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'WOMAN'S PAGI., THI EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C.. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1928. BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKE The sclection and care of stockings important in these d; when the of hosiery is as imperative as ‘the a frock. Unless the stocki 1 chosen t se of their exquisite texture choice for specinl occasion wear. even a chiffon weight of lisle | This costs more th fer It requird a high le of | this IS mercerized. Some of | chiffon-weight lisle stockings are | heer as chiffon-welght silk. or they | v to be. Lisle is such a tightly | wisted cotton of the highest grade | it is extra durable. | { When 1ving stockings with clocks, the lower part of the “stem” should | part. When they end in the | cal line they are on cheap | However, if the stem is | There i: hostery. shoe, this fault is not visible, while the | decorative. element of these side em- | broideries remains. In selecting stock- ines it is well to know the distinetion. | The scparated stem by the foot is con- sidered ornamental when visible above shoes or in the cut parts of shoes. elasticity of knit weave makes perfectly snited to stocl cver the medium. Wool is in tic, but it is not the ¢ of the medium that osponsible for the perfection of fit is due primarily to the weave, 1 to the shaping by weaving and Iy by the fashioning or scaming of st sh at weave of stocking | ades of stock- | in the in- This renders AWy, | "'~‘\\\nv; e os have the divided of the hem. are being ing universi- . try to answer them, re doubtful, refer 8 . This will give our mental rating. test is by no means an gh it does not require of special knowledge aph a certain object, ion 15 given. followed by that a certain thing will ays be there. Following this are| al words, one of which will com- plete the sentence. For, examp! A forest always has: tr irds, streams, animals r T necessary prop- | case, trees that follow: there is alwa: programs, tickets, on ng ant follow Music, | | speake: Teporters, | dents. At a_meal there is alway Waiters, Flowers, AVes . stem, fragrance, buds. { 4. A hotel always has: Bellboys, res- | rant, elevators, electric lights, detec- rooms. a railvay station there are Trains, tracks, ticket agent, | s, signals. DRSS = oaiwen | Anwers fo Necessary Propertie BAND - EMBROIDERED, CLOCKS |gneaxer, = o U'e there is always s THAT DIVIDE AT THE LOWER |5 2. At a meal there is always food. 3. A rosebush alwavs has a stem. 4. A hotel always has rooms. station there are FOOT ARE USED ON Y g Creamed Beet With Eggs. Chop one-half a cupful of cooked beef and add one cupful of stewed to- | matoes, one-fourth cupful of grated | cheese, a few drops of onion juice, cin- namon and cayenne to taste, and two | tablespoonfuls of butter. Heat together | and add three eggs well beaten. Cook | until the eggs are creamy, stirring the | e to prevent sticking. This is | fous served on toast. i Whipped Cream Pi.e. | p one-half a pint of thick eream | SUff, then add half a cupful ar and flavoring. Make a crisp pic st and bake on the outside of the pie pan to a light brown. Let the| s wrinkle at the ank too large; then the all that will be igs are the cor- pleasing to the skin, be used instead. a touch of sheen, gs from shrinking read- . “':201 mf“l“‘:fg; crust get perfectly cold, then, just be- = fore serving, U T "and rinsed In water | 1070, SeIVIDE, POur the cream into the perature and not too | : hot. Si s especially will wear ongest when washed often, but also . longe: d all stockings 15 | Answenllo Pn'-ndenlu { a certain Questions Game. ik 1. In a memorial Jured by perspiration left Marion, Onio. 2. No, he insisted on maintain- ing the gold standard. 3. He did not receive a ma- tomb at gs in what is termed | v are preferred by m because 1 w he hosiery is satisfas ’ jority of the popular votes in P h more durable | | 1860, The vote w Lincoln, t grades. The 1,866,352, Douglas, 1,375,157; kenridge, and Bel 1. Lincoln did, however, a majority of the votes of electoral college, 4. Samuel J. Tilden, Democrat, had 200,000 more popular votes n the winner, Rutherford B THE CHEERFUL CHERUB e —————— I wish | knew what kind of Ffolks Are “ving in the little stars For 21l I know Ive lots of friends . I'll miss because they live on Mars ST Edith Kermit Roosevelt or | | ing Wilson. Plerce, His horse d 1o lea fleld Lucy Webb Hayes, wife of sident #. Robert T Lincoln was Secre- tary of War, Fillmore. He belonged to Whig party when President. 10, Tyler. At the close of his term 1 nominated by a rump convention of office holders and personal admirers, After the campaign got under way he with- dr 1844 Charles Diclens says “Command plenty of vegetables well served up. Any dinner is stamped with merit. when potatoes are ved piping hot with plenty of butter” Docsn't that create an appetite? Don't rerve too many varicties of vegetables at one meal, but chooee with care and studied appro- | priatencss the methods of preparing what you | do serve, Milk s essential to tasty vegetable | preparation, 1t affords you the basis of de- licious sauce variation, Available at all good yrocers ’ { an auspicious MEMORIES! AUNT HET BY ROBUET OUILLEN, Prepared by the National Americ: How Many Can You Answer? Thirty million or more people will vote for President this year. Do you know who have been our Presider how they were elected, what they did, | why they are best remembered? These | games are good fun and good Ameri- canism. Young and old will enjoy and | profit by them | 1. Where is President Harding buried? | Home in Good Taste | | BY SARA HILAND, “I don't like coment walks, If it had |, The Boston rocker, butterfly table and | : by Anad | kerosene lamp, all dear to the lover of been a board walk, my upper piate |} ! 3 ; wouldn't of got busted when I stepped | {1° Aot o s end on that banana peelin’ this mornin." “Titie i bublerily. table. though o drope| | leaf type like the gate-leg, differs from |1t in that it was never made in a large | size. The gate-l tables were made | large enough to sea the butterly t 8 or 10 people; but table was always small, Thursday, March 1. ‘ The fore i oon of tomorrow should be for pushing most | lines of business, according to astrol- ogy, which reads the dominant plane- | tary aspects as benefic | e rule is most fortunate for persons | with the ambition to be much in the public eye. Politicians should benefit. | It should be a profitable day for | merchants and manufacturers, for there | are indications of increased demand xuri American wares, While this is an auspicious Tule for carrying on established lines of activity, it is not fortunate for new ventures. It is well not to put too much con- fidence in one’s judgment under this direction of the stars, which makes for unwise optimiem Some sort of bad news may be ex- pected at this time by persons who have been planning on an ambitious scale. The elevation of Neptune in the me- ridian in opposition to Mars is read as | sometimes exceedingly threatening from the floor. ‘The first of these table: The Balkans are to be the center of | was made about 1700, and lacking an difficulties of far-reaching tmport, it 15 | original old one, you will find a faithful | foretold reproduction a pleasing addition to your | England will have many government | furnishings. ] changes, and new ministers will gain| The Boston rockers, first made about | the confidence of the people, 11820, were usually painted black and | Persons whose birth date 1t is should | deco ed with a bit of stenciling on the | be lucky in the coming year, It will be | headboard. In combination with but- luckier to sell than to buy. terfly tables they are charming Children born on that day probably | Although the chatr 23 not more than 20 inche: have will be enterprising and successtul in | not changed, th fairs. Prosperity in hotel | equipped for ¢ management, in the maintenance of [ pleated chintz shade, plain or with a nd in agriculture is indicated. | tiny floral design tn gay colors r A A Crowning Glory ~ to Hot Cakes OLDEN CROWN is to hot cakes what Paris is to style---it makes it! The rich, mellow flavor of this sweet, full- bodied syrup makes of hot cakes a deli- cious, tempting repast, a supremely ap- petizing diu}\. Buy it and try it before another day slips by. At All Good Grocers’ FREE: (it (it W o' Iings With | ed | Ip forma | incle —BY JOHN CASSEL. 2. Did Cleveland believe in “free sil- ve! 3. W ity" Pi 4. What gest poj Nar the 1s 7. What prohibitio 8. What field's the Kno 10. W, campalg Answers | found on this p 5 hundreds of other ques- Pres These tions about in a 40-p. the United can Le ered to an postage and | the official portra | with history blic STI( nism Commission of the American Legion. ilar vote in 18762 n t P binet 9. What President belos jent times to the Anti- to o bo ces. Ad Bureau cent the handling of hi e Whi que idents life thi amps most Hou ns e answered ton, whose v was Lineoln called a “minor- ident? candidate fn ardent resident’s son was in Gar- abandoned t before clect election and Haskin In- C D MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Stewed Prunes Oatmeal with Cream Baked Eggs Bacon Curls Oatmeal Muffins Coffee Whitefoot Starts Back. Love knows no and_al th | Far " those Tor whom 1t realls' cares. Ol Mother Nature, That little saying 15 almost true, but not quite. Love does know fear, but it overcomes it. Sometimes, you know, the lied fearless are really very much | It 15 not one who has no fear who is brave. It I one who is afraid but goes on and_overcomes that fea Timid litile Whitefoot the Wood Mouse wanted to go back to the Green | Forest to look for little Mrs. White- foot. ‘That journey probably wouldn't have seemed any journey at all to you or to me, but the very thought of it filled Whitefoot with fear. You see, | Whitefoot doesn't dare travel very far in the open. He travels by darting |from one hiding place to another. Too dares LUNCHEON, Baked Macaroni and Cherse Hot Baking Powder Biscuits Gingerbread, Whippe¢ Cream Ton DINNER Tomato_and Barley Sonup Roast Lamb Cranberry Sauce Mached Potatoes Creamed Turnip Fruit, Salad Crackers Cheese Coffee OATMEAL MUFFINS Two-thirds cup oatmeal, 17} cups flour, 1 cup scalded milk, 1 1 teaspoon soda, 2 teaspoons of tartar, 2 tablespoons 1. teaspoon salt, 3 table- sugar. ‘Turn milk on oat- || meal, let_stand 5 minutes, add | | sugar, salt and butter; sift in | | flour "with soda and cream of | | tartar; add beaten cgg. Bake in gem pans, BAKED MACARONI WITH 1 CHEES! One -half pound macaroni broken up and cooked in plenty hot salted water 20 minutes. Turn int6 colander and pour cold water over it. Make sauce of 2 cups hot milk, 1 large tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon flour and | | salt to taste. Put layer grated or | | prepared cheese in bottom of | | baking dish, then layer macaroni, " then sauce, and repeat until dish ! HE FELT COMPARATIVELY SAFE . RUNNING ALONG THE OLD | STONE WALL. many enemies are watching for White- foot for him to dare go far in the open. The more Whitefoot thought about that journey back to the Green Forest the more fearful he became. But this didn’t make any differense in his de- termnatiion. He wanted little Mrs. is almost full. Cover with bread crumbs and dot Bake until brown. with butter. FRUIT SALAD. One-half large grapefruit, 1 orange shredded and 1 apple chopped. Mix with fruit dress- ing, place on lettuce leaves and serve. derful new home of his in one of Farmer Brown'’s beehives, and the only way to get her to do this would be to 120 after her. There came a moonless night. White- foot decided. that this was the night {for him to start. He would be less Ilikely to be seen by prowling enemies. So_ Whitefoot ran along the old stone wall until he came to the end of it. He felt comparatvely safe runniing along the old stone wall, for at any {time he could dodge down in between |the stones. It didn't take any courage t all to run along the old stone wall. But when he reached the end of the old wall nearest to the Green Forest BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRE i l Your Baby and ] { | \ i ! Mrs. M. D. B. writes: Your article on | left-handedness appealed to me, as I | belong to the clan. Many expedients | were resorted to in my yvouth, even to | tying my left hand, but I preferred pun- |ishment to using the right hand. At {school T learned to write as taught by | the instructor, but sewing, tatting and | figuring I did with the left hand. What | recefved the & is the difference? One hand is as good Pres n as another, and being left-handed is “/i]lie “7illis President dur- | (;inewhat of a distinction. Answer—This letter came on top of another in exactly the opposite strafn. | A mother told of the morbid and de- | pondent_attitude into which her left- handed child had been thrust by a tact- | less lecturer in school, who called left- | handed children freaks of nature. I . feel sure the lecturer used this term withoui a realization of how it would cut those hapless children to whom the word freak has only connotation. It is A far more healthful attitude to look pon differences as distinctions than as ses for useless suffering. About 10 BY ROBERT QUIL] r cent of the population is | handed., and this Tage H ¢ | much higher {f it were not fur our arbi- of train to be There s tenden: We which’ forces many per- ht-handed. whether or notk freakish about a which appears so frequently the small girl res t Jane, be- BEDTIME STORIES Whitefoot to come and share this won- | FEATURES. BY THORNTON W. BURGESS he stopped. He stopped and tried to muster up enough courage to venture over there where there was so little under which, or in which, to hide. You see, that part of the Green Forest nearest. the Old Orchard had been thoroughly cleaned up and kept clean, There were no piles of brush there, There viere no old logs lying about. At Just this season there wasn't Y dead leaf under which to hide, for snow covered all the dead leaves. No wonder Whitefoot stopped. While he sat there wrinkling his deli- cate little nose a little night breeze wandering along that way brought him & scent which caused Whitefoot to shiver a bit. It was a strong scent. It vas a most unpleasant scent. Can you guess who it was the scent of? It was the scent of Reddy Fox. Reddy had passed along within a very fsw minutes, “Well way." thoughf Whitefoot, “T'll know that Reddy has been along and isn't likely to be coming. If I walt here just a bit hell go on and | he'll s00n be 50 far away that I won't have to worry about him. He won't spend any time hunting in a place ;/here there isn't anything to hunt or.” So Whitefoot continued to sit there trying to work his courage up. Pres ently back of him in the Old Orchard he heard the funny Iittle tremolo of Spooky the Screech Owl. Then, far, far over in the Green Forest, he heard the hoot of Hooty the Great Horned Owl. Thus he knew where these enemies were. It was now or n . Whitefoot jumped down from the end of the old stone wall and started of through the Green Forest. |from tree to tree, pausi tree to look and listen and peer out around the other side. He didn't go in a straight course. He zig-zagzed taking advantage of every tree an especfally of the hemlock trees with low-growing branches, and all the time his heart was going thumpety-thus thumpety-thump, thumpety-thump All the time he was wishing that were safely back in his new home, b: he _never once thou; 4 O’clock Refresh vourself this after- noon with a glass of Welch's Grape Juice. It is pure juice of the fruit—rich in the energy value that picks you up quickly. Delicious straight, blended or diluted—the fla- vor is so pare and rich. No other grape juice can com- pare with Welch's. At the soda fountain— ask for Welch's straight or Welchade, long and cool, made like lemonade of the fruit juice with syrup and water. Welch's The El Dorado Times s is one who refuses she knows you can’t go on to bed | detective is about to get shot an'| only four more pages in the! Grape Juice @iy, I Loy, lag, L Famous ANY WOMEN, knowing how good Hellmana's Blue Rib- bon Mayonnaise is, say warmly that blended acec that is what true mayonnaise treasured rec should be. “With tull-flavored salads,” they Sometime: say, “seeve Hellmana's Blue Ribbon Mayonnaise just as it comes from the jac” Teis always sweet, fresh, spicy ones fo absolutely uanitorm in its smooth, luscious flavor. 1t is made from fresh breakfase egRs such as you use in your own - BlueRibbon mavo Kitchen, fragrant, freshly ground spices, fine salad oil. Beaten and deding 0 an old and ipe, unal the mavon- naise is as smooth as velvet! clever housewivesvary Hellmann's Blue Ribbon Mavon. naise withadded seasonings, adding ¢ bland salads; creans or honey or nuts tor sweet salads. At all grocers. The popular Yy pint size—28¢. Other sizes A4y oz, pint and quart jacs. Hellmanrs NNAISE