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FEATURES. PALE HANDS BY HAZEL DEYO BATCH THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, JULY |DorothyDiad 55 WOMAN'S PAGE. SONNYSAYING BY FANNY Y. CORY Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUI! Color as Effective Homemaking Aid 2 & The Talkative BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. G 0]‘( cessation [listen. She's evidently is important. It | means score of different ¢ goes to show | Color in th, may be used ways, but 13 in | using brig temporary from | t tones.in costuming, black should be enlivened with some notes riety or relieved from its somber- Theory That It Is a Wife’s Duty to Blurt Out Leila Marsh, who has always been accustomed to idleness, is left with out money. Khe finds her righ friends are only of the fair weather variety quite spolled “Find me the imp in a bored ve worth tired tures ness by white or cream or some light contrast. 1 know of one man who to say vou could always tell how he felt by looking at his necktie! If he felt depressed, his tie would be somber; if he felt well and in good spivits, his tie would be colorful Color wax the visil barometer of his mental and phys ditien. 1 have | known many women who donved i vht frocks to help raise their rits. The reaction of the gay tones proved of assistance in restoring | | At the Table d is anothe in the scheme ¢ 1in, 1 recall example of whi housewife told me serve Winter squiash a it the same meal. 1t sense to have ther less to say this wo and her color sense was she was alro a hon ke meals were revelations of could me 1 cookery Luncheor, ften ture some and finally is forced to go to an cni- ployment agency where she meets Mary Brandt, the manager of the place. Everything She Knows—Silence Is More Golden Than Ever in Matrimony. CHAPTER V. maid! But that The Bottom Rung. fal work, She Before she knew it Lella was pour- alwave pad & out her story to this stranger|p, had only just met. But there i, . ., something about Mary Brandt | po; invited confidences, and Leila to the end. "he her shoulders cha teristic y that they talk too much. . brain v v ever since Mother Eve's [ J 7,8 no new charge to bring against women to They have always been berated for their loqu: gossip with the serpent got us evicted from Paradis The chief pluce, however, where woman's tongue gets her into trouble lis in the home eircle, and it is her inability to keep her own counsel that brings down upon her garrulous head about half of the domestic woes from which she suffers. Curiously enough, instead of recognizing this mania for blabbing as a weakness and trying to correct it, women account it unto themselves for | righteousness and boast of it. nd that heard squared ally. e gias “Well, let's be practical s K for p't ask your family lawyer for | problem 1any more money. Couldn't you bor-| wien vow it from him and then pay him| “Thi back later? Just enough to live onfand I while » putting yourself through |« v course in stenography and type-|you I . it wouldn't be much.” one mo element memakin: Hluminating meant. One never could in fc o You often hear a wife say. with a smirk of selfsatisfaction, that she tells her husband evervthing, and that she has no secret from him. And then the poor. foolish soul wonders that half of the time she is in row with her husband and the other half he yawns in her face. She does not i cranberries white an' don't ever have much fun.” | understand that with her own mouth she fans the fires of argumentation and rred her color (Copyright. 10205 ) blows away the last remaining haze of mystery about herself. \an was an i Fof no people are so irritating to us as those with whom we have to ety acute \What TomorrowMeans toYou | | debate every subject, and none are so boring as those who turn out their Leila hesitated. Of course. she could | and her minds for our inspection as if they were the contents of a shallow drawer da: fiiatseBat sowmchow: she hated (h BY MARY BLAKE. n boys to be a vou ¢ responsibility. s what Mr, " Jones calls his, an’ they look kind of uess it's hard The Fourth ob July is pitty near here! 1t's pitty near here! It's pitty what color It is the fact that no man knows at what secret thought Mona Lisa smiles|near here! e eilaes. Radwt Tie warned her?| You that keeps men perpetually Intrigued before her ' Surely women might well take a hint from this realize that it is well to keep their husbands guessing about the unexplored regions of their souls. That is, if they wish to hold their husbands’ interest. For the fatal fuscination of the new woman to the man is that he doesn't know her, GRUT," exclaim the dutiful wives, “shall we have from our husband Yes. plenty of them. No theory is more mischievous than that it is the wife's duty to blurt out everything she knows and that she thinks to her husband Hudn't he tried to impress upon her! con the seriousness of her It wus her own fault that she b ply dribbled the money away couldn’t go back and ask him more. [t was out of the questi 2 ather not,” she said finally I've cut myself off from my and I hate 1ok “Don’t you think that's false You can't afford to be proud Kknow, not in your po I'd rather do a go to Mr. Hemingwa; Anything?"” “Yes,” Leila's firm, “yes, 1} a living wage There was a sudden Brandt's dark eves the girl's attitude hadn't expected of iron in one Quickly she book on her d she spoke. “You ¢ department store, but enced, vou'd have to notion counter or in With your inexper you could mike en course, if vou knew would Are a4 room split expenses it would he the onl Leila dld not and positi e to fea is pink “heons decorations the L It what b Your Baby and Mine P Cancer. tor | Tomorrow's planetary zo0d, although not very any new enterprise or undertaking They promise, however, a marked in- fluence on the hetter emotiof In the evening they are rather colorless and not Indicate anything of a very de tinite character. It will prove to be a valuable opportunity for mental re- view, or for future planning. It is also an auspicious occasion for travel. Above all else, however, the signs clearly denote much happiness and only ribed scheme but he colon ng scheme: Of cours »d that all plan, but one ov ind aspects are = favorable for e found minute detail carried out in f not to he expec conform to t dishes for each course can The Three Places. BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED. to fond will secrets “You s friends zoing Badly Fed Baby Rebels. Mrs. A, L. M. writes: “My nine months old baby boy welghs 19 pounds and weighed eight at birth. | I have weaned him and he is being fed 24 ounces of milk, eight ounces of water and eight tablespoon « prepared food. He gets eight our this four times a day, and vegetable and cereal “Do you think four feedings a day his age is enough? He never wants to eat, and I always have to imuse him u order to get him to take his bottle, and then much of the time he throws up every hit he takes. I never give him over a table- spoon of vegetable or cereal at a time. People tell me I should not force him to eat when he refuses it He has three teaspoons of cod ISy oil daily. He always sleeps much better at night if he does throw up his 7 o'clock feeding. 1 am puzzled to know what to do.” Answer—It is strange that you have never thought of the one thing which is so ebviously at fault The eight tablespoons of prepared food is within reason.| putting so much extra nourishment have to object in | child’s formula that he is he- it wit "‘l'klm: overfed. Overfed babies are sel- a th ix{ dom hungrv. They quite sensib | show w luck of appetite | food that is entirely and should 'be eliminated n necinlly ax the haby {s getting bhit of **s element in his cereal and vegetable. PER: . Use tue sume formula you are ne using, and feed four times daily and | not ut night. Instead of the prepared | fi fond use one tablespoon of wugar | daily in the formula. Give the cereal | night and morning and the vegetable | at clock. I believe the baby. at least after the first day or two, won't need to bg urged to eat | Mrs O. writes: “Why is it my| seven-month-old baby will stand up | to the side of his bed and crawl every where, but cannot sit alone? | “Answer—If a seven-month haby { cannot it alone it is likely due to {ricats. ®In that ease I strongly urge you not to let him stand and crawl. Put him out of doors every dav. See| he gets direct sunlight for at| least 15 minutes a dayv. Give him | three teaspoons of cod liver oil daily and be sure his ¢ ect. Nend for the weaning ceding leaflet n lald himself | Suitable for that open to suspici Another *Puzz lick” will appear here tomorrow, as well as the answer to this one. Yesterday's “Puzzlick.” A fool girl of Paris named Jane Once threw herself into the Seine; She was off of her head The fisherman said Who found her—he Seine. (Copyrizht. 5 will pride” me vou hould. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDKEN Why, for instance, should a man, who is overburdened with business cares and anxieties, have superimposed upon him all of his wife's domestic worries? Nome at all. He can't prevent the cook frum giving notice, or the chambermaid from breaking a pet vase, or the baby from bumping its nose, or Johnny from tearing his trousers. Yet there arc thousands of women who contentment for all those that marry | feel that it is a sacred obligation upon them to tell their husbands everything tn for those that “plight their troth.” { that has gone wrong in the household during the day. And there Citidren o tomorrow will, given | thousands of men who dread to come home of un evening because they v proper nlimentation and plenty of out. | have to listen 1o this Tiiad of their wivex' troubles o through infancy with fly- & 7 - & andsthis DNy folealy Every woman who tells her husband everyti must be guarded et Wil enble them successfully | house taiks too much. He shouldn't be annoyed must prevail mbat the ailments that, according | misadventure and everything naughty that the chil to e ens. il Affect them between | tell him only the pleasant and agreeable things, unle rdolesce e hdulthed. Their | crists occurs in which she needs advice and help char; Bl will in their early years be weak. Their natural intelligence will, however, come to their rescue and ave them, in later life, from those pit- dis which always await those that k determination and mental cour- They will be progressive in their ideas and rather too keen to attempt the new before having tried out the Jld. They will, however, be ever ready profit by experience and retrace steps, whenever it may be neces- o do so If tomorrow nature is kind was suddenly I cou und s in the decoration, clothes the principal eleme: in which « = of ¢ i no re should be lackin beauty. But too colors defeats its it Tuteric food hom each S0t} in | at lavish in o in the that happens by knowing of every ven do. A wife should of course, some hig turned After & and untr to the being inexperi. | the base nee I doubt meer. | some girl who you and My Neighbor Says: of greasing your taking it from the sing it before you see how much ied long enough to cut her wisdom teeth has found out that there are certain subjects that have the effect upon her husband that a red rag does upon a mad hull. It may be religion or politics or the length of skirts or the hobbing of hair or the use of lipstick Often it is her family. Nearly alwavs it is when she guotes mother Here is another place where women talk too much when they maintain a masterly sflence on these topics DI ’l‘ln: only women in the world who do what who never discuss their plans beforehand Most husbands don't really care what their wives but when they are consulted beforehand they feel that th order to show their authority. But if wife just goes along and does debating the subject they think it is all right. And, anvhow. afte done, it's done, and there isn't any use in raising a row about it fistenn Every woman who has heen m bread after oven, try g it in and softer it bleach handkerchiefs, ete., soak a solutic i do not <p Rra | else in mind, somethi jing to spri {in a mo they to do are those in want spoon of crear ench quart of wate While a4 gas stove must be kept clean both inside and out it should never be blackened, for the reason that the heat insufficient to absorb blacking consequently it v rubs off again, and the particles must go somewhere about the room or into clothes or clothing. Get a cheap teapot to melt affin in and always keep it v this purpose. Once tried, you will never do without it. The melted fin pours easily just where it is wanted, and need not be used all at one time. When making simmer the peel gether until soft, into the pie in of tartar is your birthday, your and sympathetic. You are intuitive, self contained, and | rather opinionated. You have great | Confidence in yourselt and can rarely | see that your failures are a result of vour own inefficiency. You, apparent- Iy, derive much comfort from the set- ting-up of alibis. You are always will- ing to give advice. You very rarely heed it. In some of your views you are extreme and can see no good or Justification in an opinion that is con- trary to your own. You are not liked as well by your own sex as hy the op- posite. You are a convincing talker, although too disposed to lay down the law, as though your dictum were the Jast word to be said. You become very emphatic over trivalities and_your D1 arate: audience sometimes wonders “what it the usual 1}y about.” You are studious, fond = proves of travel, and, on the whole, you se- bR for yourself, rather than give to others, much enjoyment out of life Well known persons born on that ate ave: Samuel Huntington, furist, of Connecticut; Henry Hitchcock, law yer: David McG. Smyth, inventor; Henry Inman, soldier and author: Mary Lowe Dickinson, author; Ripley | Hitchcock, author and critie. Copyright, 1926.) You sa anything. ng for | been able to certain spec Tt Women t: much when they te hushands about the akes | they make. Vir v every man takes his wife at her own valuation, and if she is always telling him what A poor manager she is, and how she doesn't | seem to be able to get as much out of her allowance as Mrs, Smith does, and | of how she let the butcher short-change her, and of how she wishes she could cook like Mrs. &impkins, pretty soon he hegins to think that he has a poor makeshift of a wife, who isn't any account and who wastes his money. | their n of ficult 7 manne; I talked the t nd told d a d b her that it wasn't 1v's maid who ul COLOR IN CLOTHES IS CHEER. ING TO THE WEARER AND BE: HOLDER. The rooms must have sufficient bright- ness of color in them to give cheerful interfors. The value of color in deco- ration is well established. When a room seems to be lacking in beauty | or coziness one of the first matter to consider is whether it has enough color in it or if the color is wr | The trouble may be found in either of these two elements. The w tone is as disastrous as is the lack of tone. There must be harmony of | shades and correct colors to suit ex- | posures. But {if she {s always telling him what | marked-down sale. and how she traded off the new tin saucepan and she brags to him about how competent sh * herself to him {as a blue-ribbon prize winner and he bhoasts of her among his friends. nd bargain she made at al Also, It is the woman who talks too much who puts her hushand | o puts he shand to| the fact that she is getting old or fat, and first sugests to him that sha could lose him. The chances are that he hadn't noticed it and was still seeing her as she looked the day he married her. an apple pie, nd cores to- then strain Wise is the woman who chu biscuits that turn out heavy into the garbage can and puts the lid down on thenm, who sticks her bad bargains i | the buck of the closet and says nothing about them, and who lets her hushand | discover her first gray hair for himself | The old proverb which savs that silence is gold and speech s silver is | never so vividly fllustrated as I matrimony, lence buvs peace and | speech Is only too often the price of a fiht DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright. 1 ong | be washed in p dulls Silver sho clean hot wu the polish. Cold meats may be attrac- tively served by removing all gristle, bones and skin and ex- effect on | | cess fat, and then pouring over lwh»rl,[ the meat any desired hot sauce. which « it el S Checkerboard Cake. Cream one cupful of butter and two cupfuls of sugar, add one cupful of sweet milk, and the whites of six eggs well beaten, then four cupfuls of flour. Beat thorcughly and add two tea- spoonfuls of baking powder. Put +| one-half the batter in a separate bowl. e e y Twalve colonied supported the reso- | Into this stir onehalf a cake of grated | | 1 CIty In southwest EnElEndSte lutlon, New York refrained from |chocolate. Grease the pans and put | MOUSFCCNE YO0 a0l by feet. i a ring of white batter on the outside, Y in. | voting because of lack of instruction: sngr of ehocols ‘l Mental process. | |then & ring of chocolate, then white | LN S although a majority of in the center. In the next pan put on ';,’_“‘{ ot f}h the resolution. chocolate outside, then white, then YD LWL { carot hocolate in the center. This will| Note—Complete the limerick by SN oy make four liyers when ail.are baked. | placing the right words, as indicated uctions, by the numbers, in their correspond Pennsylvania absented tack the layers alternately and use between the layers and on top. ' ing spaces, and you'll see why the old Wilson turned in | - solution, making that in the affirmative. < 10 the long strug gle over the blution was the ar- | fival of Caesar Rodney from D ust in time to join Thomas Mc! and register Delaware’ in the affirmative. There silence in the hall when Rodney's name was called. Unexpectedly "to many of the members, he answered, and he said “As I believe the voice of my con- | stituents and of all sensible and honest men is in favor of independ- lence and my own judgment concurs { with them, I vote for independence.” | " The express rider whom McKean | sent Rodney yesterday reached | Dover and Rodney arrived here with- in a period of 20 hours, ‘the swiftest ddle horses which. could be found ng the %0-mile journey being er | ploved by Mr. Rodney and the e | press rider, | ! While there ret that New | York did not come along today with | all the others, her silence 18 no longer | regarded as a negat Her delegates | hope for favorable instructions not {later than next week i Clothes. where s Color in. clothes is another consideration. The fact t has a positively depressing reons should not be ovi Unless one is in mourning, 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. tem for at black gentleman in Blanquette of Veal. Heat iwo cupfuls of cold veal, which has been cut into strips, in one and one-half cupfuls of white sauce made of milk, fat, salt, and flour. Ar- range a platter with a horder of mashed potatos nd place the veal in the center. Sprinkle over all finely chopped parsley and serve immedi ately “Puzzlicks” Pussle Limericks There is an old duffer of — Who never walks straight down a v hot days. You would probably —3— BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR. He had too much to —4—— But It's only & way that he —5-— her in found —b America Becomes a Nation. 1924.) PHILADELPHIA, Ju 1 America has this day become an dependent It was accom- | plished by the adoption by the (' JEa nental Cor of Richard He Lee's resoluti reading follows: “R these United its members The South ave. althougl | Morrts and | ation. on T n icing | Dickinson themselves, favor of the | colony's vote 3 to A thrilling clim of are absolved from all alleg British crown. and that political connection between them and the state of Great Eritain is, and ought to be totally dissolved.” M THE ELITE OF WASHINGTON Congress has now turned its atten tion to Thomas Jefferson's draft of | the declaration. which will |lished with toda y | statement of the causes which have { brought ahout the separation from Great Britain. The debate on the dec- laration may continue for two or three days. Minor amendments may ‘1..- introduced, but today’s adoption of - 7 the Lee resolution virtually assures “All work and no play makes ,le'h | the passage of the declaration without for some boys who would otherwise | serious opposition be dull comy pyright, 19:26.) HEN PRESI- g What a vast difference DE \< T MON- in today’s modern meth- RIOE first re- = ) ceived his guests in the ods of rug cleaning! Oval Room of the White Elite’s special shampoo- House—the floors were ing process not only bare. In 1818 an Au- brings out the brilliance busson rug arrived from £ i France—a beautiful rug e el GLpy —green with intricate fluffiness — but makes border design. In the your rugs last longer. Your Oriental rugs safely shampoocd for 8c center was woven ‘the Nation's coat-of-arms in a square foot; domes- tics, Sc. Phone for our full colors—How it was < driver to call. Pin MONEY PICKLES he same home made” 'y that has kept them favorites, for many years purit Finer Flavor because “Ripened Naturally” - You will be delighted with the finer flavor and deliclous tenderness for which Cudahy’s Puritan Ham is so distinguished. These finer qualities are the result of the special Cudaby Cudahy’s Puritan FHam has finer flavor, stands high inn process of “ripening naturally.”” This method slowly and nat- food valueand necessary muscle and tissue building {E“ HER ) N S swept — beaten — man- handled! — to keep it clean. Elite Laundry 2117—2119 Fourteenth St. NW. Potomac 40—41—42—43 ing. Thé result is like tree-ripened fruit compared to artifi- clal ripening. urally diffuses the rich meat juices without forcing or hurry- elements; and is easily digested. At your dealer’s. “The Taste Tells” The Cudahy Packing Co.USA maters of Puritan Hams-Bacon-Lard