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“ WASHINGTON, C.. FRIDAY. MAY 14, 1926. FroAT [P —. STAR, WOMAN'S PAGE. P THE EVENING FEATURES Making the Most of Your Looks Clues to Character BEAUTY CHATS The Chin Line. : { this quarter hour a das trial of the woman|of it. The longer voii who is getting fat is the loss of her | jonger it will take youthful chingline. The worst of it 19| If your chir {hat if she diels and grows 1hin agaln |old age rath the skin under'the chin will have so|treaiment, b stretched and sagged with the weight butter of the flesh pocket it has been holding Cocoa thar she will have w tervible time|the gentle making her chin look voung and firm | imuscles witho once more; i fact. she may never be | under the able to do it. No if there i% any hint | bing. ITce is the of a double chin you must take in |ment of all StANt measure Lo stop it Helen M. B.—-The astringent Both exercise and massage are nec could be used as ofie onee eac essary, and this is the hest exercixe. | Week so long as it is needed, and there It can’t be done, of course, if yoi've |iS No reason to that it will dry wearing # collar. Throw vour head |0ut vour skin. The object in using buck as far as you can with vour|# tringent is merely that of tight- mouth wide open. Shut vour n.umh!'“ ng # flabby skin, and to that ex. and you will feel a pull along the m tent it will eliminate lines. . Ignored > ( guage cles ‘of the chin and throa:. Iepe You wili alse have to build up the Ao 1 8'1%% thought processes ave in refined, | this motion of opening and shutting | tissues under the skin by massagitng high-class lines. He loves music, art, |the 1 hout two dozen times, and | With u nof ing skin food, and alsn «nd his whole soul i attuned for the | make it exercises. | bY building up your own heaith. Con heautiful things in life. He has &| This is not al. Rub vour fingers|iinue us vou have heen doing in the great appreciation of the heautiful in | With talcum powder, then with the |Keneral care of your skin. always i art and literature; sense of propriety, |head thrown slightly baci. massage |1shink and cleansing with the neatness and refinement. ‘The walk, |the chin frem its point down the neck | baths gestures, manners, lanzuage and volce | A8 far as chest, press hard against | will correspond with these character- | the skin If thera i much flesh there to | istics. He will seek friends whom he |[Ket rid of. I'ollow by a 5 or 10 minute believes are of an asthetic tempera. [rubbing with a plec ice. Unfor- | From the Dailas News. mient, but he abhors «oarse and unre. | tunately this treatment tikes time, he time xeems 1o he definitel: pa fined conversation or acts altogether perhaps 15 minutes, but if | when gome one wins 4 war or co (Coyright. 1926.) you've been careless enough to etari strike. BY EDNA KENT FORBES. Frocks for Little Bridal Attendants BY MARY MARSHAI SUB ROSA BY MIML . BY DOROTHY s‘l‘o’lfi" la double chin you must simply give to getting Lofty Ideals. How often do you meet a man with whom you would like to be on friendly terms for business or social reasons 'aml yet yvou do not seem to jmpress him? You try to put vour best foc forward and talk of the things that you think might interest him and vet he seems bored. In other words, you | misjudge him | The features of every person reveal much of his character. You muy be certain that if a person has fine tex- tured skin, fine hair and lustrous eyes, he not oniy thinks fine thoughts, but | he will_have lofty ideals and ambi | tions. Do not tell him vulgar jokes. | for the fine-haired, fine-ekinned. lus | trous-eved individual abhors such lan Saving Money. The greatest There’s not the slightest doubt in the world that the habit of saving is a valuable one for everybody. And It's pretty hard to convince the gir of today that it's more important for | her to havé a few pennies in the bank than the stunning new hat for $20 which she can't afford. We all spend so much time and thought on scenic effects these days that we neglect the bank account, and, of course, as vou've probably read in ninety thousand magazines, newspapers and boo ked young women live to regret our folly. Therefore, all right-minded peeple preach thrift to the young whenever they get & chance. % Although they're sometimes they're our’y indeed Witness white socks are chosen for the little by the up-to-date bride as almost as | bridesmaids, but if a picturesque fmportant for a picturesque wedding | period costume is chosen this type as flowers and foliage. o after a |of footgear strikes a slightly discor- ant note. Soft-toed little strap slip- | pers to match the frock are much more plcturesque, but have, of course, to be made to order. (Copyright. 1926.1 Your Baby and Mine Young attendants are looked upon nourishing and strengthens the mos ihle treat egs BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. This department is in receipt of a clipping which T am printing | “The French Chamber of Deputies | was enguged in the defense of the in- fants of France from the alleged pel niclous effects of rubber nipples. The Deputies voted to abolish rub: ber nipples throughout France ar her colonies within three months. AL Pinard declared the use of the rubber nipples exposed the babies of France angers ranging from stifing to poisoning. ", | ""The reader who sent in this clip- ping wants to know just what are the usually taken semary, She didn't know what bank book looked like. She'd never kept her salary enough to have even o cents for ‘»"BMM\'- i - i ar Ann: en Roger advised her sol ut when Roger advised her erinat g emnly that she was on the road to 4 destruction she abruptly changed her | ITonestly, it takes away all her nat- ural smartness and individualit evil ways and began to keep her ac- How much better she would look if = Fruitless, Why will Betty wear back off her forehead? counts. OF PALE TRIMM} IN RIBBON few of the preliminaries are settled And the bride-to-he has decided wheth er she wil he married at home or in church, whether she will wear white taffeta or white crepe, she then draws up & Hst of the little girls who might be her flower girls and the little boys who might be train bearers or pages. One bride recently had no grown-up | attendants save her maid of honor Instead of the usual bri had six little girls who to the altar. Frocks for these little bridal at- tendants call for as much fore thought as do those of more mature b lesmaic Sometimes the costumes are copied more or less literally from some charming old painting. Roume; painted some charming little girls. Gainsborough agd Velasquez, Van Dyke and Mme. Le Brun, Titian and some of the earlier Italians, painted esmaids she eded her lovely children whose costumes might well he copled for a modern wedding. Sometimes patent leather pumps with The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1926.) "] | /3 iy | dangers of the use of rubber nipples |and what other kinds can be used. | The article bewilders me, for if { there are other nipples than the ones | in common use now, it is news to me. t is quite possible that the nipple re- | ferred to is the one called most fr quently “a pacifier,” and is & nipple to a plece of celluloid and is without opening or other means of nse on a bottle. There is small doubt that the use of such a contrivance to still the cries of a hungry or over-fed | baby is a menace and danger to the | child. Tt is one of the causes of over- developed adenoids, with their train of ills; “buck teeth,” and in addition | subjects the child to the dangers of | infection from a nipple dropped care- | lessly on dirty floors or filthier street | The mother who would use a pacifer, instead of seeking out the reason for |her infant's irritableness, would be exactly the same person to whom a |little dirt more or less would be of little consequence. Her imagination { would not be vivid enough to ses the millions of germs which might be transferred from the dirty street by means of a wet nipple. The French | Deputies may have teh nipple in mind which was at one time in use, but has long since been discontinued, and that | is the one with & long glass stem lead- !ing from the nipple to the hottle. The impossibility of keeping such a nipple clean and free from the danger of in- | fecting the child was the immediate {cause for its falling into disrepute. | The wide-mouthed nipples or ones | which can’be easily turned inside out |are the only styles which should be used. But it is probable that the pacifier was the nipple under discussion . Nation. 9. Self. 10. Great. 11. Babylonian deity. 12. Prefix: again. 13. Compact mass. 14. Frequently. 16. Human beings 17. French unit of square measure. . Hewing tool. . Funeral pile. . Group of singers. . Anclent name of an island in the Aegean sea . Depart Vegative. Southern State (abbr.). . Road (abbr.). Wing of a house. . Sorrow. Decorated lettering at ning of a chapter. Persons here sent. 4. Place where coin is made . Wive hundred and one (Roman). Prefix: two. . Electrified particle. . Lariat. Moun . Himsel New England State (abbr.). In favor of. . Dance step. Certain nymphs. Strikes. the begin- in in Crete, [H]o[P[e]s] £ METRTANA | MOIAILIEIS] L] 3. Negative. . Spanish hero. King of Bashan. Medieval trading vessel. . Mogul of the thirteenth century. . Japanese coin. . Prohibit. . Tiny. . College town in central Maine. Prefix: out of. . Form of address for woman. Exclamation. Hebrew letter. Company (abbr.). Malden loved by Zeus Lacking ‘address. . Tissue of a gasteromycetous fun- £US. a married Advance guard. Exclamation. . Ourselves. . Part of a fish. Coronet. Note of the scale. strich-like bird oncerning. An artificial language. Hasten Bind. . Wrath. . Head covering. 43. Father. 44, 3.1416. No matter what a girl's political be- lief may be. she always wants protec- tion. Beauty experts agree on this simple method To KEEP the fresh, youthful loveliness of your skin, keep it clean! Cleanse it thorou, at least once a day (more often if it is over-oily) ridding the pores of sooty grime, Powder and Rouge. For just this purpese, Ar- mand offers a new Eau de Cologne Cleansing Cream — made of light medicinal oi combined with fresh, fragrant cau de cologne. Light i a joy to tired ses gently but lhnmufhly, leaving the skin oft, ‘owinf, fresh as a rose. o oily after-effects in heavier creams. Use instead of soap and water; or before washing. At leading drug stores, 50 cents and $1.00 per r, or write Armand Com- pany, Des Moines, for free trial sample, enclosing 2-cent stamp. She cut out all the unnecessary trifles, which was a good thing. She learned not to fritter away cash— another good thing. Still she didn't get ahead fast enough to suit her. So she began cutting down on lunch. That the first bad idea. Lunches shouldn't be skimped. They're important—we should eat all we want to at lunch time. IHowever. osle, in her great economy cam palgn, began 1o neglect her health She watched every pen kot a sick headache when she 't ac count for 3 cents. Roger was o proud of she showed him the little I with its increasing board She was cutting down in all direc tions and feeling awfully proud of her. self, when her old friend Bessie startled, shocked and amazed her one v calling her “‘atingy Resste was laughing good naturedly when she fired this shot. but Rose furious. “How can you she fairly hissed, “Just ba- cause I'm being sensible, you call me stingy. You're too marrow-minded to live.” Then Bes things—things overlooked: in rich quick. he had forgotten all the generous little acts she'd been wanting to per form for other people—the flowers she'd always taken to her mother on pay day—the toys she'd distributed among the children who lived next doqr—the lunches she'd paid for girls who couldn't afford to eat enough. Automatically she’d cut all that out and the change was beginning to show in her character. when nk book her a lIot of had entirely told Rosie her wild The open-handed, loving Rosemary | was vanishing, and in her place was coming a careful, shrewd-eyed. rather selfish little business woman. Watch out that your economy doesn't choke your generous im ulses. ; PUtois a wise thing to be sensible about money. But it is not wise to be too sensible about the things you do for other people. A little foolish- ness in the line of giving is permis- sible. i When vou find yourself think. I won't take her that candy: doesn’t really need it, and I do need the money,” it's time to draw your self up sharp, and get over being too careful. (Copyright. 1026.) WhatTomorrowMeans toYou BY MARY BLAKE. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are variable. In the morning they are adverse. In the afternoon they are favorable. In the evening thev as sume a negative character, and por- tend neither good nor evil. During the forenoon it will be advisable to devote your time and efforts to duties that are obligatory and of a routine pature, exercising, at the same time. melf-restraint in order to counteract the tendency to be easily lrritated. Between noon and sunset your pent up energies can be allowed free play, and everything worthwhile that is attempted during this period prom- ises success. Relaxation and restful recreation are favored for the balance of the day. Children born tomorrow, although relatively healthy during infancy, will not escape all of the ailments to which little ones are usually sub- jected. Careful nutrition and heaithy environment will rob these illnesses of any gravity or danger. These chil- dren, as they grow up, will, in a physical sense, flourish like the green bay tree. Their dispositions will be cheerful and they will develop great strength of character, which, com- bined with perseverance and tenacity of purpose, will ensure for them suc- cess and bring them happiness. If tomorrow is your birthday you possess intellectual ability, as well as charm of manner. You, however, lack self-confidence, and are thereby unable to capitalize vour assets. Bovee says: ‘Selt-distrust s the cause of most of our failures. In the assurance of _strength there is strength, and they are the weakest, however strong, who have no faith in themselves or their powers.” You are, as a friend, both sincere and loyal, ever ready to help those who stand in need of it. Your emotions very often get the better of your judgment, and many of those actions that yvou afterward regret are based on hasty impulse. Your home life should be. given vour affectionate nature and eas temperament, ideally happy. Your eoclal life, given the esteem in which you are held by your friends, is full of pleasure. It is a pity, however, that you ave, at times, so difident and so afraid to give expression to vour thoughts, as the courage to do so would inure to vour benefit, and. to the advantage of those assoclated with you. rush to &et | she wore her hat low over her eyes! Yours for common sense. LETITIA, (Copyright. 1926 Jean Ainsley and Conrad Morgan elope after a foot ball game at damilton College. They fall in love at first sight and do not stop to think of the consequences. Jean discovers later that her mother-in- law must make her home 1with them and that the older woman has taken a dialike to her. Conrad has a sister, Florence. whose hus- band ia a professor at the college. Jean discovers that Florence is hored and discontented with her life and encourages the attentions of other men. CHAPTER XVII. | Merton Tries to Explain. jean was somewhat surprised the | next afternoon to have Merton Thorne call on her. He had been angry with her ever since she had come to the prom as his guest only to elope with Conrad, and had refused to allow her to make any excuses. ‘Hello, Jean.” he grinned as she opened the door to him. “Want to come for a ride, 8o that we can patch | up our quarrel? Jean hesitated. She was alone in the house, as Mrs. Morgan had gone out to make a call. It was a lovely Fall day and she longed to go for a drive. She knew that Conrad would understand and think nothing of it. But what about Mrs. Morgan? Would she seize this opportunity to make trouble? However, she hesitated for only a moment. The challenge to her vouth and good spirits was too tempting. “Come into the living room while I get into my things,” she said eagerly. Five minutes later they were on their way. | _Thev were out of the town before Merton turned to her “‘Recognize the car?” | Jean flushed. It was the very car that Conrad had been driving the day he had carried her off with him. ‘m afraid I do,” she sald with a smile. “Oh, what's the difference, Jean he went on quickly. “I should have been a. better sport. God knows there isn't much choice between Con and me. They don't make ‘em any finer.” Out_on the country road, Merton slowed down the car to a bare 10 miles an hour. When he turned to Jean his face was very serious. “I wanted to speak to you about last night. T thought vou wouldn't understand.” “I don’t think T do,” Jean returned evenly. ‘However, there's no reason why vou should explain to me: it's not my affair.” “I know that, and it's darned hard talking about these things to a wom- an, a man is apt to sound like a cad. But I saw your expression when you came back to the living room and I thought you might be attaching too much importance to the incident.” Jean shook her head. “No, T didn't attach any importance to it. I knew you and Florence were flirting, I know something about thess things, Merton. Any girl in this day and age does; so that I don’t blame vou too much. T've played the game myself and I know just how provocative a woman can be. But there's someothing about a married woman letting herself in for things like that—I don't know, I just hate the idea; that's all. Besides, Flor ence Is Con's sister, and T can't bear “Every rose has thorns,” Reports some heen observer . *Reverse that sad remark ! I ery with W equal fervor. e THE first cup is as delicious as the last—and there are 50 cups toa pound of Chase & Sanborn’s Seal Brand Coffee!, (Chase&Sanborn's SEAL BRAND COFFEE Seal Brand Tea is of the same high qeality THE MARRIAGE MEDDLER BY HAZEL DEYO BATCTHELOR | of making trouble for her; that’ to mee her making a fool of herself. “Yoi know Florence's husband?’ “Yes, and T like him very much “Bui you wouldn't exactly call him intererting and peppy “He probably wasn't very different when Florence married him. How ever, it's not my affair, Merton, %o let's drop the subject. I'm just sorry about Florence, that's all.” . “And $ou won't sav anything to on?" Jean fairly blazed at him. *'Cer tainly not. I told you it was none ! of my busines “1 just didn’t want to be the means all. She's a good sort, Jean. All she wants |is a little fun. On the way home they talked of other things, and as they turned into the street where the Morgan cottage stood Mrs. Morgan was just entering the house. She stopped as the car drew up to the curb, and there was something ahout the expression of her face that made Jean sorry she had gone for the ride. Of course, she had known Merton for years, but that would make no difference to her mother-in-law, and as things turned out subsequently, Jean was right. (Copyright. 1926.) (Continued in tomorrow’s Star.) Pistory of Bour Name BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. MacGARRY. VARIATIONS—Magarry, Megarey, Megary, Coltsman, Seery, Garey. RACIAL ORIGIN—Irish. SOURCE—A given name. It's not hard to understand that MacGarry, Magarry, Megarey and Megary are all different forms of the same family name. But how do Coltsman and Seery “ring in" as varfaiions in this group? Let us see what the true Gaelic form of this name is. It's “MacSeairaigh.” Don’t let the tripthong and the diphthong confuse vou, and it is easy to see how merely lopping off the “Mac"” would develop something like Seery. This, however, is an Anglicized version of the name which has been developed through attention to the spelling of the Gaelic more than to the pronunciation. For as a matter of fact that initial “S"” tends strongly, to use an “Irishism,” to be ‘pro. nounced silently,” and this explains the start of a transition which has de. veloped MacGarry and similar forms The clan name is compounded of “Mac” and given name of ‘‘Searrach.’ which is derived from the Gaelic word meaning a “colt.” Hence the other Anglicized version, Coltsman. The chieftain who thus gave his name to this particular clan or tribe lived, as nearly as can be estimated, about 1116 A.D. Copyright. 1926.) Fried Sweetbreads. Soak four sweetbreads in cold water for two or three hours, drv them thoroughly on a clean towel, put them in a saucepan of fast bolling water, and cook for 12 minutes. Re. move and drop in cold water for about six minutes. Place between two plates and press until quite cold. then cut each sweetbread in two, brush over with beaten egg, roll them in some fine bread crumbs seasoned with salt, pepper, and paprika, and fry in smoking hot fat until a light brown color. Drain on paper and dish in a ring, garnish with cut lemon, cooked peas or small cooked potatoes in the center and a rich brown gravy round the base of the dish. Serve be fresh and eharming every day, to live every day unhand- capped, to wear sheerest frocks withoat a second thought, any day, anywhere . . . you can now do all, a new way. It is called “KOTEX.” Ends the insecurity of the old-time sanitary pad. Pive times as absorbeamt! Desdoriges, too. And thusends ALL fear of offcading. NO LAUNDRY V As easily disposed of 23 2 piece of tissue. No lundry. No em- barrassment. You get it at any drug or depart- ment store simply by saying, “KOTEX”; you ask for it without hesitancy. Costs only a few cents. Eight in 10 better-ctass women employ it. * Proves the nnnecessary risk of eid KOTEX Onegood waffledeserves another when theyaremade with Snowdrift for they are crisp and tender and delicious. Snowdrift is a rich, pure ehortening that improves the flavor of everything cooked with it. - The daily treat of more than 10,000,000 people KELLOGG’'S Corn Flakes. Toasted flakes of golden corn. Deliciously crisp and crunchy) Eat Kellogg’s with fruit, milk or cream. Have them next time on the diner. Order them at cafeterias, hotels and restaurants. Serve them for the kiddies’ evening meal. Kellogg’s are the original corn flakes. Full of delicious flavor. Never tough- thick or leathery. Sold by all grocers everywhere. QOvea-Fresd ALWATS ia 9 Kellogg’s patented inner- wastite wrapper,