenient and always ready to pro- tect your pretty frocks are these dainty Dress SuieLp Guimpes from Kleinert’s. - Made of fine net in flesh, white, or black, with Kleinert’s famous Gem shields sewed in just the MR right position. Ask to ; 9 :::: gll!:;lm::r;l:‘:"-p:;fl" S70% LR see the other Kleinervs || Fine fit....Flav'vless fashion © T palr .......... G0c to T5e { you find them in Serim Curtains. ruffle § VAN RAALTE pair ... 5S¢ SILK-STOCKINGS Filet Panels, each, 50c to $1.00 ! silk Curtains. pair $1.50 to $2.50 —=*"because you love nice things” MADE Y THE MAXERS OF VAN RAALTR Australian Shades .23%e sq. ft. Sux Grovas, Snx UNpszwaar FOOTER’S /m lean Curtains for Spring It's easy to have your cur- tains, drapes and other fabric Luster Lasts furnishings bright and cheerfu) like the new spring days. Foot- er's clean everything in fab- ric and fur. The charges, moderate. indeed. I¥ vou mave not yet tried Rice’s bread, order a loaf today and see how good it is— how fragrant, delicious and satisfying—how daintily it slices, how well it keeps. Your housewifely soul will revel in these big, beautifully browned, perfectly baked loaves. And your family will exclaim with pleasure over the rich flavor of the delicate, firm-textured slices. And Rice’s loaves are fresh always because they are baked and delivered twice a day. Whether you market in the morning or in the afternoon, you are always sure of getting newly baked bread. Solarine dissolves the tarn- ich like magic and leaves a higk Juster that lasts. It’s the only safe pol- ish. Buy a can today at your grocer,hardware, druggist or auto shop. Dress Shields keep your CLEANERS & DYERS. dresses free from odor 1332 G St. N.W. Phone Main 2343 “A phone call brings our service to your door” Copyright, 1926, by the City Baking Compang