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Trend of the Mode in Millinery BY MARY MARSHALL. One might imagine that some lrndrrl of fashion who had a cauliffower ear on the right side wanted to-hide the | fact and that thus had been devised | the new fashion for hats drooping low | on the right side only. This uncven | v BRIMS ARE LONGER AT THE RIGHT SIDE, AS SHOWN IN THE NAVY BLUE STRAW HAT FROM THE PARISIAN MILLINER. AGNES, AND THE SMALL FELT HAT BE- row drooping effect is attractive and a wel- come change. but why—some ,one asked—why should they all droop on the right side? Probably because it is the usual thing to wear one's shoulder or lapel flower on the left. It gives betier balance not to have the hat droop down on the same side Even the new berets show this dispo- i Straight Talks t BY MARY ELIZ sition to hang down &t the right; and Rose Valois, one of the prominent mil- liners of Paris, has associated her name with this type of headgear, The long-stded shapes are just part of the general tendency toward asym- metrieal offects all along the line of fashion. Everything from frocks and wraps to shoes shows this tendency to be different on the right side and the left. We have gone a long way from the mid-Victorian days when even bracelots were worn in palrs, with the right wrist adorned precisely like the left With the latger hats, with the brim cut wide at the right and drooping downward. this extension forms a pleas- mg background for the profile. These hats might be thought of as poke shapes—poke on one side only. And they are more satisfactory to wear than the regulaiion poke that hems one in on_either sige There is every reason to believe that fashions in millinery are to show a de- cided change for Autumn and Winter. In fact. the marked change may already be noticed where women who follow closcly on the heels of fashlon are to be soen. Brims are very much shorter in the front than they have been, and crowns are lower and more rounded We are moving rapidly, it would seem. oward a hat that will indeed be a sort of bonnet Meantime, if you would like to give ane of your Summer hats a bit of new frimming. send me a stamped. self-ad- dressed envelope and 1 will gladiy send vou sketch of a new hat trimmed with velvet—bits of velvet in three tones made to look like small cubes. With the sketch is a diagram for cutting the design and directions for making Scalloped Tomatoes. Drain the liquid from one pint of | canned tomatoes. Save the liquid for tomato soup. Butter a baking dish and cover the bottom of the dish with half of the tomatoes. Over these sprinkle haif a teaspoonful of salt, half a table- spoonful of sugar, a little paprika, half 2 tablespoonful of grated onion, two tablespoonfuls of grated cheese. and | half a cupful of finely minced celery if | available. Then add one cupful of but- tered bread crumbs Finally add the other half of the tomatoes, and repeat with the other ingredients. Cover the dish with bread crumbs, Bake until a golden brown o Women About Money ABETH ALLEN. ey Your Fortune on Your Back. Yeu sometimes hear it remarked that ®She wears her fortune on her back.’ This is not intended literally, because her fortune may also bé on her fingers | nd around her neck. It is intendéd to | mean that that person’s capital is in-| vested in jewels and clothes. | What are the advantages and disad- wantages of that sort of living? Clothes, of course, are of comparatively short | duration. They wear out or become | chsolete, and one's investment in them | must be considered a “short term"' Pproposition. Precious stones are supposed to have s fixed value and one that constantly eppreciates. However, there is no fixed rule about this. and when one must gell one's jewels in an emergency one is indeed fortunate if one realizes their original cost. The repson is that, regardiess of the | stones, settings become old-fashioned | and out of date. The cost of the set-| tings is “written of.” and one finds that | one’s fewelry is valued almost entirely on the basis of the value of the stones | at the time | So much for “carrying one’s fortune | on one's back It _is clearly unec nomic, and it pays slight, if any, divi- dends. It may be argued that some women enjoy the wearing of their capi- tal. This may be so. but few women an afford to wear a large part of their capital. ndeed, whatever enhancement the gems may réalize, when one calculates The cost of insuring them and safe- guarding them over a considerablé pe- riod, that ultimate profit is erased from the “books.” ‘Women in the theatrical and artistic profeesions afe often prone to this type of investment. Their apparent means is sald to have a desirable effect on audiences, agents and the like. Imita- tion jewelry, however, would have the same effect if properly selected and worn. Money invested in securities, first mortgages and similar first-class prop- erties has a constant value and rays & regular return. It is always,cashable at par value or nearly par value, and appreciation is a cértainty over a_pe- riod of years. Women who can afford jewels and desiré them should buy them for the beauty and pleasure they add to life. A luxur: can seldom be thought of as an investment. The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyr.h! An ailment Kind of fish Toothed irregularly. Harmonized. Internations! langusge Prefix; into. Hypothetical foree Mysel! Goddess of plenty Heavy weight Study Resting places Valughle wood Kind of fruit bo: Lava of Hawail. Father 29 A Btate (ab). Feel blindly Havalian bird Empbloy S8hellers of canvas Piece of rock {210({T { Ti4jmiric 2|01 t. 1928.) Coal scuttle. Indefinite article Devil God of Jove Declared to be untrue A continent (ab.) Prefix; together Uppermost part, Back Not bad Goet up Man's nickname Rub out Fruit Beast of burden Annotinces English school Blamese coin Atmosphere A continent (ab.,) 43_A Bouthery gfil’ (gb . Satisfy That HungerWith SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. | peculiarities of temper and temperament. | and fall in with your pla Baby is scared cause the lady 'at's cookin fer us is black: her ain't trab- | bled like I has on bedears, or her would | know, hers nufin’ but a lady porter! UB ROSA BY MIMI The Happy Family Circle. Dorls was,a member of the happlest family in the world. Her four big broth- ers adored her, her younger sister looked up to her. her mother and father radiated pride oveér the whole brood And from the time Doris was a kid I'she never had to worry about dates and parties. Her brothers took her everywhere. | | They invited men to the house. They | surrounded Doris with their admira- tion and in that attractive frame she could not fail to make an impression | on every one who came her way. | Her brothers were popular. 80 was she. Their friends were her friends.| She lived in a cozy little atmosphere of peace and well-being. Lucky the girl with four big brothers. i 8he really hadn't any definite charm | —except a very: quiet sort of fascina- | | tion that ‘did its work well when she | had her clever brother, Dud, to depend on, or her noisy brother, Ed, to seé her through. | If she found herself growing dull and untalkative, she could always sum- | mon one of the boys to her rescue.| The man whom she had been boring wou'd be suddenly swept off into the family circle, surtounded by the wit and charm of the boys. His opinion of Doris would change as he grew to like her brothers more, and observed their | admiration and affection for her. | Well, in that way Doris managed to have a pretty good time. and even after the brothers began to marry, she did quite well. There was always one | boy at home who could be depended | on to help her out. She didn't really | smell danger in the air till the young- | est brother got marriéd and the young- | est sistér suddenly became engaged. | ‘Then Doris cast 4 wild look around, | and married the first man she saw. He happened to bé a nice boy who needed bringing out—and Doris didn't | have the spunk or the personality to bring him out. She couldn’t help him with his friends or his work because | she hadn't any push. 8he was literally of no use to any one except as a part of a charmin family circle. Deserted by her marries Wrothers, she wasn't able to stand on | her own feet. Used to their support.| their admiration, their unbounded con- fidence in her, she lost heart when faced | with the prospect of making a favorable | impression on a critical, wortied young husband Heér marriage didn't r. It never | had a chance. Her husband had martied | a girl out of a picture—a charming ple- | ture painted by her adoring family. | Doris, the real live Doris, was just a gir] whose family had been too charm- | ing for her own good You can't make your family your | own personal idea of the world. You can't confiné yourself within their safe | borders and think yourself secure from | the troubles of life. | Tt is wonderful to be & unit of a devoted charming family cirele, but it i% extremely dangerous to come to de- pend on that family circle for every- thing. What your family thinks -perfect in | you the world may criticize. ‘What amounts to success in the fam- | ily erowd looks like fatlureé to the world. Stiek to your family, but don't de- | pend on them for everything. There's a great big circle out of the little fam- | ily eircle and you've got to find your place in that some day. (Mimi_will be giad to angwer any auiries directed to this paper provided stamped. addréssed envelope 1% Also she will b glad io send Pood fo versation and How (o Overcome seiousness ) in- o Lessons in English BY W. L. GORDON. Words often misused—Do not #ay ‘no one other is so generous as she.” Sng “no one elst.” ften mispronounced—Geyser. Pro. nounce the 8y as y in “By” the 8 Al in “sir or as z. Often misspelled — Présbyterian; not z. Synonyms — Arrogant, domineering, dietatorial, overbearing, dogmatic, im- perious. Word study—"Use a word three times | and it {8 yours.” Let ug increase our vocabulary by mastering oné word each day. Today's word: Crystallize; to bring to definite and pers ent form “Thomas Jeftérson caught and erystal- lized the spirit of free institutions.” . Braised Tongue. Place the tongue in a kettle and cover with boiling salted water. Cook slowly for two hours. Remove the tongue and skin it. Place the tongue In a deep pi some carrots cut in cubes, an y cut in fine pléces. Pour | over all & sauce made from ter in | roughshod over all of their peculiaritiés of disposition | sensibilities so near the surface as in childhood. | Mr | should we draw an invidious comparjson bétween him and some big and | A |life, a well defined plan of work. They {have little patiencé with the boy ofilort through éxperienceé, and this child | maturity. | traleved one-| | sary toward that end. Inot safe to take him for granted. He | must which the tongue was cooked, Beason m:hl{ and add one cupful of canned tom lowly for an hour. D. €. WEDNESDAY, STAR, WASHINGTON, DorothyDix Some Mothers Run Roughshod Over Their Chil- dren's Most Sensitive Spots and Then Wonder Why the Youngsters lose Faith in Them. Thinks Result Is Complete Loss of Companionship Parents Who Trample Their Children’s Feelings OFTEN wonder why parents use so little tact in dealing with their children, | They recognize the fact that grown-ups must be handled diplomatically, and that if you would “sell” them yourself or an idea you must be caréful of your approach and avoid rousing their antagonism and nimbly sidestep their little They realize that it isn't so much what you say as the time, the place and | the way in which you say it that makes your friends accept your point of view But they use no such finesse in dr:\‘llng with their children. They run They enforce théir opin- | jons arbitrarily on their youngsters. They are carelessly Indifferent to the child's | feelings, yet at no time during our whole livés are our nerves so raw and our g | As we grow older we become callous to the opinions of the world. We grow | an epidermis from which the criticisms of our fellows glance off as harmlessly | as a chance arrow from a rhinoceros' hide. But a child’s soul has no such cov- ering. It is naked. Unprotected. Rvery careless wofd plerces it to the quick, | and much of the surliness, rudeness and disobedience of childhood is nothing | but the expression of the suffering of the poor little creatures under the man- handling they are receiving from their elders. Think, for instance, of the agony that children undergo in being discussed with brutal frankness before their faces. It has been said that the most popular | | and admired of us would die of chagrin if we knew what our friends and ac- | quaintances really thought of us. | s mexsogl ] For that reason we should not dream of doing such a crass thing as telling A. that he is runty and undersize and insignificant in appearance. Still less | up- | standing, handsome man. Neither should we tell Mrs. B. that she is too fat or | that she has the hideous B. nose that is hereditary in her family. Nor should we | remark to thin and delicate Miss C. that she appears tuberculous 1o us. | i INO. INDEED. Far be it from us to do such a tactiess thing as to descant | upon our friends’ physical defects in their presence, no mattér what we | might say about them behind their backs. But with children we have no such | inhibitions. although a child wouid suffer a thousand timés more at having the | spotlight turned on its deficiencies than a grown perton would. For Mr. A, might reflect that if he was short in stature he was long on brains and a giant | in achievement. Mrs. B. might consider her size imposing and rejoice at having | a Hapsburg proboscis, and Miss C. might consider any rémark on her thinness | inspired by envy of her boyish figure The child, however, has no such consolations. It can only writhe while | Aunt Mary puts on her spectacles and remarks that littie Johnny is very small | for his age, and gives it as her opinion that Susie takes after Aunt Sophie, who is | notorious for her homeliness, or when mother casually remarks before people that Mary is backward and doesn't kéep up with her grade and that Tommy is so0 awkward he falls over his own feet | Then conslder the lack of tact parents show in disciplining their children and n enforcing obedience. Their entire attitude is one of petty tyranny. Every- | thing s an arbitrary command. “Do this” “Don't do that.” No explanation of why it is wise and expedient to follow one course or why it would be dis- | astrous (o do something else. Just scourging the child along the way it should | go instead of making it see it as an alluring road to travel. ‘When parents say that they can't do a thing with their hobbledehoy chil- | dren it is invariably because théy have used force instead of diplomacy in deal- | ing with them. They have never put a proposition up to them in the same way they would have put it up to a grown person. They have never tried to find our | how to “work” their children and gét their co-operation by making the right thing appeal to them, as they would with any man or woman with whom they wished to do business. ND consider the stupidity of the parents who never find out that children are even more susceptible to the jolly person than grown-ups are, and heavens knows, all of us adults are as wax in the hands of thé artistic salve- | spreader. Perhaps parents considér that soft soap is too valuable a commodity to be | wasted on children. I don't know. Anyway. some fathers and mothers never | seém to have found out that to rub in a child faults simply sets them in ite character and makes them indelible because it makes the child self-conscious, | just as it would a grown person, whéreas it will react to the stimulation of praise, | | also ltke a grown person, by bréaking its neck to live up to its reputation. You can eorrect little Johnny's table mannérs a million times: you can tell Freddy evéry morning about washing behind his ears and blacking his shoes: you can hound Mary to the plano evéry day without results. But you can turn Johnny into 4 Chesterfield by remarking on his élegant manners. You can mak> Freddy as particular about his clothes as a drug-store shetk by making him think that you consider him the glass of fashion, and you can set Mary to practicing by the hour by telling your friends what a wonderfyl- touch she has. I knew | a small boy who became a great historian bécause one time hé happened to know the date a certain battle was fought, and his mother foréver after braggéd, where | he could hear her, about what a student of history he was, Parents wail out that their children are strangers to théem. That they ao not confide in them. That they will not be guided by them. All bécause they have used no tact in déaling with them. They scorn to use the iron hand in the velvét glove in controlling thém, and the childrén rébel. { ‘When the children express their opinions, they jefr at them as fools. When the half-grown boys and gitls think themselves men and women, they laugh 4t them. When their children confide in theém their secréts théy tell them and make funny stories of them. And the children become silent at homeé and learn to Nide things from mother and father. We wouldn't have many grown friends if we treatéd them as tactlessly as we do our childrén. ‘What a pity that the general opinion is that diplomacy is something only to be used in soelety and business, and that it is not intended for home consump- | tion. Nowhere #lse is it o needed as in the family circlé. DOROTHY DIX. OUR CHILDREN By Angelo Patri What Next? Ao g Id e “Youi must have some idea ink! Adults séém to have very short mémo- | Put your mind on it. Sdy something. | ries, They séem t4 think that they You have somé brains. For pity's sake, were born with a elear-cut purpose in |use them.” purpose In | gow, the child had no mind on the | matter, because we grow a mind of that ue | had had only book school éxperience. But she felt she must risé to the emer- gency, so she said: “I'll be a téacher.” “There! I knew you knew all the time! Why didn't you say so?" Last week I attends that girl's graduation from medical school. She is going to be a doctor, specializing in the nutrition of children. When in doubt Yuc the 14-year-old child in the general high school course and give him a chance to grow a mind on the subject of his future. Remem. ter, experienceés aré the matérial th forms this power that dirécts the course. Few children have had thém at 14, 1928 girl who at 14 has but A very vague | notion that he will do sométhing her | graduation.” I A child is given about 20-0dd years, -—or more—to grow to 4 semblance of A 14-year-old child has not It the distance neces- Experience 1s the only factor that can and does help | child to know his abllities, his tastes | and his powers. That means that hé must have time. and more time, to live pefore being pigeonholed in a job. ‘Theré s a tendency to shove childrén along rapidly through the schools. A graduation diploma from élementary school is considered by some peopl: as an indication of a flmished product. All it méans {s that & child has learned by word and word a cértain amount of information, It rarély, very rarely, can mean that he khows the things he re- | cites. You set, you can learn all about | running a motor car out of a hook But yoti don't know a motor car until you sit behind the wheel and drive it for its first 10,000 milés The length of time that a child re- uires to réach his maximum power iffers with each child, but there I8 suficleng agreement to allow us to say that no' child under 14 Is settled for 1ife in his chosen fleld of industry, He will be a very different person at 22 than he was at 14. You would not know him if you met him after the eight vears of ‘separation. Then it is Mr give pérsonal attention to Inatirie énts and school teachers on the » and develo chijdren Write him i cave Of this paper. inclosini stamped, addressed envelope for reply from have his chance to experiment, nd therefore to grow. I remember a little girl of 14 who was graduating from élementagy school thout the slightest idea of Where she tonigh grocers carry it. — S e Z { smooth-finish oilcloth. | the top and bottom are scalloped. Then | ipforma " gorch, “sarties age. of AUGUST 1, 1928, “I guess it's just no use. I asked her if she could learn to love me, 'n she said that I was the one who needed a few lessons.” (Copyright. NANCY PAGE Porch Pillows Promote Home Hospitality 1928.) BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. —_— If there are young folks at home and if the homé has a piazza or porch. it is a wise mother who sées to it that the veranda is made attractive. Many |a petting party in a motor car is not| + | even thought of when the porch is com- fortable, the radio is close at hand and the tinkling pitcher and plate of cookies are accessible. One way of making porches attrac- tive is simple—have plenty of piliows of all_shapes and sizes Don't have elaborate ones. Don't use pillows which are spoiled by sun, or dew sensible and gay. is made of gre The edges of weather, rain, or, the pillows sturd The top pillow holes are punched at regular intervals. The pillow filler is slipped in and the | caver is held in place by stitchery done with raffia. The ruffied pillow is of glazed, wash- able chintz. Note the ruffies are at two ends only. The striped sun-fast one is always serviceable and gay. Green oflcloth is wsed for the small round one, ornamented with cut-out pleces of felt. The wind-blown tullp has a foundation of unbleached muslin. | Ofl-boiled calico in old-time patterns is appliqued. ven salads taste better when eaten at Write to Nancy care this paper. inclosing & tamped. self-addressed envelope, and ask for her salad leaflet No. 3. AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “1 don't waste much sympathy on that Jones tribe. Pa says fate kept 'em poor, but acts o' Providence don't makeé 4 housé smell like that." (Copsright. 1928.) Well-known food products are muc’l cheaper to buy . . . and more pleasant to eat Have a big salad Big salads make the menu more inviting. Easy to prepare and always welcome. For the dressing — Mayonnaise, of course, spooned out of the Hellmann Blue Ribbon Mayonnaise jar. Keep it always at hand. Put Hellmann's Blue Ribbon Mayonnaise on your market list right now. The best The popular pint size 25¢ HELLMANN'’S Blue Ribbon Mayonnaise OTHER SIZES ounces l pint l quart MILADY B BY LOIS Hair Curling in Summer, In Summertime there is always n! greater démand for hair curling among | the feminine patrons of the beauty | shops than in cooler months, when the hair holds & wave better. Those who are fortunate enough to have natural curls, or who have had successful per- ma ts, do not fear hot, damp weath- | er, because it makes their hair more | beautiful. It -is the straight-haired | sisterhood who find this season D!r-i tieularly trying. Hair that in moderate or cold weather | will hold a marcel wave for two wnk.-‘ may lose every vestige of curl after a day or twe of reai Summer heat, as | sticti weather makes the scalp perspire freely. Renewing the marcel wave every few days is both expensive and injurious to the hair. The problem of How to | keep even the semblance of a wave in 1 the hair at this time is a pressing one. 1 do not recommend curling the hair with hot irons oftener than twice a month, preferably less. During the Summer kids may be used every night after the hair has been moistened with | a curling fluid that heips to hoid ""i hair in a wave. To make such a fluid | bofl one-half ounce of quince seed in| one pint of water until the liquid is reduced to half its original volume. | Strain what remains through a clean | piece of cheesecloth and cool. Now stir | !in 11, ounces alcohol, 1Y; ounces eologne water, 10 drops o6il of cloves and 12 drops ofl of lavender. The mixture | may be thinned with rose water if it seems too thick. Hair that is fluffy or has a slight tendency to curl may be encouraged and trained with a wet comb. Wring out a towel in hot water and wrap 1" around the head so that the hair may | be steamed. Remove the towel and | proceed to water-wave the hair after | putting the part where you are going to want it in the finished coiffure. \ { An Efficient Stomach. One of our readers thinks that I am very cruel to advise a motheér to put {adhesive straps on thé baby’s mouth, | if necéssary, to prevent its chéwing the ¥uno legs. You remember the case wrote about: the mother said the baby passed huge splinters. Children do swallow splinters and other pointed objects which frequently will safely pass through the intestinal tract without any apparent injury, but there is always the possibility of .in- jury and ‘hat is what we have to think of. So if we are cruel, it is but another case of being cruel to be kind. A record-breaking case of foreign objects in the stomach was written up in one of the recent medical journals. It was that of a demented person who was accustomed to swallowing all sorts of roimed and angular metal objects, nafls, tacks, etc. Pinally hi¢ stomach had to be opened, when more than 25,000 separate objects were removed, the total number weighing almost & pound. The stomach wallt were thick- ened, but otherwise uninjured, and the patient made an uneventful recovery. However, a stomach so éfficient as this is & rare bird, so you mustn't jump to the conclusion that swallowing for- cign bodics is altogether harmleéss. While we are on thé subject, I must tell you that if your child does swallow some objeéct not allowablé in a child’s diet, den't give him a physic. PFeed him cerc-)- and put some granulated agar in it which will not be absorbed. so as to form a codting around the objéct. | X-ray pictui can be taken to watch iits ss 17 your physician thinks it | necessary. Itchy Spots. Mrs. E. has an intense itchy ?ot which causes intense annoyance. She has always believed that cleanliness is next to godliness; so there 18 no failure in that line. She has no discharge. and thére is no éruption. Her modesty forbids her going to her own physician | neuter gender, if you EAUTIFUL LEEDS. Water-waving combs may bé pur- chased in sets. Eight or twelve combs are usually required, since each wave should have two combs. Brush and comb the hair after the steaming. Comb it diagonally forward and insert the first comb about one and one-hulf fnches from the part with the teeth pointing toward the part. Push the comb forward making a mound or wave between the comb and the part. In- sert. the second comb with the testh in- terlocking with the first to hold the wave firmly. Brush the hair diagonally downward again to form another wave, and répeat the process. If the Hair 18 thick and parted on one side, about six combs are needed on the large side and four on the smaller side. After the combs are in, adjust & strong silk hair net over thé heéad. When the hair has dried remove hair | net and combs. Arrange the eoiffure. e atsuppornting, bt titnt pracics be_ disappointing. but faf 3 will bring skill and enviable knack of putting the waves at just the most be- coming angle. (Covsright. 1928.) " DIET AND HEALTH . BY LULU HUNT PETERS, M. D. ph examination. . Don't you know that to & cian 4 man or & woman is & pati will? However, if you do to & man physician, of any size its quof physiclans. There is no doubt that it is bettér for young woman physicians when when théy can't they should go own family physician, evén thou 4 man. Now about that itchy spot: Itchy | spots may be caused by uncl 3 as you have implied; by irritating dis- charges, or by an irritating urine. A uriné may be irritating if it is too con- centrated from & lack of drin water, and it may also bé irritating if it is !wu:mtmtpnrmmfildd- ash foods; or when it has sugar in it, a8 in dh?’e'tu: and in othe‘: conditions. g none of these causes is operating your casé, it may be that the nerve- endings in that particular itchy spot are disordered from some causé. At any rate, you should séé your use the X-ray; ft sueh - not most ta of about it. Hé mas has proved beneficial in many cases. Meanwhile, kéep the spot covered with gauze fastened on with adhesive, first applying some mild antiseptic oint- miént, such as unguentine or vaseline or boric acid ointment. | our nrt}cle‘on“ H umn rules for mflm‘ material we of- fér are fo inclose 2 cents in coin ‘QA’A self-addressed stamped énvelope for all on . ing and gaining; for 10 cents i ¢coin, in addtion to thé self-addressed, stamped énvélope, aré required. ‘The camel's hump is & reserve food Before 1 gi» you any suggestions. Mre. 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