Evening Star Newspaper, November 19, 1928, Page 33

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WOMA Frocks Which Have Fringe Drapery BY MARY “Long fringe is not really in the lime- light of fashion. None of the influen- tial French dressmakers from whom ‘Wwe take our cues has stressed it re- cently. They have used short fringe— DISTINCTION IS GIVEN TO THIS BRIGHT RED SILK CREPE FROCK BY SKIRT DRAPERY OF LONG | RED SILK FRINGE, A SINGLE | JEWELED SHOULDER STRAP AND A JEWELED BUCKLE AT THE WAIST. ‘ often formed by the raveling of the | material, but this is quite a different | matter. ‘ One reason why long fringe isn't seen more often is because the silhouette or | silhouettes that are now considered | newest do not call for fringe. And yet | occasionally one sees an extramely | smart frock that departs from this ac- cepted silhouette or tempo of fashion and makes use of long fringe—and al- MILADY BEAUTIFU BY Wrinkles and Reducing. One of the problems that must be solved by the woman who is reducing is that of wrinkles which gather on the face and neck as she becomes thinner. It is only natural that when the excess fat melts away the skin should crease and hang in loose folds. This is what happens in case of quick re- duction in weight. When the loss is gradual, however, comprising only a pound or iwo a week, the skin has an opportunity to adapt itself to the slow shrinkage of the subcutaneous fat. Trere is another element in the situ- ation that is often overlooked. Not only should reduction in weight be gradual, but at the same time one should strive to improve the muscular tone of the ‘whole body. A mere loss of weight due to fasting or the use of drugs will leave the skin and muscles flabby. This is why it is necessary to include in the reducing program sufficient exercise and general hygienic care of the body with the object of making all the tissues HOLLYWOOD, Calif., November 19. —With all the natural location pictures that are being made at the present time—and the range takes in the Brit- ish Isles, South Seas and darkest Afri- ca—a few local scenes are doubling gracefully for furrin’ parts. Mount Whitney is being disguised as the Swiss Alps. Ernest Lubitsch thought that out. And saved a lot ofi .money thereby. A long sand field with | a3 back drop simulating still more in- | finite sandy reaches, is doing duty for | the Gobi Desert. And when Pitzmaurice’s cast geturned from the Hawaiian Islands onl: dis- cover that some precious footage taken at the famous Black beach at Hilo had to be done over there was much moan- ing in the vicinity of the studio’s finan-’ cial cage, ‘Then some bright young soul thought to put a lot of sand and small rocks in { an outdoor blast kiln, allowed it to burn red and then ejected it until the oxygen blackened it. There was a Black Beach of Hilo on a Hollywood lot in less time than it takes to tell the . story. And for a Iot less money than it would take to transport Milton Sills, Dorothy Mackaill and the rest back to | Hulaland. Some talkie tragedies really come Under the head of humor—outside of | the financial sheet Nothing is so expensive as a talkie | fmistake. ‘The rehearsals all made—I nearly said rehashes—the principals are locked in the sound-proof cage with a policeman outside to keep away all in- truders and to insure freedom from un- welcome noises. Can you imagine the embarrassment of the studio electrician who sneezed explosively in the middle ©f a long and expensive sequence? Or can you even dimly appreciate BY MOLLIE how Doris Kenyon felt in the last scene | of the most exvensive talkie ever made | when she called Clive Brook Clive instead of the name of the character he was playing. |en would. I suppose. feel {argument is that a woman who does is | mid-Victorian |dress in the things she Ikes best, in | the things that she thinks are n1us:! | suitable and most becoming and trust | preciates the Tresults. | mothers who would feel | davghters clothes of the sc:t that men | find most_ attractive. once. | LOIS LEEDS. MOVIES AND MOVIE PEOPLE { has long cherished a dream of making | {ple will hang about—tells that there N’'S PAGE. MARSHALL. | most always its admirers are many. | Men, T have been told, especially ad- { mire these frocks. Or if they are not especially interested in women's dress and haven't analyzed their likes and | dislikes on the subject thcy usually ad- | | mire the appearance of a woman who wears a frock with swaying fringe drapery. | If you convince a woman that a man | likes a certain type of frock she will straightway go forth and order one of that sort—or else she will make up her mind never to have one. fi all depends on taste and temperament. Some wom- sgraced if they gave any one reason to imagine that they dressed for m-n. | I know one woman—and I suppose there are others like her—who stoutly | contends that a woman cught not to take her husband's taste into considera- | tion at all in choosing her clothes. Her | | or unemancipated or | something of that sort. She should —for her husband’s sake—that he ap- And there are; they had graceful if marriageable done something rather they chose for their d - THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTO SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CORY. Anuvver night gone by an' I ain't found out how I fall asleep! ekt | This week's little help for the home | dressmaker tells precisely how to make | the new applique work us~d on a num- | ber of the new scarfs, overblouses, etc. | The diagram shows how to make a set | of disks of graded sizes and how to applique them into position. I am sure | vou will find this helpful, <o please let | me have your stamped. sclt-addressed | envelope and I will send it to you at | (Copyrieht. 1928.) | | My Neighbor Says: Small pieces of toilet soap that accumulate in the bathroom | should not be thrown away. Add water enough to cover them and | | put on stove until dissolved. This makes an excellent soft soap. Salted meat requires longer boiling than fre; Put it into cold water, quickly bring it to a boil, then let it simmer. Do not waste cake or bread by cutting off a burned crust. This can be removed by a flat grater, and it will leave a smooth surface instead of a jagged crust. When buying coal, also buy a load of coke, which can be bought for less. To make a fire | use half coal and half coke, put- ting the coke on top of the coal. You will find that a fire made in this way will last twice as long as one made in the ordinary way. If the coke should have a sul- phurous odor, pour over it a quantity of cold water. firm and healthy. Plenty of fresh air and sufficient exercise out of doors are essential. Do not expect to have a smooth skin if you sit in the house all day and avoid physical exertion. Most patrons of beauty shops and readers of these beauty talks want ex- ternal treatments for correcting sagging faces and throats. While such treat- ments are of little value unless supple- mented by improvements in the general care of one’s body, they have their place. The woman who reduces rapidly and neglects exercise will not, however, be as much benefited by facial treat- ments as will be the woman who re- }iuees slowly and keeps herself physically i Massage is a passive form of exercise | and is necessary for improving the tone | of flabby face and necks. The manipu- lations stimulate the circulation. The skin should be thoroughly cleansed, then gently steamed with hot towels. Next pat on a massage cream or lotion | such as the following: 6 teaspoonfuls milk, 1%, ounces glycerin, 2 teaspoon- fuls tincture benzoin, 6 ounces dis- tilled water, 15 ounce perfume. Work this in the skin with an upward, ro- tary movement. Now wipe off the lo- tion and pat on an astris or rub with ice. An astringent bandage may be used for tightening the flabby skin at the throat. Fold a small towel Jengthwise twice. Dip the middle in an astringent and bind it- firmly on the throat. Leave on about an hour. It is not wise to wear chin bandages for long periods, since they make the muscles lazy. A simple lotion that may be used with this treat- ment is made of 1 ounce cologne water, 5 _ounces elderflower water, !; ounce of tincture of benzoin, 1! ounces cu- cumber juice. The last ingredient is made by stewing the cucumbers in a little water. (Copyright, 1928.) MERRICK. not grudge me this one bit of pleasure. &Llievc me I shall cherish it through ! Lois says she has been accused of an engagement practically to every man ! she has ever spoken to or known. But this posthumous marriage is the most | humorous twist yet put upon her ro- | mantic experiences. | Harry D'Arrast—but why be in- formal, he really is known as H. D'Ab- badie D'Arrast—was to dircct the great | Maurice Chevalier in his first American | adventure n movies. He was all enthusiasm. They were compatriots and had a’ fine feeling about art with a capital A. D'Arrast an honest woman out of the movies, | Imagine then, his horror, when he was told that the vehicle chosen for Che- valier was a parallel story of Al Jol- son’s last cinema hit. (Producers’ line of thought: Why not—the boys both sing?) Mammy D'Arrast flew into a fury. His contract, on a nearby table, was referred to, It seems it contained a clause that the rector should accept advice and sug- | gestion, The director, rumor hath it, muttered something about none of the advice being intelligent. Whereupon some one with an ear to the keyhole—these peo- was a fine sound of tearing up the D'Arrast contract. Perhaps D'Arrast felt that Maurice Chevalier, in a mammy role would be more cinema’d against than sinning. (Copyright. 1928, by North American News vaver Alliance.) Lessons in English BY W. GORDON. Often mispronounced: A-li-en-ate. { they put in an appearance. | game. SUB ROSA Open Season for Women. The game laws protect the deer and partridges so that it is only in certain short seasons that a man can get a shot at them. Men are your hunters, all right, and if it isn't one kind of a creature it's another that the sports- man tries to bring down. Time was when there were long closed seasons for women, who kept themselves out of man's way and were pretty likely to draw his fire when But this is the long open season for feminine Women are quite in evidence, it's casy to get acquainted with ‘em. | and thelr frankness is such that a man can propose marriage if he has the nerve—and the cash Women must have grown tired of their one-time seclusion, for_they are now rambling all over the fields. In the old days. there were certain re- stricted seasons of Spring and Fall for marriages, and June was your great month for brides But nowadays women are just as ready to marry in November as May, | and men are just as shy in June as in December. We might be better off if we went back to the old-style closed season and the restrictions as to intro- ductions, pettings and the like. Women used to want men and they got 'em. Today they want freedom and they are getting just a little more than they like. It's fun to wear a derby, but it maybe was more fun when the kelley was on your man’s heed. Women wanted to throw off their shackles, but now they are dis- covering that the rings went with the handcuffs. Men aren't putting the chains and ropes of pearls on women the way they used to. All of this trouble came about when women decided to come out of their hiding and relieve themselves of the trappings that had come down to them from Asiatic harems. The ills we have now are those of our open season, When the deer march along in droves, a man doesn’t want to waste a shot on them. When the frost fish tumble around on the beach, the fancy fisherman won’t cast the fly. . I guess women are too plentiful fo- day, or they make themselves too ap- parent. As soon as woman begins to make herself scarce, the hunters and anglers among the men will get busy. The open season has its advantages, but it must have been fun to have the hunters after you as soon as you showed yourself in the open. Mimi will be glad to answer any inquirles directed to this paper, provided a stamped, addressed envelope is inclosed. (Copyright, 1928.) Home in Good Taste BY SARA HILAND. Here is a little night light that will add charm and quaintness to your bed- room and prove very practical also. Just the kind of little light to switch on it you want to look at your watch without flooding the whole room with a bright light. The base 15 of wrought iron and the buib is fitted into a hand-dipped candle with drippings. The bulb being tiny = 7”R and flame-shaped, the effect is very real, and, of course, the glass chimney helps carry out the idea of a real flame. Not every bedroom would be a suit- able place for a lamp such as this, but for the four-poster, spindle or old- time type of bedroom, what could be more delightful! One often has a shelf in the kitchen which is difficult to decorate. For this you would find that a clock for the center and one of these lamps at each end would be very effective, . (Copyright, 1928.) Corn and Potato Scallop. Place in alternate layers in a buttered baking dish one cupful of canned corn and four medium sized cooked potatoes diced. Sprinkle each layer of potato with salt and pepper and dot over with a 1ablespoonful or so of butter, and each layer of corn with a few grains of sugar. The potato should form the top layer. Pour one cupful of hot cream or top milk over all, grate cheese generously over the top and brown in a quick oven. ! AUNT HET BY ROBERT QUILLEN, | | itached The Sidewalks BY THOR! A Washington man of affairs has owned an electric automobile, a ve- hicle which is rapidly becoming extinct, | Recently he decided to purchase a gasoline - driven cer of popular make. According to our informant, he had the body of the new car moved and to the | chassis of the elec- | power. tric machine o that a “gasoline body” will be seen propelled about the city by clectric Of cours2 the motor of the new machine was removed from under the hood be- fore the body was attached to the frame. The American doughboy is in mufti today. He may be found behind coun- ters, over ledgers, driving trucks, worl ing in garages, painting pictures and selling bonds. He may be found in any street of the city.” During the war he was referred.to as “the typical Amer- ican soldier.” A few weeks over 10 | years ago he was dining on “canned Willie,” “or advancing ov terrain toward an ur is not to reason picturesque figure. H mask and other militar, provided inspiration for songs. stories, pictures and sculpture, even though th soldier himself was unconscious of any- thing particularly interesting about his | attire. ’ ‘The spirit of the doughboy still flames in most of those who participated in the hostilities. Reluctant, perhaps, to speak of his experiences to those who were not overseas with him., he un- burdens himself to the men who were. We met one yesterday. He is a stocky fellow. His hair is yellow and his bull- neck would impress one that here is a lad who could give a good account of himself in a free-for-all private or public fight. He would rather mix 1% with fists than with a high-powered rifle. He was once a corporal., Unfor- tunately he is a trifie deaf. Let us quote him as he =at with a few buddies. “How did I get took dee Aw, be yourself Naw, I didn't get it any fight. Flu-inflooenzy. ©One day I goes to the sergeant and I says, “Sarg, how about 10 aspirins?” major comes up and says, ‘What do youse want with 10 aspirins?’ I says, ‘Well, I want 'em.’ He says, ‘Well, never mind what youse want. Its what u, you can have.’ So h2 feels and takes my temperature and to bed.’” So I goes to Thats how I got my pu says, ‘Put this guy bed for two week: deef. “Going over we was put down be- low the waterline of the ship. Par the band slept with us. One of ‘em was the bass drummer and he hangs the drum on a hook. We goes to sleep and one night the drum falls on the floor. ‘Who the blankety-blank is shoot- ing at us?’ says the bunch as they The medical | of Washington 'ON FISHER. z{;’mp up and get ready to leave the | boat . “Anyways we couldn't sleep very well and one night a buddy and me is on guard in one of the ship's corridors. | The colonel comes along and salutes | me and says, ‘Corporal. I want_youse | to keep this here corridor clear.’ I says, | ‘Yessir,"” and he salutes me and leave JS“ we had the corridor clear and was able to stretch out there and sleep. | . “We land at Southampton and the | | looie says, ‘Well, gang, tonight we'll all ' | be able fo get a good sleep. When we got ashore we went to an ale place in Victoria Square. | While we was sit- ting in there I says, ‘I kin lick any five Englishmen in this dump.’ Five of 'em didn’t think so and 1 landed out in the square. Victoria was spinning | around and I don't mean maybe. “Just as we was | figuring cn_getting a night's sleep we get orders to hang | on all the freight and get ready to | cross the water to France. They was 1300 of us standing | on a postage stamp on the way over. In our outfit was a poor Italian. The kind of a guy you ‘kid’ and feel sorry | for. He was a dark little bird and didn't have much to say during the trip. He could speak his own bettern | English like we could. When we get to France a couple of us meet some beautiful ones. Big boy, I'm tellin you they was like this here Cleopatra. We says, ‘Parlee voo,’ and that brings on a barrage of French that knocks us for a gool. I says to one of 'em, ‘How about a bird and a little bot'?’ They only shake their heads and shrug their shoulder. Then we stand on our heads and wig-wag to try to make them un- | derstand, but these dames is pure ‘dumh Don't understand American. “In the meantime the little Eye- talian comes up and listens. I trys again. I says to one of the gals, ‘Wee- wee-gurgle-gurgle, and make motions | like_eating and so-forth. But these | frails only stand there looking at us | like dummies. I says to my buddy, |'Maybe these janes are only looking for gene: and looies. Maybe we don’t | rate because we ain’t runnin’ this here | war’ We felt sorry for the little Eve- talian who stood by. It musta been awful to be sich a sap as he was! If we couldn’t make a hit with the gals what chance did he have? Finally one of ihe gals starts to speak. All at once the little feilow's eyes brighten and he begins to hand a line right back at them. He goes up to the two sweeties and talks to 'em like they was a couple of old friends. 1 says, ‘Hey, where do you get that stuff. When did you ever leart French?' He says, ‘They donta spik French to me. They spika Spanish. I unnerstan’ da Spanish. Adios, beeg boys." With that he hangs one gal on cach of his arms and they go A W O L. Buddy, war is as terrible behind the lines as it is up there where they're aimin’ at you.” THEY ONLY SHOOK THEIR HEADS - o= OUR CHILDREN By Anl'avelo Patri - Bread-and-Butter Studies. “But I don't want my children to take bread and butter subjects. I want them to have a cultural education. Why should my son go to the shop? Or my daughter to the kitchen? I don’t want them to earn their living that way. Surely they can be fitted for some pro- fession?” Surely. If they have the mental and physical and social equipment for any special field there is no reason under the sun why they should not be fitted for it. But isn’t a professional life one that calls for hard work and does not that hard work provide bread and but- ter? If it does not, then that profes- sion is a failure for that particular worker. All of us must work. That is the one great privilege of this life for which we should be most grateful. There is no real place in this world for the person who cannot, and does not support him- self in some way, either inside or out- side of the home. Each of us must be useful if life is to bz bearable. Why- is not culture possible to one who works outside the professions? Why is it thought to be rather degrading to one'’s social position to be known as a worker in a trade? Or to carn money by the arts, music and poetry and sculpture? Why is it not dignified to earn one's living even under culture's sway? It is. It has been done. Henry W. Longfellow was a poet and a teacher, and earned his living. James ‘Russell Lowell was a poet and a scholar and a statesman and earned money in all three capacities. Surely there is culture and skill and earning power and social standing. It is not, then, the work one does, but the quality of it. Then send the children to school with the idea of discovering the spe- cial gift each holds. Set the teaching to bring out the highest possible de- velopment of those gifts, whether they are of the highest order as the world views them or of the lowest. Teach the children that their work has a market value and the higher the money reward they can capture the better for them so long as they live up to the highest ideal they can grasp. There are people who still think that a clergyman ought to live without money, that a doctor ought never to collect his fees; that the dentist ought to take his pay out of the rich feeling of service that floods his soul when SUGAR IMPROVES FRUIT FLAVORS Makes these healthful foods | delightful to the taste. ||/ The human body needs fruits, | to be well fed and healthy, and each person should eat at .cast one raw and one cooked fruit each day. Here are the health- giving elements that fruits bring to us: needed roughage, fruit vitamines, mineral salts, and beneficial fruit acids And, thanks to sugar, fruits can also be beneficial in another way. The harsh or sour acids, by being sweetened to taste, can bé turned into delightful “avors that add enjoyment to eating As a famous food scientist states it, “The fruit acids are softened by sugar, The fruit flavors are developed by sugar. Sugar pro- motes and facilitates the inges- tion of fruits.” There are few people in the world who do not relish the de- licious flavors of orange and grapefruit salad, sweetened to taste. One of the most welcome he removes an aching tooth. They really | do. But that same person will walk a | mile to see a movie star who draws a fabulous salary—not because this star is a great personage, but because he draws a great salary. Let’s be clear on this point. All work, whether in shop or laboratory, studio or office, factory or barn, afloat on the high seas or deep in the mines,—all work that is worth while is bread and butter work. It is not a badge of dis- grace to earn and collect a big salary. It is a mark of efficiency bestowed by a_hard-headed, hard-fisted world. Tell the children the truth about it. Fit them to hold the highest and best paid place they can attain by means of their gifts develeped to their highest power. Yes, I know. There is work no money can buy. Bearing children, saving life, supreme service is beyond price. But that is no excuse for not paying thé material price for it. And supreme service may well be left out of the dis- cussion on training for everyday living. Give the children a bread and butter training first. The rest will take care of itself. (Copyright, 1928.) Mr. Patri will give personal attention to inquiries from parents or school teachers on the care and development of children. Write him in care of this papor, enclosing self-addressed, stamped envelope for reply. MOTHERS D THEIR CHILDREN. Troublesome Underwear. One Mother Says: I used to have a lot of trouble getting the children's long drawers tucked smoothly into their stockings. Now I save myself time and trouble by sewing a piece of tape on opposite sides of the bottom of the leg, as is done in the bought leggings, and this fits down snugly and holds the garment in place. It is also much more comfortable, as well as decidedly neater looking. (Copyright, 1928.) BEDTIME STORIES - Rusty Bites a Tail. ] | gne way in will do for me, i Wo wavs out T want to see | % Rusty the Pox Squirrel. | Rusty the Fox Squirrel was in a dis- turbed state of mind. Yes, sir, he was quite upset. He was in a strange hol- low tree. That means it was strange | to him. He had taken a nap on a bed | of leaves. ~Now, leaves do not get| into hollow trees unless they are put there. A few may blow in. but not | enough to make a comfortable bed. | Therefore, some one had made this | bed in which Rusty had been sleeping. | When he had first found it he had been quite sure that this hollow tree home was deserted. But now he wasn't so sure. He had been awakened by the sound of claws on the outside of | that tree. The STYLE POST is the marker on the road to beiny smart. Pe}mms‘ It was inevitable that the peplum should find a recognized place in a mode characterized by restrained fem- ininity. It is at its best on a tailored | ! daytime dress of navy blue broadcloth | (above), adding a slight flare below the snugly belted hipline. | The peplum appears on coats, too. (perhaps one on a cloth coat) and on | evening dresses of stiffly formal mate- | rial—a brocaded taffeta or metal cloth, | for example. (Copyright, 1928.) A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. Wake Yourself Up. Text: “Awake up, my glory."—Ps. } ] calls upon himself to wake up. Lying dormani within his soul is a potential glory that has never | broken forth. This hidden glory is wait- ing to be called out. And so, addressing | the higher glory and possibility he sees in himself, the Psalmist cries, “Awake up, my glory!” This is a call we all need to make upon ourselves. Within the humblest of | us there is the pessibility of a glory | that we little dream of. We nced to | awaken ourselves to see this possihfl!!y,1 We may never know what we can be | and do in this world until we arouse | ourselves and call forth the best there | is in us. An old writer speaks of a man being | “not only the noblest creature in the world, but even a very world in him- self.” The trouble with many of us is that we have never discovered our- | selves. When a man really discovers himself, he has made a more wonderful | discovery than when the astronomers | discover a new star in the heavens. “Awake up, my glory.” Make this| call upon yourself. Do not imagine the | glory is not there. It is there. Wrapped up in the humblest life there is the | possibility of a spiritual beauty and | nobility of character which, when fully | developed and manifested, will outshine the blended luster of the stars. You have no right to let all this po- tential glory in your life go to waste. You owe it to the world to develop yourself to the limit of your possibili- ties. Therefore, like the Psalmist, call upon your soul to awake. Do not sleep away your life. Wake yourself up. (Copyright, 1928.) . Nearly 83 per cent of autos manv- factured in the United States in 1927 were closed models. | newcomer and he didn’t A back door is a good thing to have. Johnny Chuck would tell you that. Reddy Fox would tell you that. Old| Man Coyote would tell ‘vou that. But | homes made in hollow trees seldom | have back doors. There was no back | door to this hollow tree home. There was only one way out and, of course, that was the only way In. Rusty ] i 7. RUSTY WAS IN A PANIC. WHAT "EVER SHOULD HE DO? | thought of this now as he listened to| | the sound of the claws on ths outsidz | of that tree. “I guess,” thought Rusty, “that. it would be well for me to get out of here right away. If there is an owner o this house and he should find me in here he might make it very unpleasant for me. I'll get out right away.” He looked up at the entrance, and just as he did so the entrance was darkened by some one who thrust his head in. In the dark Rusty couldn't see what that head looked like, but he could see that, whoever it was, he was quite big enough to fill the door- way, and that meant that the visitor was bigger than himself. Rusty was scared. He didn't like the size of this liks the smell newcomer. But what could There he was, trapped! He couwdn't squeeze past and there was no back door. Rusty was in a panic. ‘Whatever should he do? But the stranger did not come down to where Rusty was. He turned around and then poked his head outside and there he sat looking out. It was quite evident that this was his home. H2 had the air of ownership. Rusty waited and waited. 4 Now, hanging down was a tail. The end of the tail almost reached Rusty. Now ard then it moved. Rusty right away discovered that it was a quecr tail. It was nothing at all like his tail. Goodness, no; it was nothing at BY THORNTON W. BURGESS had fallen from it or if it had never had any hair. “I don't see what use a tail like that can be” thought Rusty. “Now, when I jump that tail of mine balances me. In Winter, when I sit back to the wind that tail protects my whole back. When I curl up I curl that nice, big tail of mine around me and it helps to make me warm and comfortable. But what can a fellow do with a tail like this one? It looks to me like a useless tail.” At just that moment a thought came to Rusty. What would happen if he should bite that tail? Would it scare the owner so that he would run away! Anyway, it would be almost certain to give him a chance to get out. If he should be ready to dash out of that entrance as soon as the owner went out he would have a good chance to escape. It was his best chance. Rusty reached out to bite that tail, but before he set his teeth in it he drew back. His courage was not quite equal to that bite. Three times he arted to bite and didn't. But the fourth time he did. Yes, sir, h~ bit that tail, and right away things began to happen (Copyright. ) THE DAILY HOROSCOPE Tuesday, November 20. Certain unfavorable signs ore scen in tomorrow's horoscope by astrologers, who warn people to be cautious The early morning houis may bring anxieties to men vomen who 1 resoonsibilitie: al conditions. 1t is read as an unpropitious day for all who seek rewards for political activ- tics. Under this direction of human mind incline: Pessimists multiply uration prevails. Neptune is in threa | cording to the seers, | newed agitation. Under this sway there may be double-dealing and evasivene: {rule is supposed Lo our nd even indifference to the tr 3 ‘The configuration is read as forecast- | ing much pretense and talse appear- ance of wealth or success. New phases of carcers o character are prognestica and many persons will secik live by their wits. The society bandit will flourish. In the evening friendly stars gam dominance and there is 2 good sign for conferences or discussions of fu- ture plans. Merchents and manufacturers should g;osper and shops of every sort will nefit. Artistry which will out its stamp upen clothing and interior decoration as never betore will extend to places of business, so that sumptuousness will mark prosperity. London astrolozers foretell that mili- tarism will rule .n Europe. Persons_whose birth da.e it is may have much that is unusual in their new year, which 1s likely to bring big ex- periences. Children born on that day probably will be intense in nature and capable of fine intellectual attainments. Girls are likely to be great favorites and to have many suitors. They should be guarded against unwise marriage. (Copyright, 1423.) ne stars the rd criticism. while this config- niez mood, ace who forecast re- much . The deceit th, dubious The Chinese of San Francisco's Ori- ental quarter balk at the dial phonis. They refused to use them because the 11 like his tail! It didn’t have any air on it. Rusty wondered if the hair | little holes. numbers and letters loo! much like a Richer and mellower than othei'é - - a flavor specially blended Distinguished travelers in the Old South came home enthu- siastic about the superlatively fine coffee that was served to them at the old Maxwell House in Nashville. «It’s good to beverages to any palate is hot lemonade. And remember that stewed fresh apples or pears or stewed dried peaches, prunes or apri- cots are excellent for breakfast. Doris Kenyon burst into tears, The | director burst into profanity. Three | hundred feet had to be scrapped. No | wonder the front office burst into a few | the last drop,” they declared. That matchless flavor that has won fame for Maxwell House Coffee is a particular blend of Pronounce al-yen-ate, both a's as in “ate,” not a-li-en-ate. Often misspelled: Ally and alley; often confused. admonitions regarding attention to de- tail, etc. Lois Wilson, who has long been re- garded as the ideal type of American girl, has found herself thrust into a new rolo through the channels of her fan mail. An English admirer writes and asks fier for some little souvenir of the late Valentino which he could keep and eherish. Then goes on to say. “You, Synonyms: Inability, incapacity, in- competence, impotence, disability, dis- qualification. ‘Word study: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Inscrutable; incom- prehensible; unfathomable. mains an inscrutable mystery. Corkscrew curls were popular in Ro- drar madam. as his beloved wife, must bave so many mementoes that you will .‘T:)n hairdressing in the first century “A mother loves all of her children alike, but I reckon she feels a little tenderer towards the one she spanks L : e MO (copsrisnty 1038 For dinner, think of apple sauce with pork, and cranberry sauce with any kind of roast fowl or meat. Baked apples or pears and fruit pies are delicious, as well as healthful, for dessert. Eating should be enjoyable as well as healthful. The use of sugar, on raw fruits and in cooking, is the friend of food enjoyment. The Sugar Insti- tute.—Advertisement. R e P——— many rare coffee flavors. Rich, mellow, full-bodied, Maxwell House Coffee is the first ever to please critical people all over the country. Itis the choice today of America’s social leaders. MAXWELL HoUSE COFFEE ©1923, P, Go.y Ina.

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