Evening Star Newspaper, July 22, 1929, Page 25

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WOMAN’S PAGE., MILADY B BY LOIS Synthetic Tan. This season has seen a big increase in the range of colors available for milady's make-up box. Of course, the increase is due to the growing popu- larity of dark shades in creams and powders to give the effect of sunburnt skins. With the dark make-up more vivid shades of rouge and lipstick seem to be required. Eye shadow in greenish | or bluish tones and mascara for lashes and brows have gained a new impor- tance for daytime wear. There are in general but three shades | of suntan make-up for the skin. These | include a coppery tone for the blue- | eyed blond, which gives an artificial but | EAUTIFUL LEEDS. The usual way to apply suntan lo- tions is with a sponge. The bottle should be well shaken first, as there is a sediment that sinks to the bottom. Have a bowl of water and a small sponge ready. Of course, the skin must be thoroughly cleansed before the make-up process is begun. Squeeze out the sponge in the water and then pour a little of the well-mixed lotion in the middle. Spread the lotion evenly all over the face, not forgetting the ears, neck and chest. The tint must be brought right up to the hairline, so that it is & plan to have a wide ribbon or a folded towel bound tightly over the hair to keep it back. ‘While the lotion is drying on the face very striking effect; yellowish tan for the girl whose eyes are brown or hazel | and whose hair is brown, and plain dark brown for the girl who can wear it. There are dark ereams, oily lotions, powders and non-oily lotions for im- parting a suntanned appearance to the | skin. Some are applied while the skin | i= moist and others when it is quite| dry. Directions, of course, come with each bottle or jar and should be care- fully followed. I Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY EL!ZASETH ALLEN. Alimony and the Vote. | Ever since Lorelei Lee told a noble-| man abroad that “a kiss on the hand is very nice but a diamond bracelet lasts forever” there has been a zrc\l'-i ing cynicism about alimony. It is| clear to a few at least that alimony| her the spoils of divorce or the cal need of a decreasing number | Alimony was never intended to wreck lives forever. It was intended to support minor children, or to provide | that are old or incapacitated. | as not intended as a penalty for incompatibility or other human failings, As long as alimony satisfies an eco- nomic need it is justifiable. but when it becomes a matter of greed or re- venge, it becomes something entirely different, Few divorced wives think of the “other woman.” present or future, un. til they themselves are the “other wo. man Then they realize the injustice of penalizing human beings all of their lives because of an unavoidable mis- take made at the aitar. One State at least gives the alimony privilege to the husband as well as the wife. This is hardly more than a ges- | ture because few men would care to Io: their self-respect by admitting economic inferiority and inability to said that women accept alimony o they would rather be comfort- ably idle than earn a living and retain their self-respect. This is not entirely true. as one of the spoils of the divorce. one_trouble with the ease- t is boring and it is empty It is unhappy and it is narrow. I only a few characterless enjoy undeserved ali- When life has no meaning nor delicately and then dust with the cor- | rect shade of suntan powder. | necessary, however, to use rouge on the cheeks with a dark make-up. | and lashes. brush them with olive oil to make them | glossy. over a touch of ol or petroleum jelly. cold, bluish reds and choose the gera- | Joyable. apply more of it to the arms and hands (and legs is desired). The lotion is not allowed fo dry undisturbed on the limbs, but is rubbed In with the palms of the hands. It will look streaky at first, but sufficient_rubbing will make it smooth. | " "Now return to the face, which is dry by this time, and dust off the excess color with a fluff of absorbent cotton. This leaves a smooth, waterproof tan that will not come off without the aid of cold creem. Dry rouge is best to use over this sort of liguid base. Put it on It is not Dust the powder out of the eyebrows If they are dark enough If they are pale, apply mascara Suntan make-up demands the use of & bright, warm red lipstick. Avoid the nium or flame shades. A light line of eye shadow should be drawn along above the upper lashes | and then carefully blended upward | over the lids with the fingers. Blue | shadow is used with blue and gray eyes | and the green tones for dark eyes. (Copyright, 1929.) purpose idleness and luxury are unen- ‘Women have the right to vote and alimony. and the two seem anomalous. Why make women equal to men before the law, equal to men economically, and socially, if alimony remains to| contradict all of these apparent equali- ties? It is a matter for women them- selves to decide. Economic need makes | alimony acceptabie, as does dependence, | but any other cauvse should be checked by the feminine ¢ nscience. Creamed Eggs With Peas. Melt one and one-half tablespoonfuls of butter, add one and one-haif table- spoonfuls of flour and cook until it be- | gins to bubble. Add one and one-half cupfuls of cold milk gradually, stirring | constantly. Add one and one-half cup- | fuls of cooked green peas and season | well. Toast six slices of bread and pour the white sauce and peas over them. Heap some hard-cooked eggs. sliced | thin, in_the middle of each slice of | toast. Cut some bacon into half-inch | slices and fry them until crisp. Sprin- | kle the bacon over the peas and pour one teaspoonful of bacon fat over the eggs of each serving. Garnish with | parsley. Iced Cocoa. Awo level tablespoons of cocoa, two | tablespoons sugar, one-half cup hot water, few grains salt, three cups milk, | has given her the most amusement in | heights and weights and the years chil- | one-quarter teaspoon vanilla. | Scald the milk in a double boiler. Mix Soclety still recognizes alimony | cocoa, sugar and salt and add the hot | of colored stones. S Cook over a low flame from 10 |turned them over in her hands, look- | pounds. But some children weigh more water. to 15 minutes, stirring occasionally to | ing at them and turning them into|and some weigh less. prevent burning. Add to the cocoa the scalded milk; return to the double boiler | and continue cooking for 10 minutes. Chill and serve with chipped ice and | whipped cream if desired. . Slenderizing LUNCHEON SALADS for next week -| chance on it. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. I was siting on my frunt steps won- dering weather to spend my dime rite away or elts wait a while, and Puds Simkins came up and sat alongside of me and I asked him his advice, saying, Hay Puds, what would you do? I got a dime and I could buy a peetchy Rock- et kite with it rite now if I wunted. but if I keep on saving it till it got to be 25 cents I could get a swell Red Devil box kite, what would you do? I sed. Well I dont know, its hard to decide, Puds sed. You cgn get a whole round cinnamin bun wil 6 little cinnamin buns in it for 10 cents, he sed. Proving he was thinking of his stum- mick as usual, and I sed, Well what if you can what's cinnamin buns com- pared to kites? Of course a Rocket kite is pritty good, you can get them shape like berds or just shape like kites wich- ever you feel like, I sed. They tare pritty easy, Puds sed. Their ony made out of paper after all, and after all when you jus think of that much paper it dont seem like much paper for a dime. You can get a lot of gumdrops for a dime, you can fl at least 2 of every flavor there is, he sed. The heck with gumdrops, I sed. I wunt a kite, I wunt something that goes up and not something that goes down, I sed. Thats rite, a Rocket kite gets tore without hardly trying, so I think Il save up and get a Red Devil, their made out of cloth, thats what Ill do, Il save up, I sed. If a box kite gets cawt up a tree thats a quarter gone to the dooce just like nuthing. Puds sed. Hay, G, do you know whats happening around at Mommy Simminses store this week? With every 10 cents werth of candy you get a free chance on a 2 pound box of chocklits, he sed. G, do you? I sed. and he sed, Sure, its in the window, it looks swell. dont you go around just to see it? he sed. Wich T did. the result being I bawt a dimes werth of candy to get a free Proving your frends help you to spend but if you wunt to save you haff to do all your own helping. MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. One mother says: When we were through using a bulb| bowl which we had in the house one | Winter, I washed the pretty varicolored | stones which had surrounded the bulbs | and gave them to my 2-year-old daugh- | Why |~ ter to play with. And now, if I were asked to mention some one thing that the two years since then, I would un- hesitatingly mention that 5 cents’ worth At first she just| dishes and boxes, but later on she sorted them, making pictures with/ them. and they have been used latel: i {,ol;fldlflfl'en! items of food for her doll | abies. P M O N D A Y —Lettuce, sliced cucumbers, Spanish onion with Gold Medal Cooked Salad Dressing T UE S D A Y—Stuffed egg salad with Gold Medal Cooked Salad Dressing WEDNESDAY—Lettuce and radish salad with Gold Medal Cooked Salad Dressing ~THURSDAY—Cold boiled chicken and celery salad with Gold Medal Cooked Salad Dressing FR I D A Y —Sardine and hard boiled egg salad with Gold Medal Cooked Salad Dressing SATURDAY —Stuffed tomato salad with Gold Medal Cooked Salad Dressing. (Stuff tomato with celery and apple) (2 the BIG SQUARE J, PARIS—Sketched Bernard et Cie's striped crepe de chine dress, which is even more exciting than it looks for the colors are cherry red and violes. All others beware, I young things, attention! I wish mothers really meant what they said when they say. "My child is different.” Most of them don't. least they do not say it from hearts for the thing they seem to dread most is that their child might be dif-| ferent from all others. ‘The doctor who specializes in the care of little children sends out word that certain vegetables are good for chil- dren. say all children vegetables are good for children. He just says these Tm- | mediately children all over the land | must cat these good vegetables daily or their mothers are frantic with fear. Prolonged study of childhood brings | the declaration that children need a daily nap. All children get that nap. at least the chance to get it. But here and there a child refuses to sleep. Im- mediately the mother is anxious. ~All children ought to sleep in the afternoon but this one won't. What is to be done? Most children learn to read about the sixth year, but there are children who begin to read at 3 years of age. Others refuse to read until they are 7. Are those who delay to be*forced to read or those who start early held back? _Or are they to be permitted their differ- ences? We have studied the relation between dren have lived. From that study we made a table. Children of a certain age and height ought to weigh so many Shall the heavier one be lighter one fed up? Go carefully. The findings of the ex- perts are preclous to all of us who train children. They are our gui nd our reduced or the Notice, please, that he does not | Slim RITA. defense against neglect and ignorance. But nobody ever said they were a final- ity. The more expe: more skilled the specialist, the stronger his caution. so of a great group of children. Con- sider these facts in regarding your child, but remember always he is an individual child and individuality is based on dif- ferences, ‘When you say, “My child is differen have you a reason for saying s0? Ha vou studied him in the light of the spe- cialists’ findings and discovered wherein he differs? Or are you excusing the | child and urself from following the clearly marked road to health and hap- piness through discreet discipline and | happy opportunity for self-help? | It is by bringing out the child's best | differences and eliminating his poor | ones that we educate a child to his full- | est_possibilities. Diet and school work 1 and conduct and the daily routine are related to the child as he is. The gen- eral rule must somewhere be adapted to him because he is somehow, some- where, different. | Do you mean anything real when you say your child is different? | (Copyright, 1929.) | Sherbet. Lemon Sherbet: Cut three lemons in halves, extract the juice, and to this ice add a little water and one cupful | of sugar, and keep on stirring until the sugar is dissolved, continuing adding water until about six glasses are used. | Then add half a teaspoonful of lemon extract and one can of crushed pine- | apple. Stir well and serve in individual glasses with pieces of ice. Orange sherbet is made in the same 3 GOLD MEI)AL NET |2 QZ.“Y- “THE BEST FOODS INC. caco PANCISCO NEW 4 PACKAGE You’ll like the BIG ' SQUARE JAR, too. 12 ounces — half again as much as wsual. rt_the doctor, the | “This we have found to be | SUB ROSA BY MIML Continuity. Pirst came the erreotype of 's _childhood, n the hard, dry plate of the camera to be followed by the rapid film and then the moving picture. The celluloid strip of the movie is the very symbol of con- tinuity, but ”mmnm!hmm 15 required. ‘There must be r smoothness in the way the various actions are to be thrown on the screen, if the film is to tell the story in a natural manner. The eye can bridge over the tiny gaps be- tween the ssparate exposures better than the mind ean fill in between the acts when the play is poorly construct- ed, ‘Therefore the studio must have a person who directs the pictures in such a way as to make the plot plausible, the action natural and the story some- thing we can almost believe. There are blank spots on the screen just as there are bits of static in the radio, and there are also gaps in the moving picture play. But that’s a matter of machinery. In a certain sense, every girl's life is a moving picture which is seldom pho- tographed. She-may have snap shots of herself at home or on her vacation, and in rare cases-there may be fllms of her acting; but most of us perform instinctively without any camera man in front of us. The thing a girl's life needs is con- tinuity. Most of us are on the job and | equal to the occasion at times, perhaps most of the time; but that is not the same thing as the continuity which a life deserves. Walking, they say, is a series of falls, but we move right aloni and do not “fall down and go There is often lack of continuity be- tween private life and public, home life and the way we live outside the four walls. We have one set of exposures for the members of the family, anather for our crowd of friends. We talk one way with a girl friend, another with a boy friend. Of course, there must to b certain natural differences. or our lives would be like steel engravings instead of moving pictures; but we can still aim at a kind of continuous per- formance in all we say and do. We dress according to continuity when we don an ensemble. Why not live in the same ensemble way so that there may be consistency in the pat- tern of our lives? We want our duds and hats to be becoming: we can aim at the same effect in words and acts. ‘The single film movie and one-piece frock are the ideals of today. Now such uniformity may well serve as model for a girl's life, if she wants to live as though she were the heroine of & beautiful romance. oty R Abe Martin Say ‘The feller wno kin drink a quart without showin’ it might be questioned about the mysterious disappearance of 785 barrels from the bonded warehouse at Chicago. About the worst combination I know of its lots of pep an’' no judgment. GOL FEATURES. " WORLD FAMOUS STORIES DIBDIN’S GHOST. BY EUGENE FIELD. , was an Ameri famous. (Eugene Field, 1850~ Fis today very time—and much belo: humorist and poet, he was in his own a3 well. Dear wife, last midnight, whilst I read the tomes you so despise, a specter rose beside the bed and spake in this true wise: “From Canaan’s beatific coast I've come to visit thee, for I am ‘Frognall Dibdin’s ghost,” says Dibdin's ghost to me. I bade him welcome, and we twain discussed with buoyant hearts the vari- ous things that appertain to biblio- maniac arts. “Since you are fresh from t'other side, pray tell me of that host that treasured books before they died,” says 1 to Dibdin’s ghost. “They've entered into perfect rest, for in the life they've won there are no auctions to molest, no creditors to dun. ‘Their heavenly rapture has no bounds beside that jasper sea; it is a joy un- known to Lowndes,” says Dibdin's ghost to me. Much I rejoiced to hear him speak of biblio-bliss above, for I am one of those who seek ‘What bibliomaniacs love. “‘But tell me, for I long to hear, what doth concern me most—are wives ad- mitted to that sphere?” “1“','! 't’“"‘“ P! says I to Dib- “But what of those who when we would read in bed? w&‘: ::“':f ing victuals, make a fuss if we buy books instead? And what of those who've dusted not our motley pride and boast—shall they profane that sacred spot?” says I to Dibdin's ghost. ‘Oh, no! They tread that other path, which leads where torments roll, and - worms—yes, book worms—vent their wrath upon the guilty soul. Untouched of bibliomaniac grace, that saveth such as we, they wallow in that dreadful place,” says Dibdin's ghost to me. “To my dear wife will I recite what things I've heard you say. She’ll let me read the books by night; she's let me buy by day. For we together, by and by, wt:luld mh;: that hfilunly host: she's earned a rest as well as 1" says I fo Dibdin’s ghost. 2 ‘Two more fore! pests have joined the Japanese beetle in its depredations of vegetable and plant life in this coun- tary—the Asiatic and Oriental garden beetles. Both of these resemble the Japanese beetle, but are slightly smaller. You'll Like it/ There! . That explains the popularity of Plough’s Black and White Face Powder. Women like it. They like its dainty fra- grance, its fine texture, its natural tints—and its rea- sonable price. Infinitely fine and soft,this pure,fragrant powder goes K on smoothly and evenly, lending tone and texture to your skin. It clings for hours without renewing and its artistic tints blend with your complexion to give natural beauty. Plough’s Black and White Face Powder now comes in a smart,red box which adds color and attractive- ness to your dressing table. Once you have tried Pl s Feco Powder you will want to try the ether equally popular beauty ereations. If you would like a copy of “How te Attain Comple: eauty” write Plough, Inc., 37 Plough Building, Memphis, Tean. Plough.s BLACK=SWHITE Jace Powder PLloughy JnC. new vorx mEmPHIZ ran FRANCIICO SALAD DRESSING ? CONFIDENTIAL TO WOMEN who weigh too much and those who want to continue not to F you’re afraid to look at the scales don’t diet and be hungry all the time — it just isn’t necessary. In- stead, take this course of SLENDERIZING Salads using nothing but Gold Medal Cooked Salad Dressing which is SO delicious and yet does not put on weight. Look at the healthful ingredients—all recognized and recom- mended by dietitians: fresh eggs, vinegar, spices, corn starch, salt and just a wee bit of oil to make it smooth as velvet. Satisfies the appetite without dissatisfying the figure. GOOD DISTRIBUTORS, INC. EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS TELEPHONE NORTH 8763

Other pages from this issue: