Evening Star Newspaper, March 26, 1929, Page 39

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'WOMAN'S PAGE. The Sidewalks Washington, delightful the year round, is particularly alluring in Spring. A day like Palm Sunday brings out those who have been hibernating indoors during the Winter. They burst forth like butterflies from a cocoon. High hats and plus-fours pass each other with songs in their hearts and good feeling for mankind. A man in a knickerb sport suit 11 or sho o knickerbockers is & | ¢ om fortable - ap- soul and y a good companion. _ He| may never have wielded a golf club, nor be a of a count The big T he evinces.an I- don't-care attitude toward the world of fellow men which most folks secretly admire. The act that JJ he doesn't give a whoop who knows whether he is bow- legged or knock-kneed establishes him s an independent person. Few are so perfectly proportioned that they can I in plus-fours. In probably no other city in America is there so much independence in the matter of wearing apparel s in Wash- | ington. In city can men walk th district hatless, or even coatless, or in knicker- | bockers, without attracting disagreeable attention? A bank executive may go 10 his office in a golf costume Saturday marning without creating a stampede among his office force, or even giggles behing his back. o The first man who had the temerity to step out in golf togs was the Lind- bergh, Fulton, Columbus, Field and Edi- son of his generation. The boys at the club probably whispered that they always thought he was peculiar and now they were convinced of it. Per- haps they did not chide him openly about his attire. (We know a man who struck a fellow rather smartly for com- menting on the color of his socks.) At any rate, men did not linger in acquir- ing the once . strange-looking outfit, until there is scarcely & man now who doesn't own a pair of plus-fours, even if they wear them when painting the old porch table. * * ¥ % It is an ancient theory if not a say- ing that “you can never judge a golfer by the clothes he wears.” The veriest duffer with the price in his Jeans can dress like a Bobby Jones or Tommy Armour. On the clubhouse veranda they may strut their stuff be- fore the fair members and be taken for those who do the course in a snappy 78. It is on the first tee, as | every golfer knows, that a golf cos- | tume is a millstone and a ball and| chain. The gallery usually expects so much of the wearer and sees so little. No amateur speaker is ever so stricken with stage fright as the dub who ascends the first tee and addresses the ball. He addresses it in silence, it is true, but at the time he would rather ~ be playing tiddledy-winks with little Oscer in the sheltering environs of his own home. Now watch carefully the next fellow who tees up his ball. He wears a bat- tered sort of hat, an old shirt and a pair of pants that once belonged to a street suit. His clothes do not create 2 mental hazard. All he has to think about is to keep his eye on the ball and follow through, which he usually does. You will frequently find him among the low-handicap men in the club. In our early naive days we bought a very elegant golf costume. "It was en rapport with the styles.” Rather swank, as a matter of fact. A new caddy bag and a dozen clubs glittering with pristine beauty completed the out- fit. It was a week day and few mem- bers were playing. On our solitary way to the first tee to play alone, we en- countered a shabby-looking fellow carry- ing a torn and ripped canvas bag, con- taining a driver, midiron, mashie and putter. Our own collection consisted of a driver, brassie, cleek, niblick, back- spin mashie, spoon, midiron, jigger, put- ter and three other trick implements. Every non-golfer might believe that BY THORNTON | were exactly $18 on the debit side of 1 | the ledger. | once took up the game of golf. As an t. a man in | essential preliminary he purchased an of Washington FISHER. a dozen such clubs should beat: four clubs. In auction bridge it would. The nondescript-looking fellow suggested & twosome. Also he ventured the idea of a little side wager on the game. We were very young and agreed. Before two holes had been played we discovered that golf skill does not con- sist of pius-fours and a dozen gleaming clubs. At the end of the contest we One of the best known comic artists exquisitely designed costume. Tail and well proportioned, he looked like a HIS BODY THUDLED TO | million dollars down THE GROUND (0 A | to the tasseled hose CLOUD OF OUST= [that adorned his i llower en,sr:{nnm 5 t was urday £ &m y"”'f\L afternoon when he U176 made his debut. b &, The awninged ve- randa was crowded with folks who watched the artist approach the first tee. An amateur club photographer had & movie cam- era which he set up out of sight of the players, Our friend strode vly up and placed his ball on a und. There was silence. Several de- wiggles preceded the final swing. Raising his club, the artist brought it down in the direction of the diminutive white pill. As he did so he lost his balance and his body thudded to the ground in a cloud of dust. The em- barrassed fellow resembied nothing so much as a base ball player sliding for second. From one side of his face to his fancy hose he was a sad-looking ob- ject. ‘Today he is an excellent player, but it was months before he could be in- duced to play in a golf costume. ‘There are 10,000 Presbyterian congre- gations in the United States. they so often cause! only 40c a large tube. The Business Woman finds a new answer to her oldest hygienic problem Sauses Dental THE EVENING STAR. WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, MARCH 26, 1929. © MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKFAST. Baked Apples Dry Cereal with Cream Baked Sausages Potato Cakes Popovers Coffee LUNCHEON. Corn Chowder Snow Pudding, Custard Sauce Wafers Tea DINNER. Lamb Stew with Potatoes, Onions AN d Carrots Grapefruit and Pineapple Salad Rice Pudding Coffee POTATO CAKES. Shape cold mashed potato into small cakes and roll in flour. Butter hot omelet pan, put in cakes, brown one side, turn and brown other side, adding butter as needed to prevent burning; or pack potato in small buttered pan as soon as it comes from table and set aside until ready for use. Turn from pan, cut in pleces, roll in flour and cook same as potato cakes. SNOW PUDDING. Half box gelatin soaked three hours in one-half pint cold water, then add one-half pint boiling water, two cups sugar. Strain, flavor and set on ice till like jelly. Beat whites four eggs to stiff froth, beat in with the other and set on ice. For cus- tard sauce take yolks four egas and one extra egg and beat with four teaspoonfuls sugar. Add this to one pint milk which has been scalded and cook until like cream. GRAPEFRUIT AND PINEAPPLE SALAD, Cut large grapefruit in halves and scoop out pulp, add one cup shredded pineapple, one-half cup chopped celery, one-fourth cup pecan meats and one-half cup canned cherries. Mix lightly to- gether, place on heart leaves of lettuce and crown with mayon- naise made very delicate by addi- tion of whipped cream. DECAYED teeth and irritated gums are largely preventable: Here is the modern way to guard against the injury to health Guard The Danger Line. There acids form that attack the tooth enamel and irritate the gums. Protect yourself by using Squibb’s Dental Cream. For Squibb’s, being made with 50% Squibb’s Milk of Magnesia neutralizes the acids at TheDanger Line. So it does away with the cause of possible trouble. Squibb’s Dental Cream is delightful. It cleans beautifully and it contains no soaps, grit or astringent. At all druggists, FEATURES.) Happy Children Carefree Mothers favor this blended bread HOLSUM...its New Hundreds of homes are happier, since HOELSUM has cometo town I\\/I OTHERS have been quick to adopt this new blended bread that gives more than 50% of the food children need for happy, healthy growth. They know that asking for Holsum by name is a duty they can not afford to neglect. Their children enjoy Holsum in abundance. Thus they find it easy to insure healthy growth without coaxing children to eat something they do not want. Children who eat plenty of Holsum bread play harder and sleep better. Mothers are relieved of manyworries when they serve this blended bread. Much Greater Value Blending of choicest selected ingre- dients makes Holsum the greatest of allfood values for the money. Holsum repays you many times its purchase price in food-value. Children and grown-ups alike eat bread for food- value. Think how much Holsum bread is worth to you. ¥ New Crust and Texture Blending gives Holsum a thin, tender crust,nut-sweet ...a texture fine and white as angel food. This texture is so even it bakes perfectly into the very heart of the loaf. Thus Holsum slices easily and evenly. Think of the thin dainty sandwiches you can serve with this new bread. The New Flavor Holsum brings a new delightin bread to your table ...a flavor you haw never known before. It's blended. Decide to enjoy this popular new loaf today. Call your grocer. Ask for Holsum. Do it now. THE DorscH WHITE CROSS BAKERS Your home-town bakers for 20 years Because of new perfections, this sci- entifically designed sanitary pad pro- vides a freedom and ease-of-mind never before possible. CROSS the counter, in offices, in A drawing rooms, in country clubs —wherever women meet the world, they are learning new freedom, new composure and ease of mind through the discarding of make-shift sanitary rotection. Kotex has changed the ygicnic habits of women all over the world. New advantages Now come new perfections in this im- ant adjunct to woman's comfort. pad deodorizes completely and 5 by a patented® process to be found in no other napkin. A certain bulkiness associated with old-fashioned methods has been over- me, too. Each pad is rounded and d in such a way as to leave no ace of sanitary protection. You may remove or adjust layers of * filler as needed—a thing all women appreciate. There is a new softness, because both filler and gauze have been specially treated. Cellucottonabsorbent wadding is 5 times more absorbent than cotton. Finally, Kotex is so easy to dis- ose of, eliminating all need of aundering. Buy a box of Kotex today. It is 45¢ for a box of 12 at any drug, dry goods or department store; also obtainable through vending cabinets in rest-rooms by West Disinfecting Co. #Kotex is the only ssnitary pad that deodorizes by patented process. (Patent No. 1,670,587.) SUPER-SIZE KOTEX Formerly goc—Now 65¢ Some women find Super-size Kotex a special comfort. Ex- actly the same as the Regular size Kotex, but with added layers of Cellucotton ab- sorbent wadding. KO The New Sanitary Pad which deodorizes HOL

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