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Quality Required The tdea now seers to be to have you handbag big enousfsi—big enough to hold eveiything that you need to carry. The effect of tie smart ensem- hle canno: be spoiied by a really enor- nous handbag. providing it is weli =hosen, but bundies and iittle pack aBe8 are most unattractive. One's hand should be free, the bag bein; under or over the arm. But remember the larger the bar THE LARGE BAG IS MUCH IN VOGUE. THE SKETCH SHOWS | NE OF RED SULDE WITH | INITIALS N ) AND v BLACK CALFSKIN THE AND the better it must be. You can some- times pick yp a little bag on a bur- galn counter for an emazingly small amount, but the cheap large bag is a poor investment. It must be of very good quality, indeed o1 else the <martness of your ensemble will really be ruined. It has been r arkea that as clothes vecome scanter and shorter handb: become larger. and large thoush | many of these new bags are, it is umazng to know what they will con- wain. There must be u purse, of course; perhape cigaretias ard a latch ey, a checkbuek pencil er pen and memorandum ban a trip ticket, powder and perhsps rouge and lip- | stick, a smal’ beush and comb, and maybe a praver book --for the may be devout 4 night- bo 1o .ed up into very small 3 Can You A brick residence in cleereie lights and located just four doors from Lincoln Park for only— $5,400 On Your O Well, See 116 11th St. N.E. Don’t Overlook This One Hedges & Middleton, Inc. Realtors 1412 Eye St. NW. R BY MARY MARSHALL. K CREEK PAR] ESTATES - REAL ESTATE, in Big Handbags cesses of her good-looking handbag and no one is the wiser for her little economy. There is something very attractive about some of the really good quality large bags. You may chouose green alligator to go with green accessories, red suede when you have a touch of red about your costume or one of the lovely new blue leather bags. If you must econom.ze and still have need of a large bag, perhaps the best thing to do Is to gei an imltation tortise shell top and then make a bag of the best velour you can find. You ma: have patience enough to work a lovely bit of tapestry—— petit point” on canvas—following, if you can, the de- sign of some old tapestry. You uscd to be able to spot the woman lawyer or journalist once upon a time by her businesslike portfoilo or brief case. Now the chances are that she hide: her briefs and manuscrip:s in the smartest large handbag that she can afford, (Copyrirht. 1926.) MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Baked apple sauce. Bran Cereal With Cream. Creamed Ham on Toast. Griddlecakes. Maple sirup. Coffee LUNCHEON. Baked Macaroni and Cheese. Baking Powder Biscuits. Buuers’;‘olch Pie. ‘ea. DINNER. Casserole of Beef. Baked Potatoes. Creamed Carrots. Cabbage Salad. Fruit Tapioca Pudding. Coffee. GRIDDLECAKES. Into one cup sweet milk stir enough flour, with one teaspoon baking powder sifted In it, to make smooth, creamy batter; add good-sized pinch salt, pour onto hot griddle and fry to golden brown, turning caretully to preserve round, even shape. if sour milk is used dissclve one teaspoon soda in it and omit baking powder. An egg or eggs may be added. but they rather toughen the cakes than add to thelr goodness. BUTTERSCOTCH PIE. One pint whey, six teaspoons brown sugar, one teaspoon fat, one-half teaspoon vanilla, three | | teaspoons salt. Cook until thick. Pour Into pile crust. Put me- ringue (white of eggs) on top. Bake until browned. CABBAGE SALAD. | Mix one cup chopped raw cab- bage with a seeded chopped green pepper, 10 sliced olives, three sour pickles cut in small apple dice, and one small cut into pleces peeled and Moisten with mayonnaise and serve on lettuce leaves. Good Buckwheat Cakes. { Scald one-half a cupful of corn meal ! in two cupfuls of boiling water, add ! one-half a teaspoonful of salt, and | beat well. When cool, add one-half ai’ cupful of flour and one cupful of buck- | wheat, then add one-half a yeast cake | dissolved. Let stand over night. In! the morning pour off the discolored water and add one-half a cupful of , milk in which one-fourth teaspoonful | ,f baking sods has been dissolved. | Beat well and let rise a little while. | One tabtespoonful of molasses may be | added if liked. 1 Imagine good condition, with wn Terms Open Sunday After 11 AM. Franklin 9503 Restricting THE TEVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDA HOME NOTES l EAT AND BE HEALTHY 150 YEARS AGO TODAY Story of the U. S. A. § N\ A\ i 1 . . This very unusual and simple type of small desk would make a useful gift for almost any one. The cabinet top is built of fancy woods and orna- mented with handsome handwrought hinges and keyplate. The stand is painted a very deep Chinese red. The cabinet is painted red inside, also, and Is fitted with pigeonholes and drawers to hold writing materials. A shelf which pulls out from under the cabinet provides a writing surface. Because It is so very compact and would harmonize with so many kinds of furniture, this little desk could be fitted info almost an* room where a desk might be required—the lving room or dining room of the small house, the guest room, the college girl’s or man's room, the bedroom, or the guest room. (Copyrieht. 1926.) s i Orange-Pepper Salad. Cut the pulp of four oranges into sections entirely free from inner skin. Remove the center from a shapely sweet green pepper and cut into quar- ter-inch rings. Make n>sts of head lettuce for individual service, and in each one place one-half dozen orange sections, well drained, encircled with a pepper ring. Sprinkle with crushed Brazll nuts and serve with mayon- naise or cream dressing. iy S The temperature of a warm-blood- ed animal when hibernating is almost the same as its cold surroundings. Strictly Reduced Owner leaving city than cost. tion is one to be proud of. 222222222, THOS. A. JAMESON, Pres. LTI 1111200011 L 1L L I L AL LA Dinah Day's Daily Talks on Diet The Right Food I Fatness and Love. lgevl:."r-rnu she will lose her meal " o The old “nobody loves a fat man' An intelligent, alert, Jolly, fat woman with some interest in life could stir devotion. But an overfat woman, flabby in. mind and body, cannot have charm. Not only has this lady become fat and spolled her looks, but she has made h:rult‘ l‘ll?k. Wrong foodlhhu s |8iven her Indigestion, overweight, her husband for a little loving he Was| uto.intoxication, shortness of breath, o e lenve the toom. _Aw.o|PRiDRAticH of the heart, anemia and result she charges that she had been [ "€[vous exhaustlon. under a doctor’s care for indigestion, [ TWo lves on the rocks because of auto-intoxication, shortness of l:amtl\d. il rt, anemia and| Readers desiring personal to thets peipitation (of (e beart, & auestions shoukd send. se-addressed, stamp. ed envelope to Dinsh Day. care of The Star. appears in court with a change of sex. A wife sued her husband for sepa- ration on the ground that she had been ill because her hushand never hugged or kissed her. in fact, the wife alleged that when she begged nervous exhaustion. Her husband in his answer stated that his wife was 45 years old, five feet five inches tall and weighed 180 pounds. Her muscles were soft and flabby because she took no exercise. She slept till nodn daily, had nothing to occupy her mind and she was very fond of sweets and starchy foods. The husband further stated that her indigestion and auto-intoxication are caused by faulty diet and no ex- ercise. Her shortness of breath and palpitation of the heait are related to indigestion and caused by too much fat. Her anemia and nervous exhaustion come from lack of occu- pation for the mind. 1 may add that anemia and nervous exhaustion coms from not <ating the right kind of food. Undoubtedly the lady uns short on her iron ration. She suffers anemia even though she is overweight. Because there is not enough iron in her blood she does not get enough oxygen into her lungs and she suffers from shortness of breath. These people have been married for 19 years. The husband, until last May, gave her from $5,000 to $10,000 a year. “But,” the wife complains, ‘“he always acted as if it were his duty to support me since I was his wife, but he would never give me any sign of affection.” It would be interesting to know what the lady weighed as a bride. Her normal weight now should be Oyster Ples. Make a good ple crust, roll it out thin and line little individual ple plates with the cruct. Cook two dozen freshly opened oysters for three minutes in their own lquor, then skim them, add an equal quantity of rich milk to the liquor, season'it with pepper and a little salt, thicken it with flour and butter rubbed to a paste, and add a teaspoonful of pars- ley chopped fine, then the oysters. Fill the ples with the mixture, put on the top crusts and bake until the crusts are done. 2 g With the exception of size and ma chinery the operation of blast fur- naces for smeiting iron nas been little ‘nanged for centuries. Peorfect BARGAIN 2708 WOODLEY PLACE N.W. (Open Sunday 10 AM. to 6 P.M.) Near Wardman Park Inn is compelled to offer this home less This dwelling represents real value and the loca- GARDINER & DENT, Inc. Realtors 77T T AL L P LTS LR 2T 2 P LT L L LTI LA P Y ameson-Built Model Homes 1301 to 1333 E Street N.E. On Capitol Hill—12 Sold—Inspect at Once D717 17771 LILLAI L) LTI LE LB L First Time Offered 3612 Quesada Street Chevy Chase, D. C. Detached English-type tapestry brick resi- hout 147 pounds. When the fact is shades cusrantesd. aken into consideration that after 30 | May we send you es- 12 it is better for health’s sake to be | timates? Call us up. | slightly below the average weight it | is evident how very much overweight | this plaintiff is. ' Her life has evidently been one of | self-indulgence. She has indulged her ; appetite. She has lost her husband’s | 830 13th St. N.W. Modern in Price ants’ lavatory and w: 1409 L Street N.W. Corner, Main 352-353 6 large rooms, tiled baths, hot-water heat, NI vwwswwsiwwuswwus electric lights, hardwood | | floors and trim, built-in ice box, built-in bathtub with shower, and lots of extras, double rear porch- es, with cement front porch. Easy terms. For Sale by THOMAS A. JAMESON CO. 906 New York Ave. N.W. Owners and Builders Ask the man who owns one. Main 5526 3 3 E are especially effective. | sloners WINDOW SHADES and casy rolling W. STOKVS SAMMONS, Pronrietor. 718 to 738 Marietta Place Northwest Situated Immediately North of Eighth and Madison Streets FEATURES Six large rooms, tiled baths, built-in tubs, concrete front porches, one-piece enameled sinks, pantries with built-in ice boxes, hot-water heat, kitchen cabinets, large porches, 30- gallon hot-water storage heater, large light cellar with ser- trays. Price, $8,750 $500 Cash—$65 a Month, Which Includes Interest cn First Trust Open and Lighted Until 8 P.M. Floyd E. Davis Company Realtors A Happy Community North Woodside, Md. Most remarkably located just where the city leaves off and the country, with its wonderful scenery and environment, begins. North Woodside is an exclusive community. Its character is preserved by practical and protect- ing restrictions. Every Home is a model of attrac- tive design—and the Bungalows, just completed, You can have no idea of the roominess and Y. DECEMBER 4, 1925. 3 Franklin Safe in France. AURAY, France, December 4, 1776, | One-third at least of the poor wretches —The American war vessel Reprisal arrived today, bringing Dr. Benjamin Franklin, one of the three commis- |, who are to represent the Uiu.ed States in France. was 30 days from land to land. On the voyage it fell in with two brigan- tines, one Irish and the other English, both of which were captured by Capt. obliged to do duty. to humanity. der. poo! The vessel | (What's left allve) lying on the c 1d ground, In poor thin tents, and some not at all, pleurisy. to go in. REAL ESTATE) BY JONATHAN A. RAWSON, JR. than 900 pair of shoes have been sent. now barefoot and in this condition This Is shocking It cannot be viewed n any milder light than black mur- The T creatures are now and many down with No barracks, no hospitals The barracks are at Sara- Wickes and brought into Nantes as | ‘Ogu. Americun prizes of war. Notwith- standing these incidents and the fear that England might endeavor to cap- |t Col. Wayne's letter to Gen. Gates confirms Mr. Wood’s report and veals still further the toriures many of our young men are enduring in the Army camps for the . tion of this new Nation. Board Philadelphia seems never to be able to keep abreast of the de- mands for clothing. hos- vital service and wholesome provi- sions. (Covyrisht. 1998.) —_— Rubber boots sent to Great Britain from this country in a recent month numbered nearly 95,000 pairs. Water Front Property for Sale melt. “If you were here your heart would I paild a visit to the sick yes- erday in a small house called a hos- 120 acres with 5,000 feet of water front, located near Chapel Point in Charles County, Md. ture the Reprisal and make him a(Pital. The first oblect presented tc § partly cleared. Balance nicely prisoner, Dr. Frankiin reports a|MY eyes, onc man lying dead at the || wooded. Excellent views. Priced tedious passage. Although 70 years | door; then inside two more lying dead. || at $125 per acre. This property is of age, the distinguished American | tW0 living lying between them; the (| .n exceptional value. is in good health, though somewhat weak, #s he admits. He says that he hopes that the good air which he t w.ll breathe on land will soon re- 1 establish him. Dr. Fianklin will proceed at once to Paris, but when asked about his plans he says only: “I propose to re- tain my fIncognito until I ascertain whether the court will recelve minis ters from the United St tes.” “0ld Ty” Camp in Distress. TICONDEROGA, N. Y., December 4, 1776.-~Two letters left here today by post riders with fervid appeals for medicines and clothing for the Ameri- can garrison at Fort Ticonderoga. The letters were from Col. Anthony ! Wayne to Gen. Gates and from Joseph Wood to Thomas Wharton, jr. Mr. Wood gives detalls of conditions here which demand immediate attention. “For all this army at this place,” he says, “which did consist of 12,000 or |} 13,000 men, sick and well, no more |/ e $10,500 733 Twelfth Street N.W. living with the dead had been there for four and further; this was too much to see and j i Sample House: 3 ] *fii.;hmflmr AT IR (S TR | 20 hours. I BAUMAN & HEINZMAN went no Main 3500 00 much to fecl for a heart with the || 1504 H St N.W. east Lincture of humanity - : F iné New Homes Northeast Only *8,250-2 Attractive Terms 1503 West Virginia Ave. N.E. (Between 9th and 10th, Above Fla. Ave.) These attractive colonial-porch homes, contain six large rooms and bath, h.-w.h, elec. lights, hardwood floors, double rear porches. Plenty closet space and numerous floor plugs. ) Built-in Garage These modern homes are superior in construction and work manship. An inspection will convince you of their desirabilit 4 and value. § We Have One Modern Home Left At the Low Price of $7,975.00 J. Dallas Grady 904 14th St. N.W. Main 6181 Must Be Sold Large Semi-Detached Colonial Brick Home 1008 Otis St. N.W. Here is an absolute bargain in a large 3-story semi- detached brick residence. Its location is most con- venient—near 14th St. cars, stores and a public school. This house is a side entrance, center hall plan and is in excellent condition, having been newly papered lhl:lunul.l Elel"l‘n large bright rooms, wide colonial front porch, glassed-in ONLY rear porch, hot-water hms and at- 10 500 tractive lighting fixtures. The lot is $10, 27 feet front by a good depth with space for garage. Owner has pur Your Oun chased in suburbs and has priced this . Terms property to sell. Open Sunday After 11 AM. Hedges & Midd'eton, i Redltors 1412 Eye St. N.W. Franklin 9503 SSS 'mwzmmi mfi ‘ss\\\\““\\mmms\‘\\n > New Semi-Detached Brick Homes ONLY $350 CASH f L 823 Sheridan St. N.W. - Er'zcourage dence, one block from Chevy Chase Circle, less than half block from new Church of the Blessed Sacrament. (Sample Hoeme) comfort which have been worked out in their planming. The fixtures throughout are most mod- ern—and at the rear of each of the large lots is a garage that matches its Home in design. $7,950 i Easy Terms Ride out—by motor or bus—and see how handy —only a mile and a half beyond the District line at Georgia Avenue. Open for inspection all day Sunday. Phone us anytime up to 9 p.m. week days for special appointment. LoDGE REATING Protective Restric- tions for a tract as significant as Rock Creek Park Estates—over one hundred acres “truly a part of the Park”—was a task that involved the ut- most in architectural and lanscaping skill. The foremost specialists iu these respective fields gave their assistance. . . The resulting code is practical The rectrictions it emhodies are solely for the Protection of your property here. And ey belptully encourage the most tasteful of modern Home development. You Enter the Estates at 16th St. and Kalmia Road Office on Property—Adams 538 Ask for the Beautiful Descriptive Brochure ‘These homes consist of ¢ large rooms, with hardwood floors throughout, full tiled baths, with built-in bath tubs, large closets in each room, finen and coat closet, hot-water heating system, Crane Automatic Hot-water Storage Heater, “Quality” Gas Range, “Standard” plumbing fixtures, bulit-in refrigerator, concrete front porch, double rear porches and built-in garage. Price, $3,150. A monthly payment of $71.50 includes afl interest and principal. Bl El Ed 3 d 3% Ten rooms, 2 baths, porches front and rear, electric refrig- eration; 2-car garage: oak floors throughout; slate roof; best of construction. Lot 40x145 to alley. This house was designed by a leading architect for one of his clients, but who for business reasons was forced to leave Washington. It is offered for sale at a figure far below actual value. Open for Inspection on Sunday from 12 Noon Until 9:30 P.M. For Particulars and Price, Call Open Sunday For Inspection To reach: Drive out Georgla Avenue to Sheridan Street, and then east one block to the homes. Telephone Main 5974 for an Inspection Appointment Willi L M I . Jl' paxin! EdSOll W. B igos CO. Owner :,,,4 Builder ’ E Deal Fith a Realtor - om":'lgg o ot s S 1415 K Street Main 4752 |2 HANNON & TUCH One-Thousand-One Fifteenth Street, at K - R - l ST