Evening Star Newspaper, October 7, 1926, Page 49

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WOMAN’S PAGE ‘We ought to shed tears over the parent passing of the fashion for e necks—and some of us doubtless would were we quite sure that the present flalr for high-collared day frocks and tightly swathed necks was in reality Collars Made of Light Material BY MARY MARSHALL. |ends hangng loose, or close upstanding collars, but the wide shfiwl collar that leaves the neck partly exposed at the front is still with us. For the woman who chooses the frock with low neckline, but who sl | wishes to produce the effect of a fair- | lv high neckline for streit wear. th are clever little collars of kasha and | other woolen materials. hardly heavy enough to cause overheating. If d sired these scarfs may be left with one end may be thrown over the shoulder. How- ever, to produce the collared effect | there is usually some sort of device ! to keep the scarf ci about the nmval‘ The sketch shows one of these new vf collars. It is made of copper- colored kasha trimmed with velvet. Two shades of hlue—one a dark nav 1 ——make a smart combina tion for a scarf of this sort. (Covyright. 1926.) My Neighbor Says: To prevent the lower crust of pie becoming sozey. the surface may be sprinkled with flour or brushed with egg white before adding the tilling Grease stains on leather may be removed by applying benzine or pure turpentine. Wash the spots afterward with well- beaten white of egg or a good YET FOR TOGETHER. INGENIOUS DEVICE SCAR! HOLDI [} 1S OF COPPER-COLORED KASHA WITH | ONE END PUT THROUGH A/} VELVET STRAP. 1T BA WITH BROWN VELV the requiem of the bare neck. \\'llwn. ow | older women observe that the neckline is really more becomin daughters of flapper age, feeling ver smart in their new high-collared jump- ers, smile ndulgently—much as we used to smile when older women as- eured us that bangs were more be- coming than pompadours. Doctors tell us that real harm can | v the fashion of swathing be done the neck. they assure us, much more subject to colds. But fortunately there is still excellent precedent for continuing the fashion of the open neck, and many of the smartest frocks are made with neck and throat bare. Some of the Winter coats are made with rather Danny and the Fisherman. > fine Patience i a T Alas., T sl ey Meadow Motise. When Danny Meadow Mouse es- caped from Jim the Fish Crow he felt that he had learncd a lesson .t “It doesn't do to take too much fc ant- ed,” said he. gir. it doesn’t do to take too much for granted. T cer- tainly thought that was Blacky the Crow, but when I had a chance to 80 HE SETTLED HIM HIS HEAD DRAWN BACK BE- TWEEN HIS SHOULDLERS. really use my eyves I could see the difference. That fellow isn't quite so big as Blacky. And when 1 think it over, his voice isn't au the same. My, T must wateh out, or I'll be get ting into trouble one of these d s that fellow had caught shivered at the thought he came to a low place Now supp me.” Danv By and | on the bank of the creek. !le saw Peep the Least Sandpiper and a lot s friends running around. Dann, ch them a few minute: Just beyond him there was an old stick standing in the water. At least Danny took it for a stick. He near] lost his balance and fell in the mud when that stick siiddenly came to life. “Oh, my eve!” exclaimed under his brea “1t's Longle Great Blue e I've seen him the S Py and 1 He's the k that long 2 I would.” Tt wa Heron and he had cel Tt disappeared t long neck of hi the Great caught a head first dow and then Longle exumed his fish- Ing. Now the in fishing is to be j fisherman fter fish: fish knows this you have come to you as soon as he w his toes in the wa himself with the to s big enough to wet So he settled tween h: houlde 1til he didn’t 1 bird at all. At a distance one of the weather- iven in the the creck ettled himself to watch. “I'm going to sit here until he ca other fish, the rest of the afternocn ¥ _to_himself clear to the points and stay sharp alongtime Guaranteed Best Stores 250 Styles and Sizes S.in.Ladies’ SIMPLE 1S THE | THIS | “The overheated throat is.| BEDTIME STORIES LF, WITH Longlegs | wn hack be- | ches an- | leather reviver. To determine whether a cake is baked, press gently on the top. 1f the impression of the finger springs back, the cake is baked. Should the imptint remain, the cake must be re. turned to the oven. To remove scorch stains from white garments wet a cloth in hydrogen peroxide and lay over the scorched parts. Run a hot fron over the stain and it will disappear instantly. Do not let it remain too lon To clean grease from an iron sink, try Indian meal in place @ soap Custard pies should first be strated to bake in a hot oven to set the crust, then the heat of the oven should be quickly re duced so that the custard may cook slowly. When boiling new milk, to prevent a “skin” from forming on the top as it cooks, add two | | tablespoons of cold milk to avery pint when at the bofling point and stir for a minute. The so-called skin will then be ahsorbed and the milk will not be impoverished. BY THORNTO! . BURGES! The Sandpipers ran this way and that all around Longlegs. He didn't pay any attention to them ), Si he didn’t. You never would have guessed he was alive. He simply stood there on those long legs of His, as if there were no such thing as fish, anything else or birds, or “He's asleep.” said Danny. “He's | asteep. 1 could run right under hi | bill and he never would see me. _It's a funny place 10 g0 to s there in the open. Oh Longle; 1 suddenly darted that {1ong neck of his forward to length. His great bill had s eep, right out i he looked as if he hadn't any head at }all, and away he flew with his long |legs trailing out behind him. So | Danny learned how patience is re- warded. (Covyright. 14 R Clues to Character BY J. 0. ABERNETHY. He Thinks for Himself. There is a type of man who loves to delve into things, who will not take | vour word for anything until he has investigated it thoroughly for himself. e demands proof—concrete evidence and prefers to “dig it out” for him- | self rather than to have vou tell him {about it This type often is dubbed hard-head- ed and sven mulish. hecause he pre- | fers to_think for himself and insists |on seeing and examining whatever comes under his investigation. It gives the mentality the cast of an in- | ventor or discoverer. | Persons who invent new ways of | doing things, or who suggest some |short cut to attain success in the siness world, have the faculty of scovery well developed. | The sign is shown in the lower end | of the nose. If the septum, that nar- row strip that divides the nostri to push downward. vou will know that the individual who has it is naturally inclined to investigate, to invent, to analyze, imes to be rather critical in his ions, ion: | “The lower the septum seems to | hang, the more the faculty is devel- joped. Chem cientists and invent- ors have this faculty greatly devel- | oped. If septim is sharp and thin, there will be a tendency to criticize people and things in a sarcastic man- ner ar ! Copyright. 1926 ) ‘Mrs. Danforth’s Pie | A new recipe using Gorton's Ready to Fry Cod Fish Cakes I 2 cans Gorton's Cod Fish Cakes % cup Milk 2 tablespoons butter 1Ess & cup Cracker Crumbs % cup grated Cheese Empty contents of cans and fluff up with fork. Add milk and egg, well beaten. When smooth, place in buttered baking dish and spread h the cracker crumbs mixed with melted butter. Sprinkle cheese over top. Bake until well browned. RS. C. H. DANFORTH of Boston likes Gorton's Ready-to-Fry Cod Fish Cakes 3o weil that she invented this new way to serve them. Perhaps YOU have original ways, too. We are always glad to hear from housewives. brown | down into the water. Tt was done so| quickly that Danny rubbed his eyes 1o see if it really had been done. Tt had! Up came that head, A sil- very fish was tossed in the air. As 1it turned it came down head first and {disappeared down TLongle; long | Then Longle retched to, | height. looked way. looked that way, spread his great wings, sald “quawk,” tucked his head and neck back on his shoulders until SUB ROSA SY MIMI | “I Wouldn’'t Care if She Was Stunning.” he's left me—thrown me st when it seemed that every- g was going to be wonderful for the rest of my life. I went with Jack for two years and we were every- thing to each other. 1 had not the slightest doubt about his faithfulness. And, really, he has been true to me up_ till last month, | when he met this awful girl Marie. “I'm not just being the usual jeal- ous critic avhen I say that this girl wful. Every one who knows any- thing about her savs the same thing. She's ugly and rather loud. she has a bad reputati And he’s simply crazy about her. He's actually going to marry her—has asked her parents’ consent and all that. “}e went with me for two years land never once seemed so anxious i to marry me as he is to wed this dreadful girl. It huris my pride so. I wouldn't mind half as much if she were stunning. Then, at least, I should feel he had a reason to leave me. I'd know that my rival was a worthy successor. But to think of his throwing me down for that crea- ture he loves, it breaks my heart.” That's the wrong attitude for Elsle, the writer of this epistle, to take. She n. shouldn't be so miserable over the other girl's inferiorify If Jack prefers the tvpe of girl Marde appears to be, then Jack isn't the sort who could ever have made Elsie happy. She's a nice, quiet kid with a lot of fine ideals. Jack in his choice of Marie as a wife has shown a sur- prising lack of taste and also very little moral judgment. This fact should comfort his de- serted sweetheart. She's found out something about him which might never have come out till long after they were married, and then it would have been too late to do anything about it. How much more heartrending it would be for her to know that Jack had fallen for a great beauty—a woman of wit, charm and experience! vain tears of regret that How many Elsie might have shed situation, realizing that Jac showed his good sense and strongly than ever! Realizing her rival so far outshone her, her hurt pride could find no balm in the other’s | inferiority. As it is, Jack's new selection has definitely established him on a lower level. Elsie may quite easily look down on Marie. She can do this with a smile of superior satisfaction. 1t Jack fs no better than to he Marie’s husband, Elsie can have no enormous respect for him as time goes on and she begins to reason more : over ad of finding herself in the po- sition of a pathetic little faded sweet- heart deserted for a radiant beau she can survey the situation with some complacency. To all who know her it must be apparent that Jack’s taken a bad flop. Most people will pity him—few will pity her. The point which seems to be bother- ing her most is that which should be giving her the most comfort. Just because the other woman is n inferior person, she should realize that Jack has lowered himself and is no more up to her standard of man- hood. (Copyright. 1926.) Send for Mimi's fashion hints Inclose | selt-addressed. stamped envelope . Tripe Pie. Cook a pound of honeycomb tripe in a pint of water seasoned with one teaspoonful of salt, a small pinch of cayenne and a bunch of sweet herbs, letting it merely simmer for one hour. (ool on a platter and set away until { next day, or until the tripe jellies. | Then cut into squares and arrange in a h either a light pie paste or a rich biscuit dough rolled to a quarter of an inch thin. Add a quarter of a pound of cooked ham or lean bacon cut in small pieces, over all place two hard-cooked eggs, | cut in rather thick slices, cover with a sheet of the pastry or biscuit dough and bake until well browned. This iss very good. 7 Jellied Fruit Pudding. Put one’ package each of orange and raspberry prepared gelatin in a bowl and add boiling water. Stir until dissolved. Add one cupful of cold wa. ter and cool further in a pa of ice water until beginning to stiffen. Add {one cupful of cut-up candied fruit and pour into a star mold. Chill and turn out onto a large plate. Fill the center with whipped cream slightly sweet- | ened_and tinted a_pale green. 14 year old girl does family wash “I got clothes whiter than mother ever did — with much less work” HEN my mother was ’sick, I had »» to do all the housework. The woman who lives upstairs told me to use Rinso so that I wouldn’t need to worry about the wash. She said, “Just soak all the clothes in Rinso suds and you won't have any hard rubbing to do.” So on Monday I did just as she told ;nfl and the clothes cate out beauti- ully. Mother said they were whiter and cleaner than she ever got them with her hours of rubbing! Even badly soiled spots got snowy white after a tiny rub between my fingers. I had no hard work at all. Now mother always uses this new granulated soap instead of bar soap. Mother’s hands are never red or rough any more. And she says the clothes last longer, too, because there's no scrubbing against a board. Ask your grocer today for The granulated soap that soaks clothes whiter —no scrubbing —— ] 7| NG N JEEE N JEN H dd JEEgE BN NN a8 N 2. Oce . B 61. wre Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle. NG STAR, WASHINGTON, The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle Across. . Of the present month (abbr.). . A reunfon. . Town In Massachusetts. Beast of burden. »” . Topographical engineer (abbr.). ah . Siberian river. | rood of pheasants. . State of being careless. . Exist . Bring sult against. . Indefinite article. r (abbr.). da 2 2 g 23. Arablan proper name. 24. Restores to health. 25. The smallest State (abbr.). . Point of the compass. 35 Gonjunction e 32. Gold (heraldry). Check e 33. Province in Soviet Russfa. - Man's name. 34, The sun god. . Toward. Tie . An itch, . Man s B 9. Man' 1 People o Erin. " Great (apbry. French unit of square measure. . A constellation. 87. A news paragraph. . Note of the sale. 40. Eskimo dwelling. Brag. S | An assistant. . First letter of Arabian alphabet 1. Associated with. . Metal-bearing vein. 2 . Asiatic shrubby plant. . An American editor. | _ Point of the compass. 6. An exclamatlon. | . Central American republic. . Prefix; two. . Upon. . West Indian (abbr.). . Behold. . Within. River in Europe, Loy o . Hush. £ . ke an e, Macaroni and Kidneys. ow ists. Disclosures. . Doctrine of a_society of fiffeenth century occult philosophers. . Out of. . Bone, 4. Comes close to. z 5. Walking stick: nickname. ’ D. C, THURSDAY, O (Copyright. 1926.) . French coins. . Manuseript (abbr.). . Level with the surface of the water. . More gloomy. outh Wales (abbr.). Break one-half a pound of macaroni or spaghetti in pieces and cook until tender in boiling salted water, then drain thoroughly. While the maca- roni is cooking, wash one veal kidney or eight lamb kidneys, cut in slices, and saute for five minutes in three | tablespoonfuls of melted fat. Add one and one-half cupfuls of water, one teaspoonful of salt, and one table. spoonful of catsup. Cover and sim- mer for about 25 minutes, then Down. thicken the gravy with a tablespoon- ful of flour mixed with a little cold water. Lift out the kidneys, mix the gravy with the macaroni, and arrange on a hot dish. Pile the kidneys in the center and ser hot. very, c s Peas in Turnip Cups. Select tender voung white turnips of uniform size, peel and boil them, then scoop out deeply, chop the por- tion removed, and mix with freshly cooked green peas, melted butter, a few bits of pimento and the required seasoning. Drop a bit of butter in each turnip cup with seasoning to taste, then fill with the peas and stick a sprig of mint or parsley in each. up erly tomorrow morning and finish my lessins | and then go to bed a wile, pop sed. study out loud, saying, There is more CTOBER 7, 1926. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Pop was smoking behind the sport- ing page and 1 was doing my lessins |. and wishing I wasent, and I sed, G. pop. sippose 1 go out a wile and get Sippose you finish your lessins now Proberly meening he dident bleeve I would get up erly, and I herd the fellows velling outside, making me kind of homesick, and I started to than 200 bones in the human body, there is more than 200 bones in the human body, there is more than 200 bones in the human body. Wich after I had sed it about 20 times pop sed, Im glad to heer it, Im sure, now for Peet sake change the subjeck. Wich 1 did, saying, South America is bounded on the East by the Atlan- tick-Ocean, South America is bounded on the Fast by the Atlantick Ocean. IKeeping it up till pop sed. Well, well, wat of it, vou cant change it by com plaining about it, can yvou? Im studying my lessins. pop, I sed. 0, is that it, well dont let me stand in the way of your education. pop sed. Meening to keep on studying them. Wich I did, saving, Columbiss was the ferst of the grate ixplorers, Colum- biss was the ferst of the grate ixplor- ers, Columbi: was the ferst of the grate ixplore And I sed it about 10 more times, and pop sed. Say, young fellow, on 2nd thawts T think it would be splendid mental training for you to get up with the lark and the sun-tomorrow morn- ing and finish your singing. And now if T let you go out for about 20 min- nits will you promise not to stay long- er than an hour at the latest? he sed. Yes sir, T sed. Wich T hardly dident. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Washing the Hair. One mother says: Put the little one in the bathtub and rub soap or a shampoo on a stiff hand brush swhich has been moistened with clear warm water. Then with the brush rub the buby's head a bit at a time, not too hard. ee how quickly the dirt loosens, and how easy it is to keep the water out of baby's eyes! When vou are ready to rinse the hair, gently tip the baby's head backward and wash with clear water, moving the brush toward the FEATURES. 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR today voted to advance the $30,000 to him, at the same time requiring him to glve bonds to account for th money and to take steps for the tras fer of his English estate in order to reimburse Congress for the $30,000 Gen. Lee has been twice assigned by Gen. Washington to duties of a dificult nature, and Congress has delegated to him powers second only to those of the commander-in-chief. In December he was sent to Rhode Island to deal with the Tory situation, and he had a similar mission in New | York City and Long Island. While in New York ‘he was ordered to com- mand the Northern army in Canada, but when the enemy began to move upon the Southern colonies in the early Spring, his Canadian order was canceled and he was sent into Vir- ginfa and the Carolinas. He ®as nominally in command of the forces in South Carolina when the assault upon Charleston was successfully re pulsed in June. He has a pecullar Gen. Lee Gets $30,000. PHILADELPHIA, October 7, 1 —An advance of $30,000 has today been voted to Gen. Charles Lee of the Continental Army. The action is an unusual one, but the circumstance: are peculiar. Gen. Lee is an Eng lishman with a long and ried mili- tary record. When this war came he was residing in America and he of- fered his services in the cause of American liberty. He attached.to his offer one condition, which was that ‘America should recompense him for any loss he might sustain in case he lost his English property through al- lying himself with the Americans against England. The offer seemed to be a fair one, and such military genius as Gen. Lee was believed to possess was much in demand. Considerable sums of money were due Gen. Lee in England when he entered the American service, and his agent in the old country has been unable to collect them. In the mean- [personality, is most pompous and die- time Gen. Lee has contracted to pur- | tatorial, and ha missed em- chase an estate in Virginia, and to [barrassing S| a1te authort ties over points of military etiquette conclude the transaction according to s and procedure. agreement, he needs ready money. Taking these circumstances into con- |{riends and he slderation, and recognizing also that |gratulations upon Gen. Lee has already performed val-|from Congress. uable services for America, Congres: (Covrrizht Don’t Be “Skinny” and Scrawny! Build up Weight in 3 Weeks with New Combination of YEAST and IRON—or Pay Nothing Pleasant Because Tasteless “] Gained 10 Pounds” “For over a year I had 6o energy or ambition. My com lexion was muddy, 1 could not sleepat night. 1 fell off in weight uatil [ was but @ shadow of my former self. ing one treat- Tant of TRONIZED YEAST I feel like & new woman. My complexion up wonderfully. 1 have and 1 am full of .. B., Chicago, TIL Yet he has made many will receive many con- his $30,000 grant 19 It seems incredible how fast IRONIZED YEAST adds pounds of good firm flesh—on women and men, children and old people. Doctors know the value of vegetable iron and yeast in building up and improving the body. IRONIZED YEAST, in a highly concentrated form, contains all the blood- building properties of vegetable iron with yeast. 1t is nine times more effective than a cake of ordi- nary baker’s veast or iron alone. New Complexion For You People ask—what is the magic in IRONIZED YEAST that transforms sallow, lifeless, faded com- plexions into the fresh, smooth, lovely skin of early girlhood? Wrinkles disappear. Eyes rerew the sparkle of youth. Hollows fill out. No wonder thou- sands of women pour in letters to us in praise of the ‘marvelous,youthifying effects of IRONIZED YEAST! Yet, the answer is simple. Vegetable iron and e ve been used for years to vitalize the body; to make rich, healthy blood; to improve digestion and bBowel action and add weight. In IRONIZED YEAST these two valuable elements are combined in a special formula that is nine times stronger than yeast and iron used separately. That's why Peaple IRONIZED YEAST works so quickly. So, got & Lack Pep, s m«m :utmem-—so nice nsb.l‘m s i andy bottle. No nasty, pasty taste— Safe to take VC‘;"‘" g Contains 5o harmful drugs. ‘Satisfaction or Money Back Go to any drug store and get a full size treatment. If, after this generous dack. It will back. If you keep talking about in- teresting things during the process hing, there will be little danger U. S§. B DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE trial you are not delighted with effects, ask for your mongy be r:f\mded immedi‘lhtely. 1If inconvenient to buy from dru send $1.00 direct to the IRONIZED YEAST CO. ATLANTA, GA. 4 82-E. UREAU OF FISHERIES Economic Circular No. 48 Revised April, 1926 In 1864 an enterprising runs of other species, but This salmon has reddish the red-meated kinds, and caused the public to pass cipally because they are canned. Pinks and chums usually but are equal to the redder the package InTERNATIONAL SALT in the new leak-proof, sealed-tight container. The finest salt money can buy. Clean, pure, free-running. Packed by the largest salt company in the United States. Get this package at your grocer’s. tent and lower cost render disregarding the fat or oil, Canned salmon, pink or chum, except the can. spoil quickly in the home; cooked in a variety of ways CANNED SALMON By HENRY O'MALLEY, Comsmissioner, U. S. Bureas of Fisheries. fornia established a salmon cannery on the banks of the Sacramento River for the pur- pose of utilizing the chinook salmon which swarmed in that stream. There were smaller 80 conspicuously the most aboundant, the largest and the richest that it was used ex- clusively in the newly established industry. the growing demand for the product induced the extension of the industry, the growth was toward rivers and sections producing the same fish or other red-mested species, first to the Columbia River, then Puget Sound, and latest in Adaska. For a great many years the only:salmon canned were come so intimately to associate the color with the product that pink or pale-fleshed fish have been regarded with disfavor or suspicion. Even light-meated chinook, com- mon in some localities, have not found a ready morket. Color is a matter of appear- ance only, but prejudice and custom have and equally wholesome pink and chum prin- Economy of Using Pink and Chum Salmon. tein—tissue-building materfal. They are low priced because of their abundance and the use of labor-saving machinery in handling and canning them. Their high protein con- nomieal than most animal foods in common use. To buy the same quantity of protetns, in common use would cost as follows®: Ham, 1.4 pounds, at 45 cents . Chicken, average, 1.4 pounds, at §5 centa__ 49 . Lamb, leg, 1.3 pounds, at 37 cents__.______ 43 Sirloin steak, 1.3 pounds, at 40 cents. Eggs, strictly fresh, 1 dozen, at 48 cents.. 48 The two kinds of canned salmon, pink and chum, contain more tissue-building material, welght for weight, than the other foods listed, byt they have less fat. They are as digestible as the best of meats, there is no waste, and nothing has to be thrown away ‘They have amother virtme. Fresh meats will keep indefinitely if unopened. it is ready for immediate use, or it may be One pound of fresh salmon will furnish 18 per cent of the energy a man needs daily, 69 per cent of the proteim, 10 per cent of the calcium, 57 per cent of the phosphor- ous, and 19 per cent of the fron.t As the bones are softened in processing and rep- dered suitable for consumption, the min- PINK AND CHUM resident of Cali- eral content of canned salmon should be somewhat higher. lodine in Canned Salmon. Gofter 1s very common in men: the United States, affecting, h:ysg;r;! I?lg stances, over 50 per cent of the population. Iodine or foods rich in fodine have been found to be very efficient in the prevention the chinook was flesh, and, when the publio has i Brief Lifo History. ere are five species of Pacific Coast salmon, all used in the canning industry and by the cheaper not red when contain less fat varieties in pro- in their second year, while most ch: four years old when they come bmk.uw some may be in either their third or fifth year. Both species return to fresh water solely for the purpose of epawning, usually each fish in the stream n which it was batched, “and having spawned once, they die. The whole generation is after providing its successor. It is on this m thef n that most of them are wmm mm purposes. Salmo n canneries make extenstve laborsaving machinery, which n:t“‘:ng makes it possible to pack vast quantities of the fish during the brief period of the rums, but adds tq the quality and santtaticn of almost entirely avoiding con- them more eco in various foods Cents per 1-Ib. ean_. 15 62 52 camned salmon it desired. erally appreciated. ican pack was 6,018,550 1-pound cans. Of these cans were. pink salmon, Wwere chums. i mrcm-dum-u-«‘runq— from the S { procared ;ptrhuendentd.hm

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