Evening Star Newspaper, July 7, 1926, Page 24

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LONDO! An - English woman éxplaing ‘r{h ™ fashion for hats b at the back by saying th e 4 turn no NOW WE WEAR HAND- . PAINTED FROCKS. THIS HAND- PAINTED LINEN FROCK IS OF WHITE, THE DESIGN PAINTED IN ROSE AND NATTIER' BLUE, AND IS BANDED WITH BLUE I‘SLIEEEN. THE LARGE HAT IS OF doubt milliners think women want to have sunray treatment at the ~ base of their brains. Another woman insists it 1s because they want to . show the-ugliest part of the bobbed coifture. At any rate, a large number of hats, one sees here in n are turned up at the back—either turned up or with brims that diminish to PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE - +¥ BY WILLIAM Predisposition in France. The trend of medical opinion in France, as we were about tq say when they blew the’ whistle on us the other day, is different from the American medical view of the predis- position to tuberculosis: In America:| ‘we take little stock_in the idea of & | special predisposition, tempgrament, © eonstitution or tendency, and favar instead the belief that more than 90 per cent of adults harbor latent tuberculosis and just an occasional individual develops active tubercu- Josis as a consequence of his un- hygienic mode of life. In France they cling to tradition and the French medical view is well shown in an articlp by Dr. Nigoul-Foussal in Le Bulletin Medical, on the “petty signs” of tuberculosis. ¥ As 1 understand it, this Frefich writer would have us believe that a skillful diagnosticlan may = recognize . signs of even the latent tuberculosis which, as I have just sald, more ‘than 90 per cent of all adults in this eountry have. The very name of la- tent tuberculs signifies that it is just a smouldering focus and that it produces no signs or symptoms. So we think in this country. Not so in France. Nigoul-Foussal details the “petty signs” of just that state, and ‘these signs constitute the picture of predisposition. ~ Remembering the endless stream of highly fanciful ‘medical theories which come out of France, not to mention the well ‘known hokum in French cosmetic and beauty remedies, one hesitates to quote freely from this author’s ar. " ticle, but we'll chance it, with the " warning to readers that if any of the gescriptions “hits your case” there " is fiothing much to worry about. Just clip the part that “hits your " and take it along with you as ‘an excyse for seeking a physical or Bealth examination by your phy- “sician. Of course a really competent physician requires no ’explanation from the intelligent client Who ‘would have a periodic examination for the excellent pur of k!egln! well. | ain that anxious question || PR «Will it jell?® | truit by itself contains enough Hlying substance to’ jellify all of Lits Juice. That is why, by thegold- fashioned methods of jan#and Jelly making you have to *boil your {4l fruit- down” until enough of the juice has bolled away to concen. trate the jellying substance in the ‘“‘B’:t with Certo, which is simply the natural jellying substance of fruit refined and bottled, you do not have tt‘cu bo‘::l sour; fruit’ down. [One. or~ two inutes’. enough to give a perfect, tender fget.” ¥t cannot fail to jell, short l':\-uch of an avers! nh’tao untyhnm:E hats ‘as the Americans and Frenci have for the trimmed hats. Os ive ge 1s st and other expensive plumage et tht n.:'ond by vmn:ey.n E W who can—or things. They have the same fond- ness for ostrich, as a sign of wealth and_position, as women in America used to have for it, (Copyright. 1026, = MENU FOR A DAY. { BREAKFAST. Sugared Currants, Dry Cereal with Cream. o EeeaPotatose. Bal E Date Gems, Coffee. LUNCHEON. " Escalloped Corn. Bread and Butter Sandwiches. Prune Whip. - DINNER. ¢ Cream of Beet Soup. Hamburger Loaf. Lyonhaise Potatoes, Lima Beans. Vegetable Salad, .. French Dressing. Frogen Custard. Coftee. —_— DATE GEMS. Beat yolk one egs and add one-half 5 cup s-’;c:nted :‘a;t cho ates. wo e -ln'o"a”d flour - with three tea- poons baking powder and oné- _half teaspoon salt and add to frult’ mixture alternately with. one, cup sweet milk. ~Beat in one tablespoon melted butter, then fold in beaten egg white, turn into greased gem pans and bake about 25 minutes. PRUNE WHIP. Stew one pound prunes in very little water. When tender drain through colarider. Keep hot. Add gradually four. egg whites,” beaten stiff with ore cup powdered sugar. Put all in buttersd pudding dish and bake 20 minutes in moderate oven. Serve cold with cream, HAMBURG LOAF. ‘Two pounds hamburg, one cup cracker crumbs, salt, pep- per, celery salt and catsup to season, two onions 'chopped fine, two eggs {well beaten be- fore mixing {n).«Mix thoroughly aud pack in loaf tin. BRADY, M. D. But, alas, there are so many old fossils—some of 'em still youths— in practice. Should you encounter a mos#back who does incline to laugh at a perfectly healthy person & physical examination, thrust the clipping In his hands and hurry away —don’t be buncoed by his kind of amination. o Not Golng Into Decline. In one group of persons so ‘“‘pre- this French author, istic “‘petty sjgns” are chilliness, sub- normal, temperature and . lassitude, which are usually associated with ha- bitual low blood pressure. In another group the “‘petty signs” are due to a low grade intestinal in- flammation, and consist of constipa- tion, nausea, vomiting, capricious ap- petite. In a third group, the individuals merely show an ve reaction to protein injections of any kind ahd idiosyncrasy or :oversensitiveness te the action of such drugs as quinine and aspirin. In a fourth ggeup the “petty Wl is early obesity. Some lay lers will be susprised to know that obese young adults not rarely develop tuber- ulosts e Nigoul-Foussal points out that, while these ‘‘petty signs” may be taken as evidence of a predisposition to tuberculosis, many individuals pre- senting.these signs live for.long years without developing active disease. : Panng acom is dangcrous or even if you don’t measure umb.,” . A ‘Tomorrow’s “planstary sspecti fayorable until ndon. They then come adverse and remain so until sun- set, when they again revert to the favorable stage. The time’ in the early part of the day is too short to justify” anything .of ' far-reaching importance being attempted, although ltll‘!ldln‘lr’ this period to make commitments of a fi nature— always provided they neither speculative. nor. hagardous. In: the afternoon only routine duties should engage your attention, as the atmo; phere will be discouraging and lack: ing ‘in all urge to achievement. The evening will be full of enjoyment and | pleasure, as contentment will’ be in the air, Children born tomorrow are . des- tined, according to the signs, to suf- fer from a variety of aliments during Infancy. They will exact more than ordinary care, and special attestion must be given to their alimentation. There, is nothing, however, that need cause alarm, and they will outgrow all their infantile weaknesses and tain physical normaley. Their char acters will be unyielding, while their dispositions will be bitter and cynical, rather than sweet and trustful. They will not make friends quickly, but will }n capable of a great and an enduring ove. 1f tomorrow is your birthday you are practical and shrewd, yet, withal, a great lover of art and music. The probability is that you would become proficient in the latter fleld if you per- mitted yourself to develop the talent you possess, $ ‘You .are, by no manner of means, temperamental; on the contrary; you are exceedingly practical; being quick, alert and energetic. u’Yw are & sud- best sense' of B ol Bt b Meiae voke ‘ou generally su in YOI own way and in getting ‘:th-u to do avoid L. ‘Your home life i§ happy, as you look ‘upon ma: as- an-equal partner- ship, and are always ready “to gi and to take.” o o ‘Well known ‘persons born. on be- | doctors, becsuse she cannot ses “Bthel patiiion's so. keen | &céepted 5 o B TR Al her, fortuns is practieally ro # 481 to wonder if 1t that the woman will her son to college or gowns and launch them into soclety. Nevertheless is lnui & Lol u wherever you Conter. Who are the P of the banks? 1 udges of the courts? Who has painted 4 wondertul the year? Who hes mfi-r‘l?a o ning society? What girl of your acquaintance Ninety:nine times out of & hn‘w it is the boy or vantgge in youth but the advantage 3 D may happen mmmnmmumr are the leading preach pen to live, ‘whether it is ¢ y jers, lawyers, pleture, written the best:sélling book of the catch of the season? -What t woman is run- has become & famous ? girl who had no ad- .DO.Vurty. B THERE are perhaps a dozen rich men in this country who inherited stu- pendous fortunes and who have held on to th The financiers, almost without excéption, in their pockets and have worked Ih remainder of the men who started without a dollar way uj P. % Nearly all of our successful professional men were poor boys who made their. own opportunities for education. Oncé 1 sat in & courtroom’ listening to a m: ‘vast wealth trying a case in a bungling, mt:tm:u by fe T o who had won fame and fortune in his profession, and had way. An old man near me, retired to enjoy a nno:Aple’rau- %la age, tun’x:: to ;n- and g “Ah, my dear young lady, the profe ns are not. for the rich. It makes me think of what the greatest criminal lawyer this country ever produced said to me when I was a young man. I was a poor boy who had made his way up from bétween the plow Imost morning and were worn and fagged to les to this man's office, and ohe night 'hnnu‘: had been warking until haustion, just as we were leaving, he put My ‘unless he is poor.'* And it is that last turn of i ness or art or literature or law Nor is that hard to the ability to take ot. That is what poverty does for t! ung. self-control, dauntless courage, th: qun:il{i:.ut'hnu strong:-souled do not like poverty ‘they )2 . TTHEY take the iast turn of the men in e line of life who had vn.olwnu-t at ,n. I this country, where fortuhes other might ask herself whether, and a golden old medicind, that mean medicine, means su understand, We do not train prize ing them on sugar plums or spreading silken cushions l?:r We strengthen the muscles by exercise, we teach harden them s0 that they may stand up uhder blows. punishment. ° not, fran S I er s0n 10 have a gilded youth and l.;g! nu'm. i 0 old age. N B el e L i lon, that poor, for there is always one Iast turn ofp:ln '3, m:‘n."?in"’"" % verything, whether it be busi- CCoEs. fighters by feed- them, ghvm: endurance, we ‘e breed into them e S 5 juse tl against it and win out. scréw that the man wh ! ; fortable, anyway, won’t take, and that'is the m;nam m‘" v ot ‘entailed. it almost looks as if & she would préfer ; or & hard worked youth . For that is approximately the ratio in every community. The. middie- aged men who today are are holding down forty-dollar- riding around in’ a selling papers or ruuning-errands, and cotton nflrtl In the public school, while the. utomubiles 40. years ago ‘wére bresches. blue broken-down old that ‘were the 1t in velvet and lace, with tutors and goverriesses, that !:ll erstwhile poor boys envied. bl 168 | far better. has given him the y V. | there is .mum him. And if there sn't, money One Mother Says: - My children, like all others, are very fond of cookies. I used to find that the cutting of them took a great deal of time Auntil I discovéred that, by rolling the dough as nearly square @s possible and cutting the cookles square: with a Q(nt knite, I eaved a great deal of work. A square cookie tastes just as nice as oné with & more fancy shape and looks guite ‘appetizing and prett: ous . Ao Tot the ghiotadytht g e g money hds seved her ‘from. A.man hired by Johii Smith and Loudly declared that he'd —2 Men that lla —3-i- ° ‘_Dumping dirt near the —4-— “The drivers, therefore, didn't —5— 5 T OF partners not named. ;. ONe Or mMOMS oersu! ne " (two, 4 ed. ' i T Ra g, U (NOTE~"In_spite of the fuct that one of the rhymes is a little haiting and the meter in the fourth line is a bit out of tune, this Hmerick is dis- tinetly ot of the says H; F. W. of Columbus, Ohio, who sent ‘Puzzlick.” What do you think | nigh. A certain old maiden named White Put on her pajamas ons night; #A®.she happened to pass e ‘;E.‘Q’ a ;nl.n!" in ‘Near a 8he delig] Melt one Mflnfifl of bun:z. | add “one tables pour on gradual stantly two-thh Daatin ‘Uil ek and. en until tl and lemon, col- ored, and season with one tablespoon. ful of chopped . half ‘spoonful of salt, a little pepper and a few grains each of celery salt and cayenne. Beat the whites of three eggs until stiff and dfy and cut and t'old into the first mixture, - Turn into buttered individual molds, det in & pan of hot water and bake in a slow oven until firm. Remove from the molds, , pour tomato sauce around and garnish with the whites and olks of hard-bolled egg’s and. parsley. 'his is known as a l-rlu'r&.e gar. .. Cut the whites of the eges to represent the petals of the flower and ‘force the yolks through a strain- not take } tles Pop wis smoking and thinking and ail at once I put my hand in my side eoat- pockit saying, G wizz -holey "‘R‘:fnf‘i‘.“;. bad a8 pop sed. that, Yes sir, Ive lost wmtfiln( that was in this pockit, I sed. Yee gods, a blow like that at yeur time of lite is enulf to tern an optimist into ‘2 pessimists, was the stuff insured? pop sed. ' No .sir, G wiszickers how did I l[mo.: 1 wad going to lose it all out? ! This is réely a case for the lesgue ot nations, did you have mutch in there? pop sed, ,g.wtu 1 should say so, I sed, G wizz there was 13 tops of gingerale bottles that I was going to make something with, and there was about 9 shoes! all ‘tled together but I them It T wanted them something out of, and little bottles without 4 there was a e harsieal kind. oF string 16 e there was a good 2nd ha nales and & empty pill box and a #well cullection of pencil stumps, and &o"" there was a lot of othér things 1 cant think of jest now. Youve thawt of enuft to give ms & ideer of the ixtent of your mis~ sed. Well, you wont be “ to make & new start in life, he sed; and I sed, G, herray, heer it all is in my top pockit, 1 muat of changed it all to ot, and R ! [ aren’t the boys who had @ good start, but ‘mg: my_ top pockit for somé reason:. ‘en you remeémbér the reason let me know and Il include it in my tortheoming book, The Cure and Pré- ventlon of Pockits; pop sed. And he kepp on smoking to him- were men without deen | room where there having them instantly leap to thoir feet. Always before she had and | those things for granted; now, of gazze , treated -her to various of condescension, and it made ¢ rebel] . For the fArst time in lita began to think of such as ‘social position, class con- ., :Always beforée she had life without giving much §'§§ course, she could no longer expect them. Her heart was bitter as she crossed the sumptuous entrance hall and climbed th She ewhat su the earliness of the hour, ment lafer she was . ki ing . at Mona's door. and was _somewhat - . | sharply bidden to enter. Mona was sitting up in bed, a lacy be;.hcm thrown across her shoul- ders. ht morning light she was beautiful, but Richard, Who ' stood at the foot of the bed, seemed unconscious of her loveliness. ‘There was a sneer on his handsome | (] i mouth, they had evidently been quar. § reling about something. » As Lella entered Mona stared a: mo- ment at the girl and then laughed mockingly. “Draw. my bath, will you, Leila, ¢ {and bring my breakfast tray at once. badly spoiled. When she was < temper she snapped at and made things as than she was of her temper. It was as though Mona realized that the girl oultute and breeding, but because of her position was extirely . . She loved to say things that brought the hot color to the girl's face, she ‘loved to twit her on her beauty and to call attention to it when some one else was present. On the fist morning Leila had eaten her breakfaw at 8 o'clock in a corner of the big sunny kitchen. The night before when she had eafen there both Ingeborg and Marle had looked at her, wondering, perhaps, what her manner toward them would be, alert and on the defensive lest she “give herself airs.” It was an ordeal to Lefla, and she was afraid, which gave her an appearance of shyness. Then, too, she did not know what to say or how to say it. She ‘was uncertain about everything, and yet she wanted to be friendly. She was not a snob, although her bring- ing-up might easily have made her one. . And 80 she had been very quiet, speaking only in monosyllables, but the next morning at breakfast.there Was less restraint. eborg was ‘won over by the girl's uty, and Marie, a pleasant-faced girl of about 25, ehowed a willingness to. be After breakfast there was nothing for her to do but wait until Mona summoned her, which would prob. ably beé about 10:30. To reach her own room it was necessary to pass through the dining room, and as she the door she saw that Richard Kingsley was having breakfast alone. At the side table Kuwa was pouring coftes, and as she passed his table Richard looked up at ber. BShe was conscious of those plercing #elf and 1 went out to see if eny of | mured the fellows was out. ) a tea.l’ for w Kuwa is getting it ready.” Leila went into the bathroom and turned on the water: Then with a pense of Yellef she slipped out fnto the hall. She was hoping with all her heart that Mr. Kingsley would have gone when she returned (Copsrighs. 1926.) (Continued in tomorrow’s Star) Gaagt IR Where Ignorance Is Bliss. From the Good Hardware Magazine. ‘He—Do you play golf? She—Oh,, dear no; I don't. even know how to hold the caddy! Serve this new relish that makes the whole meal taste better/ PIN MONEY PICALILLI hese men - did a great thing women Agauim—plusnfimp,ofmtoworkitwt—- forever freed women from worry about moth-damage. ", After 18 months of experiment, these mén produced i : Latyex. And Larvex, when sprayed on anything woolen, er to.represent the center. s More white labor is bei em| In gold mines’ of Bouth A‘?fiu&’:’ :‘i any time, the number now being 2,100 while that of natives is 7,000 imakes that article absolutely safe from moth-attack. These men tested Larvex far more thoroughly than [ * it would ever be tested in your home: They mothproofed _hundreds of woolen samples with it. They kept the - samples covered with live moth-worms for months. But - the moth-wormns all died—without eating a single hole in a single sample. Such protection had never before ‘been possible. (Remember—moths are harmless. Moth- worms do all te) by the eating. They hatch from eggs laid 1 7 ¥ 4

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