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WOMAN'S PAGE! New. Styles Rich in Possibilities BY MARY MARSHALL, One uses the comparative in speak- Ing of the new clothes. Skirts are somewhat longer, waistlines are some- what higher. Coats are very often fur- less—not always. The silhouette is wider—but not too wide. Contours are THE NEW TYPE OF RAGLAN SLEEVE IS SHOWN ON THIS SPRING COAT OF GREEN AND YELLOW JERSEY. more curved—still retaining something of the well established straight line. Colors are brighter—still, pastels are to be found. There is more elaborateness —but the best dressmakers strive for simplicity. ‘The return of the cape is important. There are cape effects on coats and frocks, short capes are worn instead of sport jackets at some of the resorts and for street wear there is the seven- eighths cape. Sometimes there are up- and-down slits at the front of the cape for the hands to come through. Shirring is to be noted on many of the new frocks. Full chiffon skirts are often attached to the bodice with a triple row of shirring. Sometimes the shirring extends from the line of jointure well below the hips to form & sort of yoke at the top of the skirt. Sometimes there are shirred sections let in at the side or front of the skirt and agdin there is & puckering of the material at the front of the skirt held in_place by up-and-down shirring. In evening and afternoon frocks skirts are frequently—I might even say usually—of uneven length. The under side of the skirt is frequently faced up with matching or contrasting material and the legs are then silhoueted against this background of material. You may not agree with me—but it is my candid opinfon that the new clothes are unusually attractive, and the fashions offered for us to choose from are unusually rich in possibilities. So simple, but so effective—was what we said when we saw a little girl's cape recently brought over from Paris. It was just the sort of thing that every little girl needs to put over her party frocks. Then it occurred to us that our readers with daughters might like to know how to make it, and now we have the pattern diagram from which it is a simple matter to cut the ca in any size required. If you would like this little dressmaking help, please send me a stamped, self-addressed envelope and I will send it to you at once. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. Dainty Eating Habits. One Mother Says: Training in the etiquette of eatin| should start before baby leaves his hig] chair, I never dump all of baby's food into his deep plate and mix it up to- gether. If he has bread and gravy and vegetables of several kinds, I put these in separate parts of his plate, or even give him a side dish. When the soup and the foods of a proper first course are eaten, I remove his plate just as I would at table and give him his fruit or custard, spe of this as his dessert. It is easier to train in this dainty to break slovenly habits later. MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. So many of the beauty problems that are brought to me cannot be cured without improving the sufferer's habits ©f eating that I am going to devote our column today to a brief discussion .of food as a beauty aid. To the average person a “beauty aid” 85 a sweet smelling substance that comes in an artistic container at a fancy price. This idea is correct so far as it goes, but the wide-awake modern woman has learned that there are any store. Therefore, instead of going 10 a drug store to buy a remedy for her sallow complexion and scanty hair she now stops in at the grocer's to get & bag of fresh spinach, a bunch of car- rots, lettuce, oranges, prunes and whole- cereal. If she must take her at a restaurant she does not for- to order salads and succulent vege- les with her Juncheons and dinners. Right eating is the basis of good th and also of healthy beauty. One the commonest enemies of correct especially for lunch time, many unwise combinations such as pie, Frankfurters with mustard, dill pickles and coffee, and also rich pastries of cloying sweet- ness. All these items of food may have their place in the diet, but they do not make a well balanced, healthful mid- day meal. Many older women complain of lack of appetite when the lunch hour comes around. Nothing seems to tempt them to eat and yet they feel that it is necessary to take something. Instead of forcing one's self to eat under such circumstances it is often wiser to omit luncheon so that when dinner time comes one can eat with real relish. Oftentimes lack of appetite at noon is due to the fact that breakfast has | not yet been digested. People who have passed the growing period of their lives.| do not need to take nourishment as often as younger ones do and two meals a day may be all they require. In ycung people lack of appetite s often due to nervousness, failure to get encugh outdoor exercise and eat- ing candy between meals. The ex- tremely thin, sallow girl who cannot find anything that appeals to her for lunch should try taking a cup of clear soup to begin with. This will stim- ulate the gastric juice and thus coax the appetite to solider foods later on. Instead of going right from her office or classroom to lunch she should take a short walk out-of-doors during which she should try to relax nervous tensions and forget her wor- ries. She is the type of girl who|fice needs to drink plenty of milk but too often she has a prejudice against it. Milk is unpalatable to her but she needs its nourishing properties in her diet. To overcome this difficulty a little gelatin may be added to the is a finicky appetite that refuses | drink. Use one-quarter teaspoonful of lesome foods and seems to crave, ' gelatin to a glass of milk, stirring well. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright, 1928.) address, In Mother Mistake Lucky numbed Botwms of the feet, Down, Mzke 8 noise while breathing Tequires, Filliard stroke, . Metric unit, Concerning Indefinite article, Young women, Frinted notice, . Babylonian deity, Gold (heraldry). 1 am Twi thousand pounds, Jip: Conjunction, Act Martien micale Engineering degree (ah), Avenue (ah) Fopographical engineer (sh.), Yulernationml lsnguage. Bpunish definite niticle, Cumpase polut, elBidine habit of eating very early in life than |good THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNE "DorothyDix WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. en old Atlantic Park, Seventeenth streets northwest, was taken over by the Y. M. C. A. for base ball and a star team performed vals? SUB ROSA BY MIML The Selfish Mother. “We could be married tomorrow,” walled Marle, “if mother would only give in and consent to come to live with us.” Where have you heard that before? Haven't two out of every five of your friends had much the same story to wnls’n't it incredible how often that sort of thing is hn})penlnx all over the country and how few of us have the courage to tell the unfortunate fillal victims m‘eh un‘lg ':kzr:um. sensible rse for them e qunfle'l case is typical. She lives aking | with her mother and supports her and hasn't an awful lot of cash left over to take care of her clothes and her times. Nevertheless she has managed very well, so well that at the present date she’s all tied up to a nice young gent named Walter. Walter, of course, is o Rockefeller, and the first few years of marriage are going to be pretty rocky, TR e ng and so fol L However, they're in love and obstacles look pretty small from where they sit up 1nl the clouds with their heads in the air. They're willing to take the risk of marrying on next to nothing if only Marie's mother would come to live with them. Now that isn't a pleasant pros- pect for those two young folks—Iife in a three-room apartment with a mother- in-law on deck. But they're facing that bravely and gayly. And even to that Marie's mother won't consent. No, if you please, she won't live on charity—that 1s, she won't let Walter chip in and help with the money question. She will let Marie work and slave and toil to keep the two of them— she’ll even let Marie throw away her one chance of a big happy future— but she’s not going to do anything as low and mean as to let Marie’s husband take care of her. Did you ever hear of such utter nonsense? And can you belleve that any one with as keen and level a head as Marie is going to fall for that stuff? She's simply eaten it up. What's more, she's all ready to give Walter the g. b. This noble sacrifice of hers is dic- tated by her sense of duty. She owes everything to her mother. ‘Therefore, in the face of her mother's obstinacy she can only give in—she must sacri- fice herself. No, she musn’t. She musn't think of r acce] a in_her new home. e She must do this for her own sake, and for Walter's. Why must she sacri- the man she loves to the selfish ob- stjnacy of her mother? Let there be no mistake about it. Her mother won't hold out long when she sees her daughter determined. She will make the best of it. She may even come to enjoy the new life more when things grow easler for the young couple. In any event she must not be allowed to ruin the happiness of two young people. That kind of selfishness is un- pardonable and ought to be stamped out, not encouraged and pitied. (Coosright. 1928.) (Mim{ will be glad to_answer any in- auiries dirented "tk The 8tar " prosided s stamped, addreased envelope ' 1s 2 Also shie will be glad to send “Pood for Conversation™ How to Overcome Seif- Consclousness.”) WINTER BY D. C. PEATTIE. Except for those two early trees maple and alder, the first flowers of Spring, you will always find, do not bloom on the red clay hills, on the sandy outwash plains of rivers, nor in any light-colored soll. The reason for this can be discovered even now, while Winter is still with us. Go up into the steep, rocky woods, above the Key Bridge, on any day with a hint of Spring balm in the air, and gruv. your d upon the soll, the own-black loam, the leaf mold of cen- turles. Even the palm of the hand will usually detect that it is warmer than the solls of the bare hills and sandy valleys. It 15 a strange fact that in a few months this loam will be the cool- est soll in the countryside—when the leaves above cast their shade, and the solls with less humus do not hold their molsture 5o long. Now, the very dampness of the soll helps to regulate and even the tem- perature, But, above all, it is the dark color of the soll that accounts for the temperature, As every one knows, Lo find how hot it 18 in the sun we must not put out an ordinary thermometer, for that merely registers the tempera- wire of the glass, but a black-bulb ther- mometer that really gives us the tem- Vflulurr of the sun's rays. The black oam 15 1n itself a sort of thermometer, or, more exactly, a thermostat, Obviously, the nts that grow In the rich loam are the first to be awakened; Indeed, If we make a careful Investiga- ton of such woodland flowers of early Spring, as bloodroot, anemone, wild gin- wer, chrysogopum, hepatica and the little Pennsylvania sedge, we would find that they were already showing signs of lite—for there 18 no one place where Winter ends and Spring begins, ‘TG take advantage of the warmth of woodland loam, these plants have, most of them, characteristics in common—a roup of tralts in their growth which s called the geophilous state, This Is merely & Latin way of saying t| they are earth-loving. ‘Their bulbs, or rhi mes, or other storage orguns, are close to the surface, where the first sun will warm then. Also their leaves usually spring up es a little busal rosette, close t the warm ground, and the stem 13 very short. Plainly, it it were a long stem 1L would take a long time for 1Lt grow, and for the fowers o bloom, and by that tme the leaves would he on the trees, and the shade unfavorable for growth Indecd, It we look for traces of our Bpring fowers i Midsummier we frequently Aind that they have com Jletely vanished Wondland Bpiing s, Laeed, briet ang ewset. wade him How to Hold a Husband’s Love Warns Against Using Court- ship Tactics After Marriage “Men Tire of Beauty, of Wit, of Goodness, Even of Good Cooking—But No Man Ever Yet Grew Weary of Being Admired.” A her for keeps? To each man his own medicine. YOUNG woman who Is about to be married and who earnestly desires to retain her husband's affections asks me blow warm or cold, shall she keep him guessing, how she shall treat him—shall she or let him know that he ‘has No two husbands respond alike to exactly A the wise wife is she who diagnoses the trouble with her :fiml;;fl:“;’&;&nfind then administers the remedy that is indicated. are only interested in a wife whom they feel they tr;nl‘l:npefneetgxlsb;:i?gser };g losing. %‘hrre are other husbands whose wives take on an enhanced value from the mere fact that they belong to them. There are husbands who like to be let alone and other husbands who dote on being fussed over and babled, and it Is up to the individual woman to find the answer to the human conundrum to which she is united in the holy bonds of matrimony. Nor can a woman treat a man after marriage the way she treated him before marriage. Courtship is one thing and matrimony another. Nor are sweethearts and husbands the same, and the tactics that a girl employed to catch a man fail to work when she uses them to try to hold him after he is caught. 1t is well, for example, for a woman to be uncertain, coy and hard to please before marriage and for & man never to be quite sure of her. It rouses his sport- ing blood for her to flutter just a little way before him, just a little out of his reach, and for him to have to use all of his sublety and finesse in capturing her. But after he has once caught her and instailed her in a nice, comfortable cage, he wants to rest from the chase. He is done with the wild-bird stuff and wants a thoroughly domesticated hen around the place. The airs and graces that allured him get on his nerves. The pretty un- Teasons that he found so enchanting make him tired. He doesn’t want a wife who is hard to please, but one who is easily satisfled. A man may like a sweet- heart of whom he is never sure, but he wants a wife who will stay put and on whom he can lay his hands. Ty JEA!OUSY is often an effective weapon before marriage. Many a girl makes herself desirable to some man by causing him to belleve that another man is about to win her away from him. Many a woman uses a rival as a stalking horse to tole the man she wants to the altar. But the wife who thinks that she can stimulate her husband's affection for her by keeping him jealous makes a fatal mistake. Connubial love does not thrive on that hell's brew of which jealousy is com- posed, and all that she does is to rouse a thousand demons in his breast and to fill him with deep, dark, torturing suspicions of her trustworthiness. ‘The French have a proverb which says that in love one kisses and the other submits to being kissed. Before marriage the woman should always be the kissee instead of the kisser, because man still cherishes the illusion that he is the pursuer and not the pursued. Nothing makes him lose interest in a courtship so quickly as for the girl to turn wooer and feed him up on love until he is surfeited with it. SDAY, MARCH 7, 1928 SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Baby used to be satisty dest watch! me doyflnts. but now her allers hollerin,’ “See me!” (Covyrizht. 1928.) DAILY DIET RECIPE Potato Rolls Baked. Mashed potatoes, 2 cups. Milk, 1 tablespoonful. Egg yolks, 2. SERVES FOUR PEOFPLE. Well mashed left-over potatoes sea- soned with salt and a little cream or butter can be used. Beat in the egg yolks, Shape like Vienna rolls, score across the top and brush with the milk. Set in hot oven about 10 minutes to heat thoroughly and brown on top. DIET NOTE. Reclpe furnishes starch, fat, much fron, also lime and vitamins A and B. Good in a diet to gain weight. Also good in blood-making diet. Can be eaten So a girl does well never to wear her heart on her sleeve before marriage, never to let a man know how much she really cares for him. The foxiest vamp always makes the man believe that he is teaching her how to love him. But after marriage a wife's best play is to make her husband realize every day, in every way, the depth of her devotion. The strongest appeal that any wife can make to any husband is just to love him. Millions of men have married women for whom they did not really care just because the women loved them so much that they could not resist the appeal it made to their vanity to be so adored. Millions of men stick to wives whom they have outgrown and of whom they have tired, just because they are not brutes enough to tear away the arms that cling around their necks and to break the | salt."—Gen. xIx.26. hearts that love them. %% FURTHEMORE. nothing blinds a man to a wife’s faults as does the knowl- edge of her love for him. Other people may think her dull and stupid, but he is bound to respect her taste and judgment as long as she lets him see that she considers him the most wonderful man in the world. Other people may find her conversation platitudinous, but it never bores him while her tongue continues to sing his praises. Her eves may lose their luster, but he never knows it as long as they are mirrors in which he sees him- self reflected glorified. ‘This is why the cold wife, whatever her charms and virtues, so often I t, while husbands continue to cherish little morons of wives who have on];\‘ fr!!:l‘llx-' gence enough to be worshipers. Nor 1s this strange. The outside world deals many a hard blow to a man's self-love. It rubs his vanity raw, and so it is incalculably soothin; able to come home to a wife who does not judge him nor crmcuegx over his wounds the soothing ointment of her adulation. to him to be im, but pours Women seem to think that the craving for the outward expression of affec- tion s a distinctly feminine complaint, but this is not true. There are just as many heart-hungry men as there are heart-husgry women. Just as many men starving for love and tenderness, just as many men who want to be petted and flattered and made much of, fust as many men who wish to be told how wonderful they are, and how handsome and talented, as there | Spiration to be drawn therefrom. But are women Just as many men who want their wives to show them appre- clation for all they do for them as there are women who want their husbands to show that they realize that they are still women and not just hauscr:o!d convenlences. And the wife who treats Just papa never loses out. beauty, her husband as if he were still Romeo instead of This is a tip that you can play all the way across the board. Men tire of they tire of wit, they tire of goodness, they tire even of cooking, but man ever yet grew weary of being admired 1Y DIX. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 19 THE WATER LOTS BY GEORGE POPE MORRIS. (George Pope Morris, 1802.186 wall Known American” writer of poior, “His chiet claim ‘to popular fame is his ‘verse feciiation entited”“Woodiian, ‘Spare Toat X M. Poopoo kept a small toy store In Chatham, near the corner of Pearl street. He lived there for many years, and was one of the most polite and ac- commodating of shopkeepers. He had lived there ever since he came from “dear, delightful Paris,” as he was wont to call the city of his nativity— there he took in the pennles for his kickshaws—there he lald aside $5,000 against a rainy day—there he was as happy as a lark—and there, in all human probabtility, he would have been to this very day, a respected and sub- stantial citizen, had be been willing to “let well enough alone.” But M. Poopoo had heard strange stories about the great rise in real estate, and, having understood that most of his neighbors had become suddenly rich by speculating in lots, forthwith determined to shut up shop, turn everything into cash and set about making money in rightdown earnest. No sooner said than done; and our quondam shopkeeper a few days afterward attended an exten- sive sale of real estate at the Merchants' Exchange. There was the auctioneer, with his beautiful and inviting maps—all the lots as smooth and square and entic- ingly Iald out as possible—and there were the speculators—and there, in l,f'l:' midst of them, stood Monsieur poo. “Here they are, gentlemen,” sald he of the hammer. ““The most valu- able lots ever offered for sale. Give B bid {or them!" ne hundres o e e d each,” sald a by v One hundred!” sald the auctioneer, scarcely enough to pay for the maps One hundred—going —and ffty—gone! Mr. H, they are yours. A noble pur- {m’s‘e.l Y'nu('llI scll those lots in less fortn i bl r(ml.l"“l“ for fifty thousand Monsleur Poopoo pricked up his enrs at this, and was lost in nuu!nh«mnn t This was a much easter :;:II{‘OI ur('udmulllllnq rie o 0y8, and he dete; Moot e determined to buy The nuctioneer proceeded In his sale At lnst camo a more valuable parce; u'“hllld than all the rest. I now ofter you, gentlemen, these magnificent lots, delightfully sftunted on Long Island, with valuable water priviteges. Property in fee—tillo in- disputable —terms of sale, cash - deeds ready for delivery fmmediately after the sale. How much for them? Give them w start at something. How much much? The nuctioneer looked around; there were no bidders. At last he caught sight of Monsteur Poopoo, “Did you say one hundred, sir? Heautiful lots~valuable water privileges—shall 1 say one hundred for you?" “Yes, monsieur; I will glve you von dollar aplece, for de lot wid hle vatare privalege.” “Only ona hundred aplece for these sixty valuable lots —only one hundred &olng, golng, gone!" Monsteur Poopoo was MBS *HAOF The anction ed nim the wale closed company dispersed Ho Poopoo departed to the counting house, where the six thousand dollars were pald, and the deeds of the prop erty delivered. Monsteur Poopoo put thiess earefully tn his pocket, and as he was about to lewve, the wuctioneer & pressut of the lithographic ’ fortunate congratu and the outline of the lots, which was a ve: liberal thing on his part, conslderlnr; the map was beautiful specimen of that glorious art. Poopoo could not admire it sufficlently. There were his 60 lots, as uniform as possible, and his little gray eyes sparkled like dia- monds as they wandered from one end of the spacious sheet to the other Then he decided to go to Long Island to view his purchase. But he was not a little perplexed to find his property. - Everything on the map was even, but the land about him was undulating, and there was an elbow of the East River thrusting itself quite Into the ribs of the land, which seemed to have no business there, Being a stranger in those parts, he called to a hrr&rr 1'1: an adjacent fleld: “Mayl you will havd de blA:’ n;lltlw .l’gedde 60 lot vich k}nd):‘:\s': ught, v o valuable vi Ve 'I':‘igf'" e vatare priv 'he farmer glanced his eye over t paper. “Yes, sir, with pleasure; if )R\en will be good enough to get into ‘my boat, I will row you out to them!" at dat yow say, sure?" My friend,” sald the farmer, “this section of Long Island has recently been bought up by the speculators of New York, and lald out for a great clty; but the principal street fs only visible at low tide! When this part of the East River is filled up, it will be just there. Your lots as you will percleve, are beyond it; and are now all under water!"” At first the Frenchman credulous. senses. ually was In- He could not believe his As the fact, however, grad- broke upon him, he shut one eye. squinted obliguely at the heavens | and then he ! —the river—the farmer turned away and squinted at them al! over mgain ‘There was his purchase sure enough: but then it could not be percelved for there was a river flowing over It! He hastened back to the auction room The auctioneer ming n carefree hope you like was tune. your there, “Well, purcha hum- A, b, monsleur; m o sorTy I do no lke him" . it but there i no ground for your complaint.” “No, sare: dere 1s no ground at all pund 18 all vatare!™ “You joke!" “I no Joke. 1 nevare joke. Will you have de kindness to give me back de money vot 1 pay!™ 8 tainly not™ 3 good a8 to take st RIver off de top of my lot?" "hat's your business, sir, not mine.' “Den I make von grand mistake!™ “f hope not. I don't think you have thrown your money away in the land " “No, sare; but 1 tro It avay in de vatare!" “That’s not my fault” “Ah, me" sald poor Monsteur Poo- poo, “I am vuinl I am done up! 1 am break all to ten sousan leetle Plecest T am von lame duck, and 1 shall vaddle across de gran oovan for Parts, vish 18 de only valuarble vatare privaloge dat 15 left me at present)” Poor Poopoo wis ws good wy his word e sailed m the next ship, and arved I Pards wlimost as penntloss as the day he left 1t Hhould any one feel disposed to doubt the veritable cleumatances hore ve corded, let him oross the Kast River and any farmer will vow him out to th very place where the poor Frenchman's lota atill remaln under water! he by children of 2 years and over and by adults. A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. A Lesson From Lot's Wife. Text: “But his wife looked back from behind him, and she became a pillar of Every one knows the story of Lot's wife. Fleelng with her husband and two daughters from Sodom, condemned to be destroyed because of its great iniquity, and turning to look back, she became a pillar of salt. This strange piece of ancient history is also very modern history. Every man | who turns his face from the future to the past becomes a pillar of salt. He becomes a fossil—a man of antiquated ideas and methods and dead to prog- ress. The man who habitually looks | back to the past has no more future. He has reached the climax of his career. He will never make another forward move. | Forward-going men are forward- looking men. They are ever looking forward to greater things and greater achievements. They are drawn on by a great expectancy. The future holds them, not the past. The past is by no means to be de- | spised. There are many lessons to be learned from the past and great in- | we are not to be slaves to the past, boynd by its opinions, customs and | méthods. We are not to be so enam- ored with the past as to be blind to the present and the future. The golden age is before us, not behind us. 3 Remember Lot's wife., Leave Sodom behind and move bn. Sodom is‘a per- ishing city. Do not let yourself be tied to ideas and methods that have been | doomed by the world's progress. The world does not want men who live in | the past. The world wants men who live in prospect rather than in retro- spect, men facing forward rather than facing backward. (Copyrieht. 1928.) AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “That woman says she's only 28, but she polishes her shoes on the back of her stockin' an she learned that when skirts was long" (Covvrieht, 1028 ) Bt B Careless Wa o o A { Spoils Children's Hair Any child can have beawiful hair - healthy and usuriant, It fs sinply & matter of shampootng Proper shampooing makes the halr soft and siky, It brings out al Hfe and luster, all the ave and color, und leaves it || soking, glossy and bright | Mo children’s halr must have quent and regular washing to keep It beautiful, fine young hair and tender scalps cannot stand the | harsh effect of ordinary soaps. The free alkall fn ordinary soaps soon driest the acalp, makes the haw brittle and ruins it | That 1s why thoughtful mother | everywhere now use Mulsified Cocoa- nut Ofl Shampoo. ‘This clear, pure wreaseless product | brings out all the real beauty of the haie and cannot possibly injure. Two or (hree tenspoonfuls of Mulsifled is all that ia requived. It makes an abundance of vich, creamy f | lather which cleanses thoroughly and || Linses out easily, Temoving every pav- [ | natural tele of dust and divt 1t leaves the haw manage and mak Wit new Hte, gloss and luster | You can get Mulsified Cocoanut Ol Hhampoo at any drug store A four-ounce bottle montha — Advertlsement Wit and easy to | it fatlely sparkle FEATURES. Absolutely Fresh Old tea Is bad tea — the SALADA system assures that every package Is fresh "SALADA” 368 FUSSELLS. Watch Out for the Week-End Special —on sale tomorrow—Thursday—and through Sunday. One of the most popular of our delicious com- binations— Pineapple and Sultana Of all the long list of Fussels Frozen Favorites this one is outstandingly popular—appealing to the taste, satisfying to the appetite and takes the task of dessert making out of the day’s work. 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