Evening Star Newspaper, May 12, 1926, Page 35

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WOMA N’S PAGE. Rapidly Changing Jewelry Fashions BY MARY Fashions in jewelry mnow almost as liner Some women would wear a last season's hat a last CORAL AND JAD 3. LET WITH LARC HOOP BAR- RING TO MATCH. RHINESTON INITIAL PINS FOR HAT OF SHOULDL X CRYSTAL CHOKF AL OF THE 2 LINK BRA! kcason’s bracelet. Empress 1 of France d other not @ Crowin heads of old Europe had t} less jewels set ever, but it is w ordinary have such fashion. One bit does mot 1 time to time usually 1 by the of the small circlet of sw tirely up-to when the peared bracelet nd v diamonds jewelr nie 1 ccent date - effect jew 1 folk ray of her ring recently. riv p- ave of s m: tinum v be passed these days —nec EAT AND BE HEALTHY Dinah Day’s Daily Talks.on Diet The Right Food Is the Best Medicine The Fat Child. all the 1 the On one = the normal. world, the divided into sheep and de there and on the ones, whos those (e the awaken- to slimness, little After pic healthy chil rest of them two gro! goats of th would be the other we'd put arms and I overst eve, en in could o Rible. the eirls hange pidly as fashions in mil- soon 10 longer want figures in their Some fond with blind offspring as round and roiy ing.” she of fact, t “fat” is not short on reserve { pu might 1 look loo a matt who is noticeal ile is in truth His lowered otesque, fat | betes, to sk diseases makes b to resistan to pneumonia troubles und general. He is heca the startlin in t feet 1y on to get f the It ny had to soldier: > A t child tremely foad pie, chocolate laye ni big ks of bread and gobs sves rich and fat- the disposi- for somebody thing is true. fon s easy His ener lower than his body o much food 1s not of it is puat tlon or propensity turn to fat, we he To this extent such = His nature or dispc sing—he doe r equirements bein excitable yo ter's, gine does not requit to keep it goin barned up away on tl Still use old hygienic methods. Charming freshness, true protec- tion, this new way ... discards like tissue O help women meet every day unhandicapped is the object of a new hygiene. A way that ends s of the old-time “sanitary t ends the embarrassment of disposal. Eight in 10 better-class women today employ “KOTEX.” Wear lightest gowns and frocks without a second thought, any day, anywhere. Five times as absorbent as ordi- mary cotton pads! Deodorizes. Ends ALL fear of offending. Discards as easily as a piece of t No laundry. * You get it at any drug or depart- ment storc simply by saying, “KOTEX.” No embarrassment. In fairness to yourselt, try this new way. Costs only a few cents. Twelve in a package. KOTEX Mo laundry—discard [ia tissme his food to | MARSHALL laces, Dracelets, chains. There may be conservative who agree with the conservative jew- elers ther bad form to wear a brd necklace or ring that is not the very best of its Kind. According to this theory it would be well enough to wear a rhinestone hat buckle, but quite reprehensible to wear a rhinestone ring. Fine quality imitation pearls are the only excep- tion in the way of necklaces. ~ Accord- ing to the conservative opinion, an imitation or plated gold necklet would be not quite correct. & Most of us are not so conservative, however, and so we willingly buy pounds of the new inexpensive orna- ments, realizing that from the pres ent point of view all jewelry must be rather heavy and massive. Stewed Prun Oatmeal With Cre Omele Broiled Bacon. Rice Cakes, Maple Sirup. Coffee. INCHEON slish Monkey ted Crackers. s of Lettuc neh Drossing Chocolate Cornstarch Coffee. Pudding. DINNER Mushroom Soup. i Shoulder. Mashed Potatoes Cream of « Joiled Cabi Mix one cup bolled, vice with one and onehalf cups flour mixed and sifted with one-half teaspoon salt and two teaspoons baking powder. Add one well | | veaten ez and sufficlent milk to make thin batter, beat well | | and bake on greased griddle. Serve with maple sirup. ENGLISH MONKEY. One cup cheese in small pieces, one ecup bread crumbs which have heen soaked in one «t milk, one egg beaten ne-half teaspoon salt, ayenne, pinch soda, one tablespoon butter; cook five minutes. Serve on toast or erackers, FRUIT SALAD. Pee and cut two large oranges -into pieces. add cup shredded pineappl half \d malaga gr which skins and seeds been removed, and one-h: pound marshmallows cut into ! P ten to aste, 1 nests of lettuce leaves srown with boiled dressing mixed with equal quantity whipped cream. | the fat is not evenly distributed and| | they very unhealty lookin The over-fat child is not seen sol |often as his fellow victim, the | anaemic child, but Fatty's condition y j needs looking over. and more than | likely his habits eating need to | be corrected. G. W. F. rooms have st Answer—You contain_ &t | ilable, T am- reduci Mush- | ch: can 1 eat them?| may. Mushrooms do | it is n sim- | are permitted to T suffer with billisus- {ness. One person tells me use n orange at night, anoth~ orange is b at night swer—A glass of orange juice night s an excellent thing for | Readers desiring personal anewera to their questions should send self-addressed, stampesi envelope to Dimah Day, care of | The Star. = sy . Jellied Shank of Veal. | Have the marketman saw the bone across a couple of times, s | veal shank may easily be ple | pot. Put it on to stew with water { enough to cover well. When the water begins to hoil, skim. then set the pot {back where it will simmer gently for |four hours. When the veal is tender, {take it from the pot, cut the meat ! {from the bones. then put the bones| {back in the stock to bbil still longer. { Cut the meat in pieces about half the ize of a hazelnut. Take up the bones |and strain the stock through a fine| ieve. Now place both the stock and | ! the cut-up meat in a clean pot. adding | salt and pepper for seasoning. and let them boil down until there is just enough stock to cover the meat. Cut some boiled ham in pleces about hul!j lan inch square, allowing two table- | spoonfuls of ham to a guart of veal.| Place the ham on the bottom of a mold and pour the veal stock over it. t aside in & cool p) vou Comfort is the first thought in this most Convenient SANTA- LETTE—easy in cut, cool, butadequately protective. Kleinert’s make a most ingenious variety of sani- taryapronsand bloomers, someall rubber combined withscrim,someofrubber- ized nainsook, and others of rubberized silk. In such garments, the quality of the rubber de- termines your satisfaction —for your own protec- tion, insist on g Rubberized end Pure Rubbei | emotionally f | marked | who know {are alws SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY Puttin’ me to bed without my supper Just because somefin gets lost! I ain't had it, has I? All right for them! { After they keep me in hero weeks an’ | 1| weeks, an’ T dies, they'll be sorry. | bet! (Copyrikht, 192 What TomorrowMeans toYou BY MARY BLAKE. Taurus. lanetary aspects are able, although rather active efforts are concerned. They do not presage any success for enterprises or changes. They do, however, portend an atmosphere of kindness and con- sideration. If you have been a party to a long-standing quarrel, if you have perpetuated personal differences that should never have existed, it is a great opportunity for forgiving and forget- ting, as there will be an air of re- sponsiveness that will yleld to the first overture. It is also a’ favorable oce slon for lovers, as “they can seize the moment when heart inclines to heart Children born tomorrow will not at birth reveal those evidences of robust ness that are a desired. goes on it will be discovered, however, re less subject to illness majority of little ones, and s to which they will er nature Tomorrow's negative s than the even the be exposed will he of as than usual. In character they will be extremely affectionate and selfish. They will be rather shy as voungsters and reserved adult Nothing, howevs their attention, and they wlll be capable ¢ handling themselves creditably in an and all emergencies It tomorrow is your birthday, you an ingratfating personalit; store of sou t. | they were married, and eloped, but you have an un ity to make a quick analy ny situation and visualize th outcome.. You never nor do you allow otners to fool \ou, no matter how plausible they may Of what the world calls erudition you have only a small stock, but all those you envy vour unerring judgment and invariable accuracy of thought. You have a great facllity | for making friends, and reciprocal loy {alty prevails between you. Manner- isms are forelgn to your nature. You vs frank and at the same time courteous. Your home life, especially if mated with one born in January or August, should be ideally hapdpy. Well known persons born on that date are Montgomery C. Melgs, sol- dier: Arthur Rotch, architect: Rev. Perey Stickney Grant and William Boyce Thompson, financier. i Vélmtogn Chipru; L | support him. As time | un- | fool yourself, | Warns That Matrimony Works no Miracles Wil He or She Change After Marriage? DorothyDix o Magic in Marriage Ceremony Which Will| Change 'Drunkards, or Loafers, or Jazz Babies From What They Are Into What They Should Be. {ERE is no question that I am asked oftener than whether a man or woman will change after marriage. A girl will write me that she is in love with a drunkard, and she wants to know if he will continue to drink after marriage. Or she will say that she is thinking of marrying a young man who has no trade or profession, and who has never had any regular employment, and she asks if he will go to work and become an industrious man and a good provider for his family as soon as he is married. A young man will write me that he is in love with a feolish, frivolous, flighty girl, who is crazy about going on wild parties and jazzing and smok- ing and drinking, and he wants to know if she will change when she is married, and make a settled, domestic wife. Or he will say that he is engaged to an extravagant girl who spends on clothes everything she can lay her hands on, and he asks if I think she will make a thrifty pnd economical wife for a poor man. Both men and women, engaged to be married, will write me that'they can never agree about anything, or on any subject, and that they argue and quarrel continually before marriage, yet they want to know if after ‘murriage they will live together in peace and harmony. ‘These questions are so foolish that they would be amusing if they were not so tragic, for they show how many people still cling to the superstitious ! belief that there is some magic in the marriuge ceremony that has power | to alter the entire natures of men and women and make them over into dif | ferent beings. | . the faults and weaknesses of These deluded ones see clearly enough s husbands and wives, those whom they are tentatively thinking of taking and they would not consider marrying them as they are. No woman wants a drunkard or a leafer for a husband. No man wants a pleasure-mad woman or a spender for a wife. No man or woman looks forward to pass | ing the remainder of life in a perpetual fight. | If they knew that the man or woman of whose habits and characteris | they disapprove would continue to be after marriage what they are before marriage, they would not consider entering into a life contract with | them. But they put their faith in the idiotic bellef that there is some sort of maglc In the words at the altar that changes the bride and bride groom from what they are into what they should be. D on this fallacious belief they risk their whole life" ly with disastrous results. For matrimony works no mirac | man and woman were before marriage, they Only more | For the great majority of people marriage means a letting down of the | bars and a throwing off of restraint and the privilege of being themselves [ without having to camouflage graces and virtues that are foreign to them. | What a ‘MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. One Mother Says: My young daughters were growing very slangy and careless in their speech. One evening I invited their favorite teachers to dinner. Having previously taken them into my confi. dence, I proceeded to use all the slang phrases “overworked adjectives and bits of careless English I could recall having heard them use. The girls were greatly surprised and really very much embarrassed. Now I have only to repeat after them any objectionable word or expression, and they take the correction quite good-naturedly. (Copyright. 1026 ) What Do You Know About It? aily Science Six. Has coal gas any odor? What makes the pleasant the air after an elec- 1 smell tric 3, at produces eggs” 4. Light and heat are caused by vibrations in the atmos- phere: s this true of smell? C chemical the smeil element of bad ! The drunkard finds that matrimony has not quenched his thirst, but | | augmented it, because he has more cares to drown in drink. The lazy good- othing is just as disinclined to work after marriage as before, and has s little shame in letting his wife support him he had in letting his mother | i The girl who lived on thrills and excitement before marriage is bored to| death with her husband and children. Shs whose god was fashion continues | j to worship at the same shrine as long as she lives. | gt . And the couple who could not get along before marriage discover about a million additional things after marriage over which they can spat, because they are brought into daily and hourly conflict over every detail of the life | they share together. i | Occasionally-——once in a blue moon-—there is There has been a drunkard. now and then, who reformed ried. There has been a female Simon Legree who has made band go to work. There has been a wild woman w came domestic and stayed contented at her own fireside. | avagant girls who became tight-fisted when it was their | own money they were spending instead of and there have been men { and women who disagreed before marriage, who signed a peace pact when | reafter respected each other's taboos. | > 6. i | BUT these exceptions are so few and far apart that they are not worth| taking into consideration in figuring on the advisability of mar man or woman who does not come up to your ideal, on the off chan marriage will change him or her from what he or she is into the kind of husbs ‘We may be the darling of the gods, and hav ort of a miracle worked in our behalf. The chances are that we are fot, and no supernatural fntervention Wil save a fool from the results of s folly. And, after all, what right have we to marry, expecting our husbands and wives to change their characters to please us. It is up to us in the first| place to take them or leave them as they are. If a woman doesn’t want a rounder for a husband, why doesn't she marry a sober, settled man to begin with? If she craves the things that | money buys, why doesn’t she pick out getter for a husband instead of | a dreamy poet or a fascinating ne'er-do-well? | n exception to this rule. | fter he got mar.| loating hus- | » has had enough of a | And if & man wants a domestic, thrifty wife, who will stay at home and | watch the soup pot and count the pennies, why doesn’t he choose a domestic | girl instead of one who is a fashion plate and the joy of the cabarets The truth of the matter is that when you go shopping for husbands or wives you have to know what you want and pick it out in the first place. You can’t change it after you get it home. That's certain. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1026.) { Sweet Soup. kernels are large, opaque globules | like. | for gre in use today 1s cotton. Wash and pare six potatoes and | slice them in thin slices into cold vater. Drain and plunge them into double boiler and add one cupful of n kettle of bofling water for one min- | shed sago. l.et boll for one hour, ute. Drain well, blanch in cold water | then add one cupful of washed seed- and dry thoroughly on a clean towel. | less raisins and a pinch of salt. When Put the potatoes in a wire basket | it has boiled another hour add enough and fry them in deep hot fat. Keep |sugar to sweeten nicely and put in an in motion by shaking the basket dur-|inch of stick cinnamon. Have boiling ing the frying process. Drain on water in the tea kettle and add more paper and sgeason with ealt and pep- [ water if the mixture gets too thick. Tut a quart of boililng water in a hanging suspended in the soup. Add the juice of one-half a lemon and the | julce of one orange and serve piping hot in hot soup plates. This is a very nutritious and healthful food that can be taken by even delicate persons. Do not make the soup too thick. Peopls of the Netherlands East Indies are buying many new Ameri- hot or cold. Continue the bolling until the sago can automobiles. Is the sense of smell strongly marked {n most birds? 6. Why is a malodorous gas put into {lluminating gas? Answers to these questions in tomorrow's Star. Sense of Smell in Insects. A dog’s smell is marvelously keen, | red to that of | LS v - but it is nothing comy insects, which are attracted from great distances by an odor that they In fact, bad insect v be lured to destruction placing a substance that smeils sweet to them in some sort of trap or poison. They | are also powerfully repelled by odors espectally camphor, though have not much objection to ced me people believe. The most f: mous _experiment the sense in insects {s that of Male insects appear to find mates by smell more than sight. The femalo leaves on tever she touches an odor delicious to her mate, but o faint that we cannot smell i ourselves. It is, however, perceived t distances, perhaps miles, b her mate, even through thick walls Fabro showed that even the presence of another powerful odor like that of sulphur would not disguise it. Now what do you know that? Answers to Yesterda; The commonest v they about Questions. 2. Argentina, Australia, the United States, Spain, 3 Persia and India are the chief wo producing countries 3. Alpacas also produce wool 4. The stem of the flax plant is used for linen fiber. 6. Jute is used in gunny sacking. 6. Sisal Is a Mexican fiber that has ‘recently become of great importance. Ginger Creams. Mix in the order given, some sugar, half a cupful of molasses, one cup- ful of sweet milk, one teaspoonful of baking soda dissolved in milk, one tablespoonful of ginger and three cup- fuls of flour. Spread thinly with a knife on well greased baking tins, and when done cut in squares and dust with powdered eugar. What a relief to be absolutely dwie Never again that humiliating em- barrassment. A healthful glow-of perspiration no longer destroys her charm with a hint of unpleasant odor. For women have found a way to prevent it. Lifebuoy re- moves the cause of body odor. That cause is a constant accumu- lation of fatty waste and of perspiration in @/ the pores of the body—not merely under the arms. Local applications only re- lieve part of this condition. Baths help, but their effect is soon gone unless Lifebuoy is used. Lifebuoy’s antiseptic lather penetrates each pore and removes every trace of odor-causing waste. So thorough is this cleans- ing that your body ‘ immaculate, all day. L Not a substitute stays sweet, fresh, for cleanness, but stops smell of the acids <0 (W3 weA o _m "y 08" cleannessitself. Health is guarded Skin is kepf tion—beautifully soft and smooth. The wholesome, antiseptic t in the pink of condi- Lifebuoy rinsesaway Lifebuoy is orange red—the color of its pure palm fruit oil. Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mam. smell | Fabre. | their | zetable fiber FEATURES. WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. and yet the cheaper ono may be really the better suited for your needs. Every home has some use for me: cerized cotton. Study your own need: and buy the fabric which will give you the most satisfaction. e Onion-Cucumber Soup. Peel and cut in thin slices cross wise two good-sized onions and three cucumbers. Cover with one pint of boiling water and one pint of veal o chicken stock, and simmer very slow ly for one hour, then rub through a sleve, pressing hard so a& to obtatn a8 much of the pulp as possible. TR« turn to the fire to keep hot. In a double boiler scald one pint of milk and stir into it one tablespoonful of butter and two tablespoonfuls of flour, rubbing together to a paste. Wher thick and smooth, add the strained soup, season to taste, simmer for fiv minutes and serve with croutons. Real Mercerized Cotton. Not every cotton fabric having a glossy finish is mercerized. Some of those glossy finishes which you see in fabrics are produced with paste mix- tures applied after the material was woven. “Paper cambric” is one fabric with a paste finish which many shop- pers have confused with mercerized materials. Some fabrics get a glossy effect by being pressed between heavy rollers, but cotton cloth may be given a silky effsct by mercerizing. To mercerize the cotton thread is put into a chemi- cal bath under tension. This makes the threads round and rodlike. The cloth then becomes softer and it seems glossy and silky because it reflects the light better. Mercerizing often makes cotton cloth look like linen. If vou are buying linens for your household, or, for that matter, need any sort of white goods, Iyou may be able to save a good de: of money by buying mercerized cot- ton. Cotton, of course, won't wear as long nor look as well as linen, but it Is much cheaper. Cotton cloth that has bheen mercer- ized is much stronger than ordinary cotton cloth, and that's another reason why vou should insist upon the mer- cerized when buying cotton cloths for hard usage. In the process of mer- zation the cotton fiber is strength- 1, and, therefore, the material im ange as it may cem, many women have been confusing artifictal sllk with mercerized cotton. The for- mer {= much more lustrous than mer- cerized cotton, and there is no reason | why the two should confuse you. An-| other point of importance is that mer- cerized cotton retains its luster, while fabrics with paste finiches, et only temporary luster. There are many mercerized cotton | cloths on the market today, and there | are also materials int nich bright | mercerized yarns have been introduces | to form stripes, figures and checks. | Among the best known mercerized | fabrics are batistes, mull, cotton dam- ask, cotton foulard, sateen Venetian | and cotton poplin. Each of these is | valuable for sonms spectal purpose, ac cording to its character. For under- ! wear and infants’ dresses the sheer | fine fabrics, like batiste, are best, | whila the heavier ones, like cotton poplin.® are better for linings and | household uses. Tt means dollars in your pocket to| know which merce; | suited for needs vou have former | supplied _with more expensive terials. The difference between s | venetian linings and ik linings for { season mav run up Into many doll; PEP brings vitality— and marvelous fla- vor. Contains bran. A ready-to-eat c-e;l NAM FADELESS DYES Dye or tint all g materials in | 3 one operation | Dresses made of combined materials | dyed or tinted in one operation. | meed to rip apart. Same applies to Id_npen'el. etc. Boi! to dye. Dip to tint. The original one-peckage dye for | all materials and pu rections in package. 15 cents at your dealer’s. | Use Putnam No-Koler Bleach to remove | color and stains. | Free Sample Package ofdve color) sent with illusrrated oys of Beaurifving fardrobe.” Send 10 cents 10 cover handling and postege. ” Address Dept. N-3 MONROE DRUG COMPANY, QUINCY, ILL, 1-.-A drop 2..A rub 3.~A shine Solarine does the job quickly-on gold, silver, . brass, aluminum and nickel. The Solarine luster lasts, too. Sold by good grocers, hardware. drug stores and auto shops everywhere 1SoLamine so%l ‘fi';f\\\l“\“\"\ /M»fl/.,;{l,g; i | Your Baby’s Carriage OU can be sure of the proper carriage for Baby by selecting one with A Quality Seal on Every Wheel. Look for this seal—a Red Hub Cap with the letters H-W in gold. One hundred years of experience have guided Heywood-Wakefield designers in producing carriages built to fit your baby, at prices to Your dealer is now showing new designs in Heywood - Wakefield Reed and Fibre Fur- niture, which is be- coming the vogue for every room in the home. ywood -‘Wfié%’a’}l REG. U.S. PAT. OFF

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