Evening Star Newspaper, January 31, 1927, Page 35

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WOMAN®S PAGE. EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. (., MONDAY, JANUARY 31, 1927. FEATURES. 35 MAN! 2 WHATS T - - - IDEA oF BY MARY MARSHALL. |2 Tomt6HT THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Uncertainty As to Morning Clothes I Olf’fi 2 25,78 A MEMBER AT | Do EnJOY o Z | .Tue CLus - ¢ - BT | | | l OIJR, CHILDREN By Angelo Patri Skilled Hands. Many a child leaves diploma_and no education w name What can he do” interested stranger. “Why, he ation. He can do anything. SR ,, Hands telligence are more thar Tuesday, February 1. A Friendly stars iy | cording to astrolo benefic aspects strongly dominate. All the signs appear to indicate | great thought activity on the part of | good ed the public, which will inquire into|says his trusting guardian, And he political matters and will advocate re- | can do just noth at all because ‘fnlln- o various sorts. he has never been taught to use his is to 80 “away with morning clothes—at Aviation is to have a tremendous| hands | impulse, the seers prophesy. least for the Winter season his ; would hardly be a practical solution / | “Bducators now will prosper and !,y P ol (O for ‘theiveolien iof taffalfs ior- of bitsi heads of umiversities again will be g 00 PPGEE O ness activities—but for the women of consulted much regarding the state | ot YN GUCET 0 society it seems to work very well jand the nation. | nor repair one. For that ) One of the French dressmakers has This is a gay most auspicious for | por TePaly one. For LI I formally announced this Winter that the desires amd ambitions of women. | Wil ‘Dot help except with an he will show only afternoon and eve who are to succeed In new plans for | fyiiid JOL MR SRR WG | ning frocks. The social life in Win fmportant service, clvic and national. | = 1% Sphchs v g Pl kg oo | Under this rule, weddings should be | Nor could you make a loa nearly tea. time. It is almost too much | fairly luoky, since it indicates a fair |Or cake or a jar of jam. Your hands 0 expect a society woman to appear |amount of ' prosperity, as well as|would have fo be skilled in the art or luncheon, though you may meet Seblpiit plenty of common sense in romance, | before you could say. "I can cook {them in the late afternoon at a con i | This fairly fortunate sway for | Nor could you wash a baby the right | cert, at a famous antique shop or for > | theaters. and. places of amusement.|way unless.yeu had pract Nad |tea in the drawing room of a friend ~ Y | but there will be many experiments in | your own hands. What could you do [T At woin tivirite mestanrint {There | management which may not be suec ;\‘l_'h('nu‘ hands \.m] the children arc {is something decidedly simple about % . e Ll e | Few of them government | The mistake came of the distaste to agricultur- | for Jabor. Those who labored with these afternoon frocks. b e L e T unexpectedly, | their hands did not have the social ! position of -those who worked with | even in the morning. They are straight |in line, long-sleeved and sometimes P e & e reiel o) oty Axe sliont DS e et ieam oo one: Id fox 1. | not outrageously so. Their trimming ing, the higher his social position be came, There is some of that old |18 extremely simple—the ornamenta tion often consisting of a clever ma ned that there is an | netion abroad still and a whole lot | nipulation of the fabric of which the seems to indicate for|of it has settled in the school house: trock is made. actions, which should | The only kind of efassroom built (Copyright 2 g thes € €80 | the sitting-down-and-studyir kind tlsm and & childish desire for recosnl: | in most of the schools in the country Wil the rsibne abpears toforeshintow| Y DAY we edd il a- sHop: {0} every A 3 S Jress a 0 s S ALh - Persons whose birth date it i have | Decome a mation of talkers of the 8 Sear especially sulted for study and| sainted with that notion. ~Wo belleve Children born on that day ;.mhahly1:,:‘*:::,‘:'(3,‘(‘ ea Al somylacent will be exceedingly clever and inclined | [5OSR ‘m“ e tha '“‘“ i | historians are born under this sign. | {Uhe SHRCURTE 10 C0 e e hands P and feet and back and b to set it right In the kindergarten th uses his hands fregly end. From then until he graduates » small, cakes with the from the university he need’not use | hands. Dust lightly with flour them again save to push a pen or |rolled cracker crumbs and saute pencil across a sheet of pape little hot fat Generally speaking. the frocks thatare, too, thousands of well dressed women wear may still be divided ac-|business and professional women who cording to the time of day when they | dress once for the day—and for what wre worn. I'or women, as well as for |ever social diversions they may in : there are still morning frocks, | dulge in during the afternoon they arc Y | oon frocks and evening frocks. |content to wear rather simple day at we have rd so much re-|time costume. itly from the women who are in| But that is only (avor of doing away entirely with the | plitying the matter. The other rule tomorrow, ac school 3 which finds that one way of sim the knowledge 4 could you do For one thin. nor ¢ 1f vpu had only hands ¢ hands should I 1d mig) e part annot he the ind human of 1 r cor m alor n o you would | 8 ocLock | of bread from the h br chinery pr in the But r('anwr, LIKE GETTING) HOME EARLY- Tia ) WIFE musT GET ((PRETTY Lome \ gl than diploma s is a planetary which promises much ists, who are to profit astrologers foretell. m now on in the United States squirement of land will assume a ance and significance, if are read men are wa aspect which them mental r be overcoms Roast Pork. with S - - /{ib/(_% 1927.) My Neighbor Says: Soap is one of the things that are more economically bought by the quantity. Not because there is a great difference in the price, but the older and dryer soap is Can Marriage Broker Enforce the longer it will last, the less Fee Agreement? harmful it is to the hands, and i the moreefficacious as a cleans- BY THE COUNSELOR. er. e s e T Carpet sweepers should be set 80 the weight does not come on the brushes. The hair and lint which accumulate in brushes, especially carpet sweepers, ma) be taken out with an old but tonhook or coarse comb or old scissors. Little pieces of scented toilet soap dropped in your hot starch give the starch a fragrant odor. Frequently tablecloths and nap- kins are stained by cocoa. Such stains should be washed in cold water first, and then boiling water should be poured through until the last vestige of the stain is gone. For spots made by coffee or tea, boiling water poured through will prove ef- ficacious. A bit of white starch moist- ened into a paste and applied to a grease spot on an otherwise clean blouse will prove a useful ally, and so will fuller's earth put on in the same way. Both must be left on the spot till dry, and then brushed off, when the marks will have disappeared. ‘When cooking sowr fruit, add a pinch of carbonate of soda to the juice and it will require less sugar. Everyd shal = o he the The Daily Cro Sausage Patties. fine d pork ad in hal to it the pork tuls of mashed p and season v Mix well and Bernaise Sauce. Put three tablespoonfuls of finely chopped mild onion, half a dozen pep. | percornys and one-fourth cupful of vinegar to simmer on the back of the | stove. When the moisture has nearly | evaporated add two tablespoonfuls of | . s Judahs | | butter and the beaten volks of three Highlyiot bis Ll v b | eggn. Set the saucepan into a dish of the landlady one thouss lars | boiling water, then stir and let cook, | o alatRing ok ; adding twice, meanwhile, two more | she could bring the pair together and | !m’mwunmm rear e a marriage resulted. A cont was | i < - ) ounces of butter in all. When the | auiy’ drawn up. | | sance thickens season with salt and | ’ e e At Taar it v ere e less spoonful each of finely chopped tarra- | 5 d for medicine | The matchmaker took her business | seriously. Under her auspices several | | entertainments took place, at which R Lo O Bl sl 8 oth Hazel and Herbert were present. bax | | Tactfully, she often spoke about the fflly be used flhflfe!h tarragon Xea‘es‘ | are not obtainable. ! — with spinach a regular part of your diet! And best of all, it's so savory and tempting these cold days that you naturally want it often. Just be sure it’s Hazel Brown needed someone to tell | Herbert King what a fine girl she | | was Hazel's heart hild had gone out to Her bert 1 she thought frequently how | rre happy she would be she had him | for a husband. She managed to pass | him on the streets, but no “'date” was forthcoming. | She learned that Herbert thought An peppe IN MATERIAL AND IN FAIRLY ELABORATE IN . IS FROCK OF NAVY BLUE CREPE SATIN MADE UP PARTLY ON ONE SIDE AND RTLY ON THE OTHER. | charms of Hazel Brown. It | long before the wedding bells tolled {for the happy girl | | 'When it came to paying the one i |thousand dollars Hazel balked. The {only alternative the landlady had was to take the case to court, and she did. But she lost her The follow- } (ing universally adjudicated doctrine | ful of peanut butter to one cupful of { was applied: | milic and mix well. Add to the dry | " “Marriage brokerage contracts are | ingredients, beat thoroughly, and bake | |invalid, as being contrary to public |in a greased loaf tin in a slow oven | | policy. The pernicious tendency of | for 45 minutes. Delicious for sand- | { wiches filled with cream cheese or| Peanut Butter Bread. Sift together two cupfuls of flour, | four teaspoonfuls of baking powder, | one-half a cupful of sugar and one tea- spoonful of salt. Add two-thirds cup- | second group of apparel. Time is too precious to spend overmuch of it on —and it is too much to ask any woman to change from morning clothes into afternoon clothes and then nto evening attire. So within recent vears you have been able to see even fashionable women at luncheon, at ternoon bridge, at receptions, at tea and even at weddings in simple clothes that wonid on ® been regarded thin and brush with melted butter. Have ready some chopped walnuts and the same amount of brown sugar, then mix the nuts and sugar. Cut' square piece of the rolled-out dough, take it up in your hand, fill each | piece with the mixture, then close up | into a three-cornered little cake. Put :linto a buttered tin, not very close to- Arom 12,00 | gether. Let rise -until lght, brush/ riseaent. . | with melted butter and bak: i appropriate oniy for morning. There | such contracts is so great that en-| | forcement of them will be refused re- | | lettuce and mayonnaise dressing. | THE HOW WH | gardless of the propriety or expediency | —— | —THE WHEN—THE WHY | ot the pasticuiar marciase.” | ; Shxth of an inch. ‘ Nut Cakes. R ) —— | ! ati Subdivistons of an estate Take some cake dough, roll out quite - Lair, Realize. . Mountain (abbr.) 1416, 3. Tours of duty 8. Prefix | 9. Through | 10. ¥rom within | 11. Bottom protections | 13. Happen. *14. Resting piace. Addition (abbr.). . Pronounces. Masculine nicknare . Tecentric rotating piece Tool for shaping objects . Paid notice. . ity of Oklahoma. . Therefore . Jewel. _ Cubic centimeter . Indulge. . Emotional requ Down. KITTY McKAY PA—— ’ BY NINA WILCOX PUTNAM, BY ANNE ARDEN. ! ¢ "Tis as easy to be right as to be wrong, and to . Dear Anne rules of conduct gove: | Fellow travelers are ships that pass 5 | in the night. They come and for a mo- What are the | ment either give to one or take from : u 1ng WOMEN | one something of stimulation and in- traveling elone? TIs it thought to be|terest. We exchange thoughts and improper- to speak to other travelers, | often find pleasure in the exchanging. especially gentlemen travelers? D |Jyiy then: should these ships not be ladies go to hulf'l«dul.a_ne (3 riend of | natirally, pleasantly, politely encoun- mine says not) and still be perfectiy | {ered as ‘they pass’ - for the | . If We speak with & gentleman across | PR el or the | )e table in the dining car, and later | how. When any Wy o e ¢ 11~ | leave the train with or near him, the | It takes a bit of analysis of self to | friendshlp of the moment Is concluded. answer these things, and it takes also | QNS Boqs e TOME & FNE PAsT o e e e | which easily might happen should the en we travel we necessarily TU® | jote] he the best in town—the smile elbows with persons with _\\I\oln we | and nod may be repeated; but unless should not otherwise come in contact. | g wigh to convey a rather doubtful However, tius does not imply that we | & Wish 1o cOnTer & Teruer (oot need be other than polite at all times | 0016 again dine with this gentle- 10 these fellow travelers as well as to | 1o, IMeAgs agalh dac WIth th 8 €oni s our usual associates. | independence must manifest itself. | Fo: a perlod of time past we have | And although you have made no refer- | heard much concerning the conduct | ence to money in your letter, E. F. H., | of women traveling alone—what they | T wish to add that at all times this | 4 “hould and should not do—which Was | Jone woman must insist upon attend- Tta ;i mostly “should not” rather than|ing to her own obligations—to her | 0 e “shou It is tiresome, all this | own meal checks, to her own tips, to | s Orniental dogma, for the first requisite and the | any and all expenses always. The only kind of interior decoration only guide to correct conduct is good | * The question of point of view comes |my husband understands comes off a manners, and no lady is ever afraid to_be polite. Arden Swift & Company | sales_of D, for week ending Saturday on ehipments sold out. thank vou of this abbr.) ts Share. . Within. 3. Disinclination 4. Mineral. 5. Refusal. 6. Confer knighthood upon 7. Stalks. 9. hirt_buttons . Set apart regularly 5. Some person. 7. Heavenly body 9. Type measure. 23, That man. up in that motives are sometimes in-|hot stove, or a cold buffet. ; .| volvea. But a Jady traveling alone ‘When on a train alone—and “ladies” | both travel and go to hotels alone —the first requirement is The other travelers ave, on the whole, people not unlike one- | self, merely bored or lonely on the trip. If a man should speak to a lady. either from the next chair or a side seat, or opposite her in the dining car, there is nothing else to do but return the salutation. If one is not disposed 10 hold conversation for any reason, may be pleasantly casual, if without motive, to a stranger who is a gentle- man—and if she is a “lady,” her any least act will, of course, be without motive. It 18 our right to be friendly in the pursuit of happiness, and the fact we are on a train need not curtail | the right, and never is it necessary | to practice the blank, frosty stare that some women affect in the matter of harmless, well meaning fellow trav- elers. | MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKF, Cinnamon Prunes Farina with Cream Plain Omel Orange Marmalade Coffee. Toast | LUNCHE! | Corn Potato IN and Chowder Answer to Saturday’s Puzzle. e conversation can be limited by the brevity of the reply. but to be afrald | e answer questions in the How. When to talk to the individual, or to feel | and Why of Etiquette. Address ail commu- “superfor” to conversation with him, | pications to Aone Aren The 1= a poor excuse. | addressed envelope. m IF YOUTH BUT KNEW. : Clear Tomato Soup Broiled Hamburg Steak BY HUBERT WORK. Secretary of the Interior. Crackers Rice Pudding Fruit Cookies French Fried Potatoes Mashed Turnips Stuffed Peppers Snow Iee Thaw Coffee AIN OMELET well beaten: two heaping table The th, le which men | That disloyalty to authority penal-| | izes itself. ‘ | some| That the head should control, but | the joys of living come from the heart. That he best scrves himself who ! | first serves others. establish a | That happiness cannot be captured: | | it comes to us. | That nothing happens; it is brought about. That we get from the world an | equivalent for what we give to it. That what we see in the faces of | others is reflected from our own. | That because man's instinct prompts him to appraise, youth is not unob- | sorved. | That introspection is wholesome for succeeding day sl | correction, but morbia self.censure de t ling day should | Crates moral fiber. | | ““That fear, so deterrent and baleful | to adolescence, is dissipated by under- | standing. | —then youth could appreciate that the future promises more than ever | before of that which is true and good | | to contribute to the happiness of | | those coming forward to do the | | world's work. If youth but knes or themselves mus h in nchors us. sincerity lectual honesty That one act not babit, but its repetition does That we are but a composite group | of our habits That character Four ; cups milk. one spoon cornstar dissolved in little milk: little salt. Turn into well g d omelet or fry pan, cook till almost set, then put in hot oven and finish. Remove and fold over. To be eaten at once. some or "To Make Pine Cough Syrup at Home Has no equal for prompt results. Takes but a moment to make, Saves about $2. CHOWDER | i vy Y the hundreds of thousands women are oneguarter pound diced || Songh e reason T that piac discarding the old soaps and cheap chips cook “one minute, then udd ing and Healing ;«ifi L otk containing free alkali. For it is the free alkali onions and cook’ until tender “Pine cough syrups are made of in so many soaps—flakes, chips and cakes— O cub ey ot celkry WO || ety i ey o Ut I8 which dries up nature’s beautifying oils and il ence, [theh 4R onione 11| cremly o eeeaine coneh makes hands red and rough. and pork, one can corn, two ‘Women are using Lux, instead, for wash- ing dishes! There’s no free alkali in the tissue- thin transparent Lux diamonds—nothing to make hands red and rough. Always keep a package of Lux on your pantry shelf. Use it for dishes and save your 4 pint bottle, and fill up with home- cups diced cooked potatoes, one bands! LeverBros.Company, Cambridge, Mass. h to intel- is essenti is the truth of a man. M ihat nothing will pay that is not aight. hat “duty ay the thing that 1 That duty daily ¥ peace of mind ‘That each profit from yesterc That only those first taught to obey hat the lessons of obedience must Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. Put nieans to do in the best salt »s nearest rformed invites 1 rule who were made sugar syrup or elarifed hovey. quart milk and pepper and salt This makes & full pint—more than fo taste. Heat to bolling point you can buy ready-made for three and serve with toasted crackers. times the money. It is pure, and tastes good. You can feel it take right hold of a cough or cold in a way that meuns business. The cough may be dry, hoarse and tight, or may be persistently loose from 'the forma- tion of phlegm. The cause is the same—inflamed _membranes—a n d this Pinex and Syrup combination will stop it—usuaily in 21 hours or less. Splendid, too, for bronchial asthma or hoarseness. Pinex is a_highly concentrated compound of Norway pine extract || and palatable guaiacol, aud is fam: ous the world over for its prompt]| effect upon_coughs. 1 4 ) SNOW ICE THAW One cup hot wi envelope (the m kind) of plain fourths cup sugar, juice one lemon, eggs. Mix gelatin, salt dry and dissolve in hot water. ~ Add lemon juice and cool. When beginning to jel add well beaten whites of eggs and beat all together until stiff. Pour into wet mold and serve with * custard gauce and lady fings Custard sauce three .cggs slis fourth cup eighth teaspoon Onion Butter. | Make a mixture with one-fourth | cupful of butter, one-fourth cupful of | | flour and one-half a teaspoonful each | | of salt and pepper. Stir in two cup- | | fuls of cold water and cook, stirring | constantly until bofling. Let boil about five minutes, add two table- | spoonfuls of onion juice extracted from an onion under pressure and | beat in one-fourth cupful of butter a little at a time one 1-pint asured-for-use- zelatin, three- pinch salt, whites two igar and Beat ty A salt volks of add one and one stir con your_druggist for * of Pinex” with_dire ons. <i|:arfunll~ml to give absolute so% satisfaction or_money re- e Beware of substitutes. ounces 7, Lentil Croquettes. cups lentils, one egg, one-qu juice, pepper and salt. Soak stantly while adding graduaily lentils overnight. Cook until two cups’ scalded milk. Cook very soft and mash through a fine| | in double one-quarter cup ! | botler, continue stir- | strainer. Add the cream and season- ring until mixture thickens ‘ rter teaspoon Two cream, onion the C tgaspoonful = 11 .q: 1 / Bl o 2 % plenty foreid dzsb‘es DI B ¢ sniffin’ in school, 1 was|ing, then the lightly beaten egg. Make | | and coating is formed on spoon. pactivin « sneer like T'd do if bandits { into a stiff paste firm enough to mold | Strain BTy s tveatenin® to kill me if T didn’t |into fiat cakes with the hand. Saute! | favor 4astoon &1l where the gold was buried. these cakes in a sizzling hot omelet vanilla. (Covyright. 1927.) psn-and serve with-the tomato sauce, ; 1 wasr immediately, with one-half <) or Coughs

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