Evening Star Newspaper, May 12, 1926, Page 36

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WOMAN’S PAGE. Making the Most of Your Looks BY DOROTHY STOTE. Conrad _Morgon r Ad ¢ “older_ woman rer. Convad has @ d ix a pro n Jean, lorence A Tiny Rift. «d and the matter of ot mentioned again 1. But on the third s dressing for dinner <onrad dressed and loun hurt be iture, Is your the change? Aft this do, can't ound on Conrad. She being engulfed 7 ng disapointment that nd the same urious in her ve gone h bad Con should - hurt h she did not . But she could | helple: . of her feelin e said quickly, that.” : If it means 8o much to you d 11, of 1 just felt that perha pou d lize how much sen v people attach to the things been theirs for years. ! Mrs. Morgan and on was a man. 1t his mother was things as difficult nor would he th any act of would have scorned such th: noment she spoke to change this room, 1It's gloomy and depressing. 1 1 cheerful things about wnt I hurt your moth- her ec my point 1, we have to live vdern damsel blushes = profanity, it's probably lizes she's gotten a lit- o go to| s | make trouble be Dear Ann: Maturity brings with it that fullness at the back of the neck which s known as the dowager's hump. But it need not be revealed. A flare collar fitting close in the back will do much to conceal it, whereas a. rounded neck line, low both in the back and the front, will brmg to light in unpleasant line. Tours for diséreet collurs, LETITIA. ) our lives, just as your mother and father lived the And in a matter 50 personal as my own room I think ‘I sl’m\lld be the judge of what I want niate “‘Of course you should, darling, I didn't know you felt so strongly about it. T just didn’t want mother to get the idea that you were exiravagant. { You see, s never had very much and has always had to Jean did not er, but her busy went on working. So Mrs. Mor- zun had said more to Cou than the wt that she was hurt about the fur. » had doubtless impressed the fact that he had mar. ctical woman who was vagant. Of course she not make the mistake of com- it openly and saying so. She that. But there of doing such , and Con had been instantly responsive She was silent for so long that Con's as troubled when he spoke. “Jean, vou're not holding it against {me because I made that suggestion, you? The Ide: for her, crushing nd for a rmoment stten as s they drew it flashed with ¢ rapldity across Jean's mind. oo soon now for any one to ween them, even 1 I's mother. But would it always {be that way? Would the time come when the mere clinging together would not eutice? Would Mrs. Mor. gan succeed some day in hurting their iove, in driving them apart? These were questions that only time itselt could answer, but it seeined to Jean |that he had’ had a glimpse into the future, (Continued in tomorrow’s Star.) hart at last, @ thoug lightni 1 It | BY JONATHAN War Machine Needs Oiling. NEW YORK, May 12, 1776.—Gen. Washington's latest report to Con- gress on the state of the Army makes it evident that a number of matters | of routine and procedure will have to | be smoothed ‘out before the war ma- chine can begin to operate with com- plete efficiency. The gene reveals in his report, which bears yesterday's date, that his plans are severely ham- pered by the failure of Congress to act promptly upon many of Mis recom- mendations. “1 would take occasion to suggest to Congress, mot wishing or mean. ing of myself to assume the sms degree of power in uny instance, says the general, “the propriety and necessity of having their sentiments respecting the filling up the cles and ticers.” eral, “With the utmo: respect 1 would beg le: Congress of my former letters and applications respecting the appoint- mient of proper persons to superin- tend and take direction of prisoners. general also recommends the appointment of several brigadier gen- erals and hopes that Congress will r when he wishes them The er problem has given endless trouble to Congress and the Army. When war came the only way to care for prisoners was to put them under the supervision of the people In interior towns, mostly in Connecticut and Pennsylvania. The zeneral now urges that prison camps they | I| toward THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1926. LITTLE BENN BY LEE PAPE. Manners. Good manners are wat your parents haff to tectch you wen you are young, the ideer being to keep on teetching them to you faster than you can for- get them. Bad manners are wat you have nat- urally. i Some good manners dont have as mutch sents as bad manners, sutch as putting your napkin on your kneez ware the loose part of the tablecloth would be enyways insted of sticking it in your colier and pertecting all the part of you from your mouth to your enywaye, espeshilly if you are fat. it 1s good manners to get up and give your seet to a lady in the trolley car, espeshilly a ol lady, but on the other hand you cant allways tell if she 15 as old as she looks and it would be bad manners to ask her. Proving no matter wat elts you have, your still better if you have good judgement. If a boat is sinking it is good man- ners to leeve the ladies off ferst, un. less you are the captin and then its good manners to leeve everybody off ferst, unless you are a lady captin and then nobody wouldent hardly know wat to do, proberly belng one reason why there lzzent eny lady captins, Gerls genrelly have better manners than boys, but they often outgrow them so wen they get to be ladles they are libel to pust in frunt of you wen vou are standing in line to buy your Ucket for the movies. There Is ore tible manners than eny other kind, and enybody that knows ther all is genrelly paneful to watch. HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN. Fashion and custom dictate that | the photographs of one's family and | friends shall never Lo seen outside | one’s own sleeping room. However, it 13 by defying custom that original | decorative effects are often achieved. el | 1IN 1777 In this case custom has been dis- regarded with most attractive results by & man who has a large circle of theatrical friends, whose photographs he prizes, aund who wishes to have them where he can enjoy them. Each picture is framed In & narraw black molding, with a line of gold on th inside edge, which seems to sult al the pictures equally well, and gives them a uniform appearance. They are arranged in a nicely bal- anced group over u corner desk in the study. On the side vail fs hung a_treasured littlo collection of family | stihouettes. (Copyricht, 1924.) 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. RAWSON, Jr. blished under the direction of officer Such 4 plan, he = | will tend much to prevent e: jwhich have bLeen frequent. Such camps, properly placed, would put it out of the power of prisoners to escape and join the enemy in cuse of invasion. The general also points out that many towns where prisoners have been sent, not having the means of keeping them, have become caré- less and altogether indifferent as to whether the prisoners escape, while prisoners restricted to close confine- ment In jails have not been treated with that care which Congress wishes. estion for ising few of GGermans to be sent to expected Hessian troops newed in yesterday's report, and lea is proposed that if a few [be es Arn - sensible and trusty fellows could min. gle with have man m th Hessians they might at influence with the Ger- naries who have no enmity America and have recelved no injury at America’s hands, (Covyright, 1026.) Horseradish Sauce. Mix a quarter of a cupful of fresh- 1y grated horseradish with a quarter of a cupful of soft bread crumbs, half o teaspoonful of salt, a quarter of a teasponful of paprika and one cupful of white sause. Allow to become hot, | then add two tablespoonfuls of lemon | Juice and one tableepoonful of vine- | gBar. Cool, —————e After having used oll as a fuel, rail- ays of Argentina are returning to the burning of coal. SUPREME When you talk of Baking, whether you are seeking Quality, Punty, Economy, or Perfect Results, you can have them if you use~ RUMFORD The Wholesome BAKING POWDER lap, being the easiest part to spiil on | { apes EVERYDAY Answered by DR. S. PARKES CADMAN lestions from jers are answered daily gwqfir. L Ty preaident o ‘edernl Council of urches of 'y ARl “inat Gpgear i Do eprosentaiive Of s ar o' {rends. of otk i ttere the the muny lef which ho receives. Roanoke, Va. What is nature? Answer—Our consclousness of na- ture arises from the complex of two elements in human experience. The first element is that of the mind ftself. The second is that ma- terial external to the mind by which the mind is stimulated to action. Under the stimulation the mind be- | comes aware of a body of reality ex- j isting in space and time. This reality we call objective. ure is therefore the order of human experience conceived under this, its objective form. Chicago, 11l Is it possible for a great scholar so to defy the human intellect that he unconsclously worships it as the oracle of God? Answer—No really wise scholar Is guilty of such a misdemeanor. True scholarship recognizes the place of the trained intellect in the search for truth. Its findings are subjected to careful scrutiny, and they are authori- » only as they harmonize with all humin reason fail whole of human | ist Himself who | e the Lord thy | God with all hewrt, and with all thy &oul and with all thy strength | and with all thy mind; and thy nelgh- | bor us th " (Luke, x.27.) His appe ihe entire per- onality o 1and also hls soctul responsibilities. Depreciate the intellect and you dishonor the God whom {t reflects and the soclety it serves. At the same time it is possible to nurture that pride of intellect which prevents the ciear vision of truth and creates necdless friction between its varlous realms. o the 1o vas CH Thou » = | Cleveland, Ohto, | Do you think it wise for a poor man to marry a rich woman? Answer—This depends upon mat. ters apart from poverty or riches. It is fuirly certain that a forceful woman will not long love and respect a man who has forfeited the esteem of_his tellow men. Hence ar an who readily “flops,” to quote Jerry Cruncher, before the pride and pomp of riches is not a suitable husband for a wealthy wife, On the other hand, there are well known instances of high-m cultured but poor husbands who have given a wise direction to the wives, redeeming th sh use or vuigar dis g Lite for the bridegrooms of gold and roses {s. in not « few instances, help- tul to all concerned. Evervthing de- pends upon the mutual sentiments which the poor husband und the rich | wife habitually cherish. It the woman has that subtle com- | plex of superiority which money often | engenders, she is apt to go beyond | the rights of a wife. If the man has | that fawning disposition which s | thriftily disposed, he is likely to \m' d of husbund despised by his in all other matrimonial st word {s with the heart. What does it really desire? Is th man bent on the wom though she | were a Legzar maid? Or does he | propose, as an Lnglish dramatist re- marks in one of bis plays, to marry My Neighbor Says: Tron rust on marble is casily removed by rubbing with lemon Juice. To prevent cheese from be. coming dry and moldy, wrap it in a cloth dampened with vinegar and keep it in a covered dish. 1f pie juice runs into the oven, throw salt over it and there will be no odor or smoke nd pins will never led with cof- fee grou Rinse the grounds in cold water and let them dry thoroughly before using. To prev soft materfal from puckering when sewing it on the machine, put strips of news- paper under it and sew through both material and paper. The paper is casily removed and a £mooth seum results. For removing spots from wall paper and window shades, fill a small cheesecloth bag with corn meal and rub the sofled surface as you would with a plain cloth. Sometimes a large grease stain ifbistory of Pour Name | pleuse, that the name QUESTIONS the money and “take the livestock with {t"? + Newport, R. L. Wil you kindly give your opinion as to the meaning of Proverbs, 1v.23, reading, “Keep thy heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues of lite.” Answer—This passage you quote from the wisdom literature of the Hebrews enforces the necessity of protecting one's ipmost thoughts and feelings from defilement. It also em- phasizes the first demand of a well 1 life: a good heart. For this alous naker can provide, nor can it be secured by any save God co-operative with yourself. 1f you would take a firm grasp on your’ behavior and give it a whole- some direction, begin at the fountain- head of its motive and desi “Keep thy heart with all diligence. St. Paul likens the peace of God to an armed sentinel stationed over the heart, which is here viewed as the seat of the will and the affections. That peace sateguards them, suffer- ing nothing to enter there which s injurious to the citadel of your being. The best practical apendix to this exhortation from the Book of Prov- erbs {s the swred precept, “As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he.” The subject matter of what he is to think has becn sumnurized in the fine apostolic hing, ““Whatsoever things honorable, whatsoever | things ar whatsoever things | are pure itsoever things are | lovely, whatsoever things are of good report: if there be any virtue, and if there Le any praise, think on these things,” The process of your spiritual devel- opment is made crystal clear by these classic passages. Experience verifies and modern psychoanalysis sustains thelr ineanings. (Copyright. 1026.) BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. KRAUS. VARIATIONS — Krause, rau Krou: C pin, Crispus, Crispo, Crisp. RACIAL ORIGIN —English and German. SOURCE—A istic. Krauss, Cris- personal character- This is a family name founded upon a personal characteristic of just the type likely to bo perpetuated from father to son, and, therefore, likely to ckly and ierman origin is concerned. With the English there is a difference. In the tirst instance the name was undoubtedly descriptive of the hair of the individual to whom it was applied. It means really “curly headed.” Note, | s quite wide. | spread among Jews, and that curly halr is ono of their ruclul character- stics, y | In the period of family name forma- tion in Germany, in comparatively late centurles, the word did duty for | r 1 the forms starting with | Crisp——," when coming from Ger- many and Latinized equivalents. (The .nfluence of Latin was strong in Ger- | and has left its mark in many | n-given and family names) | But at the period of family name| formation in England the word “crisp” air meant not curly, but “frizzed,” and that it was used in an age when the hair was often artificlally frizzed. (Note the picture of Henry VIII and his beard in any history.)’ But some not being likely to inherit artificiully frizzed hair and fashions changing, this word did not | often develop into an English fam. ily name, though you sometimes run across it. Cucumber Ice Cream. To three cupfuls of heavy cream add one-fourth teaspoonful of salt, | one-half a cupful of sugar, one cu ful and one-fourth of cucumber juice and pulp free from seeds, and a trifle n coloring matter If desired. ' Freeze as uon~ - Serve in boats made ‘rom_cucumbers. \ on the wall, for instance, above a couch where members of the amily have rested their heads can best be removed by the use of blotting paper and a hot fron. ‘The heat draws the grease through the blotting paper. Keepin THERE are many places where experiment is safe. But not with the complexion. To endanger one’s pretty skin is a folly. Before Palmolive came women were told, “use no soap on your faces.” For soaps then were judged too harsh. Then came this famous beauty soap. A soap made by experts in skin care for one purpose only—to guard youth and charm. A soap made to be used freely, lavishly on mfil o d the beauty situati t e on fimmthe world. Ftt, anted artificial beauty methods the score. World's authorities widely E it. The thousands of pretty - “: you see today are largely due Wash, launder, scrub, with any soap you wish; but when beauty is at stake, take care. This rale to naf mal i Wash your face gently with Palmolive Soap, massaging it softly into the skin. Rinse thoroughly, first with warm water, then with .aeld If your ckin is inclined to Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. Appoints Himself Critic. There {s an individual whose ears are always ready to catch the slight- est error in what you have to say. Immediately he find it he begins to argue and set you right. He is the in- dividual who attends to everybody's business. He will run your business if glven half a chance. As an executive he will not hesftate to exceed his au- thority. If he comes upon you at work or at play, he will immediately appoint himself critic and make vou miserabl time of his staj r courage to chase 18 fortunate enough to sccure an executive position, he will nag a worker whom he happens to dislike until the man efther quits or is driven to commit a homicide. Altogether, he is a very undesirable person to have around the shop, the office or the club. This officious chap has a long thin, pointed nose which is inclined to turn up at the tip. If you are not willing to be subjected to continual annoy- ance, shun him. French Salad Dressing. Beat four cggs, then add one table. spoonful of sugar, one teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonful each of corn- starch and mustard, a pinch of pep. per. one cupful of vinegar and one ptul of cream g Your Schoolgirl Complexion By IRENE CASTLE Cupyrighted 1930 by P. O. Beanty Veatures A Unique Soap be dry, apply a touch of good cold cream—that is all. Do this regularly, and particularly in the evening. Use powder and rouge if you . But never leave them on over night. They clog the geru. often enlarge them. Black- eads and disfigurements often fol- low. They must be washed away. Get real Palmetice Do not use ordinary soaps in the treatment given above. Do not think any green soap, or represented as of gn m and olive oils, i3 the same as almolive. It costs but 10c the cake!—so little that millions let it do for their bodies what it does for their faces. Obtain Palmolive today. Then note what an amazing_difference one week makes. The Palmolive Com- paay (Del. Corp.), Chicago, Illinois. [ e T FEATURES. BEAUTY CHATS Cool Powders. Most women consider bath powder an expensive luxury to be used only by the rich. Certainly the shops have that idea, for bath powders are sold in larve beautifully decorated boxes, or in ribbon-tled glass jars. Actually bath powders are so easy to make that every woman can afford this ex- tra dainty touch to her toflet. A nice bath powder must be cooling, refreshing, antiseptic. To achleve this combination the foundation should be a vegetable starch, and a large propo tion should be boric acld powder. A starch is made from rice, po- at, the finest grade being which is the basls of all uss face powders. But the powder” has become so generally used that it is almost a class name. Most of the rice starch sold is made from potatoes or wheat, it Is much cheaper, and for bath powders quite as good. You n make an excellent bath powder from one ounce of borle acld powder and four ounces of this ir pensive rice powder. You can make one just as good, and even cheaper, by mixing one ounce of boric acld powder and four ounces of ordinary cooking cornstarch such as you use for puddings. If you want a powd: that clings better to tho skin add an wo of scented talcum. dered French chalk. If you tinted BY EDNA KENT FORBES buy cheap powdered rouge and etir § in until you have the proper shade. Good powder cannot hurt the skir not even a face powder that is rubbeq into the pores, the proof of it being that complexions are as good today ae a generat.on ago, when face powders were frowned on. An antiseptic bath powder such as this will keep the sk cool and clean, Miss G. Kato L.—The white pinhea formations on your cheeks are the same as blackheads—in fact, impri »ned blackheads | full that septie £olutl, them out. Mrs, w small evecup. them. acld to u pint of water will cleansing and healing cyewn ‘Watercress Surprise. To one bunch of fresh watercres washed and picked over carefull: add one finely chopped small pi; apple, the juice of half a lemon and a dash of powdered sugar, pepper an salt. Just before serving add a sma M.—The most the eyes is | cupful of he: mayonnalte with 1 glll of whipp |or canned pine: Designed for thelPalm BeachSeason 'KNIT-ATHLETIC the newest type of Knit Underwear Palm Beach forecasts summer fashions. That is Underwear Industry made up special models of for Women the Knit ol Ao which first presented at the exclusive Palm Beach shops. The successtul models are mow being displayed in your city. Women of fashion endorse 'J’-dhnfl?érbz- ) because of the smart of s B AT, ox] Y. dhe U

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