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WOMAN’S PAGE. E=—— New Hats With Trimming at Back | ! BY \I;\_l:\l SHALL. 2 | In the ¢ on wore when the dressmakers mous starc they wor . aguin > 4 much less sophisti- TR AR et L G G persons than dress- 1 mplaint was made it was the burden of the e e Knize one of the s at the front. Bt from Nowadays frocks as well as hats Ry iint s 1 quently more ornate at the down so S ) than the front. The vogue for i " head < is said to have had much to @ vestize of their short, cropped hair | do with that, 8 to be seen an N} s on (Copyrizht. 1926.) ne coats su ihe Ienu for a Day. BREAKFAST. Oatmeal with Dates Creamed Dried Beef on Toast Griddlecake: Maple Sirup Coffee LUNCHEON. Cheese Souffle Stewed Tomatoes. Clover Rolls Raisin Shoulder Boiled Corr Boiled Cabbage, Turnips, Potatoes 3 4 Beets Hot Mince Iie Cheese GRIDDLECAK Take $ AND SIRUP. three-fourths two ta- um or but- nd cups thick sour milk, one FORMAL AFT blespoonfuls sour ¢ one teaspoonful soda, little 1lt, one teaspoonful sugar, ON TTE nearly two cups flour and one NT PLACED IX T "| | well beaten egg. Reat all thor- . T oF together, then fry on __THE CROWN ed not ton hot’ iron hoon nd Use one mixing and for one sriddlecake, shoulders. batte this smount of batter will make 11 cakes. rup. Serve with maple RAISIN GINGERBREAD. One cup molasses, half cup s r./ two-third: cup butter, half cup milk ven teaspoonful shape soda, two teaspoonfuls ginger, of her coat may half cup raisins. Make as soft with that of her vou can handle. Knead —but if per and put in pan. Roll out sut at the 1 11, inches thick and bake in not too hot oven. Then done and almost cold cut in squares, t BUTTERED BEETS. 11 pail as large as will hold ny beets 3 i to Don't cut them, as that < them bleed. Cover with 4 water, cover up tight, put in hot oven and let bake. When ent in dice and place one tablespoonful butter on top. d R I o t res-Word Puzzle ¥ i it | K | 10 al n fi h: in | them. We see women tur the thought that their husbands do not love | \ y | them like a knife in their hearts, just because their husbands do not tell them : cross Not odd {that they adore them. in sy many words. A color { (R ; Island opposite La Rochelie. { YET these very men prove their devotion every day by their words. They ) S . For example (abbr.) { say it with labor, h luxuries, with the chivalry that makes a man ) sacrifice himself to Keep his f: ife and warm, but because they do not ! . Ie %put it into actual speech the < s 3 And all about us we sce women who should be happy—who have all of rd L oS! esire for SOme- | the raw material of huppiness in their hands in the shape of good, kind, 19. Wandered generous husbands and comfortable homes—making themselves miserabie over ) e panaes | trifles. They are like the princess in the fairy tale who searched under her b ) y 20. A L {40 mattresses of ease until she found a crumpled rose leaf. 2 e o 2L e They find theirs in the fact that their husbands don’t want to go out in R Y the evening; or that their husbands don't feel like talking after a hard, trying Lnansniine day’s work; or that their husbands forgot their wedding anniversaries, or give ., them a check Instead of picking them out a present at Christma k2o, ilatne pod What a pity that these silly women, who make mountains out of mole . et hills, haven't enough vision to see how small little things are! For in matri- T rony it isn’t the compliments and picking up of handkerchiefs that count. . s {1t is the blg things, the tenderness, the faithfulness, the willingness of a man > el to stand before his wife and fight the world for her n | What a pity women haven't enough philosphy and sense of humor to B {realize that as long as man is nailed to his own fireside of an evening and . : pay envelope homé, it’s proof of affection you could draw money ; v on at the hank. That when he passes his plate for a second helping it's the z ) {most fulsome compliment he can pa wife's cooking, and that nobody 4. e lever really gives you what you want as a present, but you can buy exactly 149, Goddess of ea |the thing you crave on a charge account. P . : | -~ forpe) Bt 0 Pity @ man can't remember the little things. and a woman 4 (abbr.) " orget them. OTHY b ' Savory Veal. il (Copyright. 1926.) BULRCER : | Put two tahsespoonfuls of butter Down | soof dish and when quite hot | . A . = N wo tal of flour and | Mutton With i)umplmgs. { brown i five minutes. nd one-h: Boil for 1 one pound of | 1soning of salt, | and n Heat boil to! Serve thanal ™ ' Remove the meaz from the liquid, cut |1 from the bone in small pieces and | g ¥ return to the kettle. Add any left- rot lover gravy and one feaspoonful of S chopped parsley. Thicken slightly | with smoothly ailuted flour. With a 9 : immer remove the meat, to the cen or n . . ’ neing Feat a Record. o [ter of the platter, surround with 4 v Ferando. the well known | UmPHRES. and pour gravy over all. N Ttalian d \ster. has just set | R R T Ready to Fry s nebnid S Turathon ‘dancers | The Iconoclasts were an Fastern | re cc : lanced 130 hours, | Sect of the eighth and ninth cen-| CodFish Cal(es nd. 1 1 d nights withou: | turies, whose object was to prevent come forward in Charleston dance s if they raise “Copy 1926.) Why Don't Husbands Pay Wives the Little Atten- one of her or her children. any of the “little things.” of duty that is as liable to land on the back of her neck or the tip of her nose as on her lips. { subject i now and then would make and trouble and mone: and comfort and wel toeth. At the commencement of the vear I would mark down on my calendar the anniversary of the day I met her and the day I popped the uestion and her birthday and our wedding day. And I'd send her some little i memento on each occasion, even if it were only a ten-cent bag of peanuts And when she would be so pleased that she’d never notice what else 1 did, and she would go had husbands who worked themselves to death for them, and who gave them their wives the small attentions that they anybody explain the peculiarity of feminine vision that makes a little thing loom larger in a woman's life than a big thing. Michael Arlen would say. thing that they are letting it ful each of diced carrots on the worship of and destroy religious THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1926. FEATURES. “THERE’S AT LEAST ONE IN EVERY OFFICE.” Yes me. M Tewe Miss GRAY WANT HER —By BRIGGS. What Do You Know About It? Daily Sclence Six. 1. What causes dysentery? 2. What causes typhus fever? 3. What Is the treatment for malaria? ' 4. What is the treatment for leprosy? 5. What causes leprosy? 6.Is leprosy highly tagious? Answers to these questions in I tomorrow’s Star. UH-MPIDOR Huntington’s Chorea.. man race. Its victims all belong bear the same surname, of course. family fortune to be subject to a sort palsy. but somthing far more arbitrary. manifests itself at any age. its sufferers try shake., The disease is incurable. way descended from and changing names. 1. Bison are not extinct. Pa tinet for about 30 years. 3. Saber-tooth tigers tinct for many thousand years. almost so in the United States. The Importance of “Little Things” Comments on Peculiar Feminine Quirk Doroth yDix] tion They Crave?—On the Other Hand, Why Must These Attentions Loom_So Large? chief indictment that the average woman brings against her husband that he does not pay enough attention to the little things of life, and his is what turns matrimony into cinders, ashes and dust for her. is a good man, she will mournfully @dmit when she goes on jes of self-pity. He has no rovi ve for other women. He doesn’t drink or gamble, and he works like a dray horse to support her and He is a good provider. There isn't & woman In her acquaintance who has prettier clothes, or a better car, or a nicer home, but he never does Oh, yes, h ile never pays her a compliment. He never tel eautiful she grows. He never notices what she ha He never remarks on what a wonderful hou: eeper and manager she He never sends her 1y flowe or brings her a box of candy He never takes her out in the ning wi at a fisht. He never remembers anniversaries. He never even clis her that he loves her, or gives her a kiss that isn’t a perfunctory peck on. Wherefore, all of his virtues are as nothing in his wife's eyes and she heats upon her breast and wails out that marriage is a failure and that she s, of all women, most miserable. smuch as it is well known to all men that women have this sion about little things, it has always seemed to me that it was and not to gratify his wife's ma on the tery and a pound of chocola sentimental token a woman happy, and keep her eating out of your and, for Heaven's sake why not let her have it? s There s no other way in the world that man can invest a little time | ¥ where it will y eing for himself uch enormous dividends in peace s it will if put in on showing his . . 1 were a married man, I should make it a rule to begin the day just as ¢ by paying my wife a florid compliment as I did by brushing my ed me how I liked her new dress I'd tell her she looked ovely in anything, instead of gurgling in my throat or handing out a knock. For well I'd know that if I'd sacrifice to the feminine Little Gods she bout congratulating herself 0 matter if 1 beat her and s bout her luck in having got a perfect husband, arved her. Moreover, all the other women who ne clothes and fine houses instead of fine speeches, would envy her. As 1 said before, it is sheer asininity that keeps husbands from paying crave so greatly, but, on the other and, 1t shows an equal lack of intelligence for women to put such an nordinate value upon trifles. Why they make such a fetish of little things nobody knows. Nor can It just happens that way, as On every side of us v e women putting such stress upon some trivial ruin all of the great happiness that life has for Put the remains of your roast mut- n on in cold water, add half a cup- nd turnips, 1o cupful of canned tomato and one »n. Simmer gently for two hours. “Codfish Gems” made by Mrs. Reed i | 1 Can Readv-to-Fry Cod Fish Cakes 1 Egy per person served Open can and shape the con- tents into cakes. Butter a gem pan and press one cake into'each section, hollowing out centers. Drop an egg into each center. Bake 15 minutes or until eggs are firm. Serve with creamed peas and mashed potatoes. HIS original recipe from Mrs. Ruby G. Reed, Fitchburg, Mas., suggests cae of countless variations the ingenious | housewife can give to her daily menu with Gorton's Ready-to-Fry Codfish Cakes. 1f YOU have discovered some clever use, we'll be glad to hear from you. City and Suburban Delivery s her how young and | A’ you on Insisted on spelling if At the Y. M. € L And he felt like a J | reful not to use too muc this into the beaten che are very rare in the United States. 6. Dodos are mythological birds. “puzz”cks" Puzzle-Limericks (Covyriht. 1926.) LITTLE BENNY ng woman, longing b Lol mos mpathy iwx:h su;lebhum“;:e - 2 and devdut_soul distressed about the youlymueh fojlice s Loloblove, deluge or Noah's navigation, or the Gl L ol B L e z sun standing still for Joshua, than T 1. Renown. ’ . Me and Sid Hunt and Glasses Magee | do with a clever word juggler who | Unusual spelling of feminine | and Shorty Judge and Skinny Martin | indulges in verbal legerdemain merely | name. s around in _the alley, and Skinny | as a “smart” exercise_ No man is | 8. Where theatrical performances | Martin sed, I challence enbody in this | fitted to be a helper of ™ fellows who | are given crowd to a fite. o cannot lay their lowliest burdens on 4. Anger. 1 E BB L| Nobody excepting the challence on | his own heart. 5. Identical. account of Skinny being the best -~ Note—When young ladies begin to | fishter there, and he sed, Come on, Washington. put on airs, as this one did, a simi- | enbody that wants to die, you can| | am an elected servant of the lar fate often overgakes them. \What | choose your own weppins, jest 50 itS| pyblie, anxious to retain my office fate? Complete the limerick by plac- | flsts. : and to serve my constituents to the ing the right words, indicated by the | And he started to jump around w: But ing his fi cept his ch n the corresponding spaces, see, The answer and an- ther “Puzalick” will appear here to- | Merfy came up saying, Wats a trubble, morrow. wats a matter, wats you doing? e Skinny is daring enybody to fite Saturda, him, Glasses Magee sed. An g mm,i‘,",.,, No 1 aint, elther, 1 was but I aint now, Skinny sed. Well then IIl dare you, come on, dubble dare you, Reddy sed, Being Skinn himself, in the world. 1 come on whose fers toam A forgetting to R. t. 1926, Llie even fighter defy every pinch of haking soda, but be | wa all wawked away with him Proving it all depends on who dos the challencing. and pour es. Next con-| Such is the name of one of the strangest maladies known to the hu- one family—though they do not all aving its origin in the marsh- lands of eastern England has the mis- It is not the palsy of old age, The more to control the spasms of shaking that set in the more they has been found, after much research, that every ome having it is in some the original family that displayed it, no matter how lost the relationship in marriages Now, what do you know about that? Answers to Saturday's Questions. nger pigeons have been ex- ve been ex- 4. Egrets are not extinct, but are Flamingoes are not extinct, but and daring enyhody to e llence, and jest then Reddy 1 triple dare you, than arted to jump around I challence enybody, body, Get Out of Doors. To say “health is beauty” is to re- peate a bromide and bore your listen- ers. Yet it has to be repeated now and then, even In these days of out- door sports, even now that health is fashionable! I should like to make all my readers who are under 25 realize that the more health they build up now. the longer their youth will last and the better their good looks will wear. For instance, I_know we'll call her Mrs. Baker. 35, she might pass as 21, she never looks more than 24. She's slim, she has a beautiful figure and the most wonderful skin and hair. She's had four children, she lost her husband during the war, she's had to support her growing family, she does it by night work, and I doubt whether she ever, these days, gets more than six hou sleep. For more than 10 she’s been under a terrific physical strain. But at school she led in- athletics, she swam and played tennis better than any one, she taught gymnastics, a_woman— She's about 0 A of It It BEAUTY CHATS she was good at golf, she had cheeks like red peonies, and she seemed tire- EVERYDAY Answered by DR. S. New London, Conn. Why dosyou answer so many re- ligious questions? And why bother about so many piffling ones? Answer—] t, I have to answer questions dealing with spiritual realities because 65 to 70 per cent of my correspondents are more interest- ed in them than in any other subject. They may he for or against religion, but they are exceedingly keen about it. Secondly, that which is piffle to one man is provender to another. I feel best of my ability. I am per- plexed about an unpopular measure which I nevertheless believe is wise to adopt. ¢ support of it may cost me my position in the next election. What would you do under these cir- cumstane Are the people, ou recently said in your column, always right? Answer—No, they are often wrong in* the premises, but ultimately they muddle through to the right conclu- sion, and this is what Bagchot meant in the remark I quoted from him. Your difficulty necessitates careful review before you decide your course. 1 of a world statesman hour, when, old, wear critical pent, at a and for he determined to bring in a me: es BY EDNA KENT FORBES. less. She built up a physical organ- ism then that has carried her through her bad period without a breakdown and that, she says. will carry her along another years before she 10 must think about rest and taking care the of herself. nd by that time need of hard work will be over. You v have a passably good skin now yvou're young, and of course the idea of hair diculous. But, if you ‘make your healthy hair still stronger, your nice complextion quite perfect, your good health better, you'll bless every present effort you make after you've passed your 35th birth day, and especially your 40th one Helen B.—You are about 10 pounds underweight with a helght of 5 feet 4 inches, but since you only 17 years of age and must be u great deal of energy in growing. there is no need to worry about pounds more or less. If vou are well and have a good appetite vou are doing ail that is expected at this time. ‘Anxious.—The only thing to do about the hair on your arms is to continue to bleach it with peroxide, for if you clip it very much or use a depilatory on it you will coarsen the growth and make it more conspicuous. QUESTIONS PARKES CADMAN “How happy is he born and taught That serveth not another's will: Whose armor is his honest thought And simple truth his utmost skill “This man is freed from servile bands Of hope to rise, or fear to fall Lord of himself, though not of lands, And, having nothing, t hath all.” Ny should Utiea, Do vou think a minister presume to direct the affairs or con duct of his conre; Is he not the pald servant of the congregation and under obligation to them to regard their wishes and opinions in such matters as schemes for raising church money and inne cent pleasures which their liberty of conscience will allow? If he cannot approve of nocent things should he not living somewhere else? Answer—May [ insist, once for : that the pastor of church is no man's s servant of Jes Chr fellow men for the The first servitude i ministerial manhood, the second s its height of attainment. “hired v of trustees and deacons whom vou describe does not exis 3 truly Christian economy. The fact that he exists at all is a disgrace to all responsible for his humiliation. Very few Protestant clergymen at tempt to dictate to their congregu tions, and those who do, find tha example and persuasion are the bet ter . ymptomatic of our time that whereas half a century ion? such seek t and of sake of Ch detrimental to c . ; - " ago the danger line the minister Take three cream cheeses and drain| Me, somebody sed. Being a tuff | Yet there is one principle you cannot | 250 ;I""“'l‘.."‘r"-f‘\‘!m NE dactrine, ft now off all their whey in their molds. Then ing kid with a red swetter on that forfelt; ;\\x’:::i;‘;(;;,.‘r\:q:.'x;”‘:xl 1;;‘”.:‘% [rama " i vecreation and drain again through a cloth until the Ready saying, | There is nothing rhetorical about it. | H14nCe. e chees re perfectly dry. Beat the I dident meen you, I ony ment|It sounds plain, commonplace, hum-| ‘(,_ ‘l'] innocent pleasures whic cheeses with a fork in a deep china m!;‘}'!;'l'nd e s tlx'u‘m. tm"x“ br u::fwhnuoh* mplicity | 04 o consclence. allows™” some 5 A 3 z ell, can e a frend of yours,|and naturalness which characterize | ;o A spiritual communion Dbowl, adding as fou do 5o sugar to ine kid sed, and Reddy sed, No. the best politicians and make them | times split a spirituel comeh | ~K:(-_d 0 two CuULsL ! G And he started to wawk away a serviceable. It was the guiding star | P er's creed so long he professes bare belief in_Deit his condition is neither healthy nor permanent. add a generous flavoring of lemon and ure | phe well advised 7 e will nw;:‘.g R e de"(_’;ous pihi sl -— which he knew would wreck his party | jnterfere with the pr 3 and very rich. Chocolate Popcorn. and might blight his fame. | flock unless these seriously ti rie - rudential reasons were against his | ypon the reverence and dignit peihe corn must be freshls popved. | determination. and he set them down | tg”reli nd its institution 3. H A SAuCe V' ablespoon- | in order in a letter to s son whi ing 35 ars of Y ministry. | i Sardine Cannalons. ful of butter, one cupful of sugar,|cbviously was not intended for publi- | cationed” ihe Onelaty of. T Skin one can of sardines and take | four tablespe of ation. ~ And this is what he said: | ents given by my pec away the backbone. Roll out some puff | late, and one-half a cupful of cre T am fully aware of the difficulties in | Lut tw nd in one instanee 1 pastry as thin as possible, cut it in for milk. Cook until a Jittle dropped in but the great thing is to be [wronz. lut some members | strips about 4 inches by 2 inches, and | cold water is quite brittle, then add ot success nor popularity, | churches lack the spiritual sensibility in each strip inclose half a sardine, |one teaspoon‘ul of vanilla extract and ptness, is your goal. Onee you | which hallows the house of God, and | leaving the end open. Brush over|pour it over one quart of popped sighted it, men can say of you |some ministers intervene when in with beaten agg, bake in & quick oven | corn, stirring_ so that all the kernels [ what they said of the celebrity I |tervention is foolish and futile. and serve hot. will be coated. Fat while fresh have in mind after he was dead: West 264 and Gorton-Pew Pisheries Co., Led. 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