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WOMA If you are planning an ensemble for the weeks Summer that still lie before us, you cannot do better than to choose white with brown. There is nothing that at the moment could be smarter or that gives such good prom- ise of continued smartness. And if you are planning an ensembie | for early Autumn you eannot do bet- | gol ter than to choose one of the new soft | THIS WHITE CREPE DE CHINE' PROCK, BELTED AND TIED WITH BROWN, HAS A BROWN, MAROON AND WHITE PRINTED CREPE DE CHINE JACKET. xhades of brown which have been fa- vored by a number of the important French dressmakers. These shades are very smart combined with white— though they are frequently combined with lingerie touches of flesh color or BEAUTY Ways of Reducing. There are dozens of methods of re- dueing, many of them good besides the only real way, which is dieting” There are rubber garments, chiefly to be worn at night . (though how one could sleep is some of them is beyond me) which | Teduce special parts by forcing pers- piration, or by confining the flesh. They are good, but they do not get at the fundamental _ecause of overweight. There are, reducing bath salts, which some women I know have used suc- cessfully—but these are apt to affect the heart, so doctors should be asked about them. They open the pores and foree a profuse perspiration. There are Turkish baths, which re- duce for the same reason. And there are special sets of exereises, which cause the body to use up its surplus fat, and which turn soft fat into firm musele. But none of these take the place of diet, and most of them create sich an appetite that a diet is much harder to stick to. The ideal way is certainly the diet way, with enough exercise to keep the ——— If one gives way to indignation and paws around for half a day, he won't attract much admiration, but men will shake their heads and say, “He's grow- ing childish as he ages; his maudlin ire is uncontrolled. When one breaks out | in futile rages it shows his head skould be half-soled.” The man indignant thinks he's making a great impression as he rants, but he imparts a weary | aching to all his loved ones and his aunts. He uses language loud and grip- ping o'er trifies ‘most too small to see, and people say, “Alas! he's slipping— he’s not the man he used to be. We, once considered him a model of all {hat's stately and serene; admiringly we Watched him toddle, a man of high and | princely mien. And if catastrophes as- | failed him he met them with a noble front; his calm demeanor never failed him; he never pulled an angry stunt. But now he's always sweating, foaming: he pauses every hour to swear; he's al- ways rearing up and combing bis | whiskers in a black despair.” He spolls the home life of his nieces and all who cdwell beneath his roof, since he's in-| clined to fly to pieces and kick with an | indignant hoof. And every time he has a spasm, deserting courses, most eor- | rect, he makes a larger, wider chasm between himself and men's respect. And | zome day while he's busy cussing he | has an apoplectic stroke and under- | takers ecome a-fussing and put him in a te of oak. WALT MASON. | Whiie With Brown for Ensemble BY MARY MARSHALL. CHATS | plexion when you relax N’S PAGE. Y even phk. 11 and tan are some- | times used brown, while chartreuse | which was used s0 often with brown earlier in the season will probably not survive the first early frost. African brown is a rather soft, gen- erally becoming brown that has already | come into favor with the milliners. And den brown is sometimes mentioned— the golden quality of the brown being more apparent in velvet than in felt. Black is never so much liked in this | country as in Prance, where the black | evening dress is worn by smart women | as much in Summer as in Winter. It | is » fairly safe prediction to say that for late Summer and Autumn black | be favored even in this country. | All-black linen jacket suits have been | in favor now for several weeks—and have dome something to show us that | black has possibilities of smartness to make up for its somberness. The im- portant thing to remember is that black really is not particularly service- | able and that it must be worn with as much precision and eare as white or light shades. | | ‘This week’'s Home Dressmakers' Help | gives a sketch of a new sort of collar for & dress with a V neck. If you would like this eircular with directions for. making, please send your stamped, self-addressed envelope to Mary Mar- shall, care of this paper, and it will be | forwarded to_you. (Copyright, 1929.) | BRAIN TESTS ‘The following sentences are simple ones, but the words have their letters jumbled. ! Example: HET SHORE NAR YAWA. Answer: The horse ran away. ‘Time limit, four minutes: (1) HIST COLKC PEEKS DOGO MITE. | i) HET VIRER WOLFS OT TEH (3) NAMY NEM WON LAYP LOFG. (4) THO RIA SIRES; LOCD IRA NISSK. | (5) DEAL SI VHEYA TELMA. All the words are in their correet order. but each one requires rearrange- | ment of its component letters. Answers. (1) This elock keeps good time. (2) The river flows to the sea. (3) Man men ncw play golf. (4) Hot air rises: cold air sinks. (5) Lead is heavy metal. BY EDNA KENT FORBES body healthy, and such extra help as baths or massage can give. You must remember that you cannot possibly gain flesh on food you do not eat; that argument is unanswerable to all people who sav they eat nothing and condnue to put on flesh. Make this your rule for the day Breakfast of coffee with hot milk and no sugar, no food: orange juice before the coffee perhaps. Lunch, one vege- table dish, & little bread, no butter, a light sweet. tea with lemon. Midafternoon tea—It will keep you from being so hungry. | Dinner, always consomme, filling but | not fattening: a main dish., mostly | vegetables, not much meat. fish in- | stead, and a little bit of sweet, and tea or coffee. Weak tea at bedtime, or hot skim milk. | Discouraged—Kicking is a good exer- | cise for the upper portions of the logs. Try first one foot then the other and give a quick decisive kick forward, then sideward, throwing the leg out freely from the hips. Basketball helps l:um. but this is mostly for the entire €s. Esther R—Continual bagginess un- der the eyes indicate a sluggish con. dition with the kidneys or other or- gans of elimination, Consult your doctor. Princilla B.—If you will give vour skin an ice rub once a day, following the bathing or eleansing of your com- e skin a great | deal, you will find that you do not need any other astringent treatment. | . Cottage Cheese, Nut Loaf. | Mix two cupfuls of cottage cheese with one cupful of chopped nuts, one cupful of cold leftover cereal of any | kind, one cupful of dry bread crumbs, two tablespoonfuls af chopped onion or a half a teaspoonful of onion juice | one tablespoonful of fat, salt and pep- per to taste, one-third teaspoonful or more of baking soda 1o neutralize the | acld and a seasoning of sage or mixed herbs. Mix thoroughly, form into a loat and bake in a buttered pan in a hot oven for about 25 minutes or until the top and sides are well browned. Turn out onto a hot platter. Serve with a brown or tomato sauce if de- sired. | The above loaf is very good made with peanuts. Substitute for the cup- ful of chopped nuts in the recipe above two tablespoonfuls of peanut butter | and half a eupful of coarsely chopped peanuts and season with half a tea- | spoonful of Yannd sage or with one teaspoonful of mixed poultry seasoning. I walnuts are used pimentos make a | good garnish, | “Fine Eggs and Oil give it Real Flavor’ SKILFUL COOKS POINT OUT N California, where cook s have the most tempting of fruits and vegetables for their salads, only the finest of mayonnaise can satisfy them. And thut rich, utterly satisfying flavor which means real mayonnaise, they know can only be blended from the ingredients. very choicest of Finest eggs, carefully sefected oil, pure vine- gar and rare spices—these and nothing else are permitted to be used when Hellmann’s Mayon- naise is blended. These—and a famous recipe from old France—give Hellmann’s its subtle enticing flavor. And long beating adds that clear, even texture that is always the same. Get a jar today. At all gro family size is 14 pint—235¢. ounce, pint, and quart jars. cers. The popular | tion which feared a baby's Summer. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, : 1929, “1 don't mind a couple of friends gettin’ together, but I do wish they'd quit tryin’ to compare notes.” (Copyright, 1929.) NANCY PAGE Naney Does Not Fear Second Summer. BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. did not belong to the genera- “second She had heard her mother speak of it but someway it seemed to nave been robbed of its terrors. ‘The knowledge of bacteriology which Nan protected milk. the acknowledged value | of sunlight, of cod liver oll, vegetable pirees, screened houses, boiled drinking water, helped to take away any dangers lurking in this second Summer. Peter and Nancy were more inter- ested in laying a foundation for a likable, happy, well adjusted little son than they were concerned with lurking y zed that their young son was forming habits which might make or mar him. If they could keep up the observance of correct eating and sleeping, they were health., If they could teach him to obey ahd to be responsive they were making him well adjusted to his en- vironment. Of course Nancy paid attention to his food. Now that he was about 13 months. old, he was getting a diet something safeguarding his | WORLD BY NATHANTEL (Nathaniel American _ wrl Hawthorne, 1804-1064, was an pHouse, of the Seven Gables." he Alariet There is snow in yonder cold gray sky of the morning. And through the par- tialiy frosted window panes I love to watch the gradual beginning of the storm. A few feathery flakes are scat- | tered widely through the air, and hover downward with uncertain flight, now al- most alighting on the earth, now whirled again aloft into remote regions of the atmosphere. These are not the flakes, heavy with molsture, which melt as they touch the ground, and are por- tentous of a soaking rain. It is to be, in good earnest, a Wintry storm. The two or three people tvisible oh the sidewalks have aspect of en- | durance, a hlue-nosed, frosty fortitude, which is evidently assumed in anticipa- tion of a comfortless and blustering ¢ /y. By nightfall, or at least bafore the sun sheds another glimmering smile upon us, the street and our little garden will be heaped with mountain snowdrifts. The soll, already frosen for week past, is pre- pared to sustain whatever burden may be laid upon it, and, to a North=rn eye, the landscape will lose its melancaoly bleakness and acquire a beauty of its own when Mother Earth, like her ehil- dren, shall have put on the fleecy garb of her Winter's wear. The cloud spirits are slowly weaving her white mantle. As yet, indeed, there is barely a rime-like hoar frost over the | brown surface of the street: the with- | ered green of the grass plat is still dis- | cernible and the slated reofs of the {houses do but begin to look grsy, instead of black. All the snow that has yet fallen within the circumferesice of my | view, were it heaped up together, would | hardly equal the hillock of a grave. | Thus gradually, by silent and steaithy | influences, are great changes wrought. | storm spirit flings by handfuls through the air, will bury the great earth under their accumulated mass, nor permit her | to behold her sister sky again for dresry our mother's familiar visage, and must | content ourselves with looking heaven- ward the oftener. Slow but sure! The storm-spirit has perchance the week, before him, take his own time to accom- plish nature's burial in snow. A smooth mantle is scarcely yet thrown over the withered grass-plat, and the dry stalks of annuals still thrust themselves through the white surface in all rts of tl garden. The leafless rose bushes stand shivering in a shallow snow-drift, look- ing, poor thlnflhu duconl\}h it they possessed a human conscio | the dreary scene. This is a sad ti FAMOUS STORIES SNOW FLAKES big | solately. saying, * | sacrifice to the immitigable deit; HAWTHORNE. the form of a child’s story, by describ- ing the snowball fights of two schools, the alternate %fi:fl and vie- tories of each, and the 1 triumph of one party, or perhaps of neither! How _does ter herald his ap- proach? By the shrieking blast of later Autumn, which is nature’s ery of la- mentation, as the destroyer rushes among the shivering groves where she has 'd, and scatters the sear leaves upon the tempest. When that cry is heard, the people wrap themselves in cloaks, and shake their heads discon- ‘Winter is at hand!" Then the ax of the woodcutter echoes sharp and diligently in the forest—then the coal merchants rejoice because each shriek of nature in her agony adds something to the price of eoal per ton— then the smoke spreads its aromatic fra- grance through the atmosphere. A few days more; and at eventide the children look out of the window, and dimly pereeive the flaunting of a snowy mantle in the air. It is stern Winter's vesture. They crowd around the hearth, and cling to their mother's gown, or between their father’s af- press frighted by the hollow roaring voice that bellows adown the wide flue of the chimmey. It is the voice of Winter; and when ts and children hear it, they l‘h&ld"wm exclaim: “Winter 18 come T has n hi e begun his reign Now each hearth becomes an altar, sending up the smoke of a continued ‘who tyrannizes over forest, country: and ; town. Wrapt in his white mantle, his staff a huge icicle, his beard and hair, a wind-tossed snowdrift, be travels over | the land, in the midst of the northern blast; and woe to the homeless wander- er whom he finds upon his path! There he lles stark and stiff, a human shape of ice, on the spot where Winter over- took him. On strides the tyrant aver the rushing These little snow particles, which the | rivers and broad lakes, which turn to by & light from heaven. | rock beneath his footsteps. His dreary empire is established; all around stretched the desolation of the Pole. Yet not ungrateful be his children—not have nourished our unylelding strength | of character. And let us thank Winter, too, for the sleighrides, cheered by the | music of merry bells—for the erackling |and rustling hearth, when the ruddy firelight gleams on hardy manhood and the blooming cheek of woman—for all the home enjoyments, and the kindred virtues, which flourish in a frozen soil. Not that we grieve when, after some | seven months of storm and bitter frost, Spring, in the guise of a flower-crowned virgi seen driving away the hoary lting him with violets by the . and strewing green grass on L for | the path behind him. Often, ere he will e the shrubs that do not perish with the Summer; they neither live nor die; | what they retain of life seems but the | cHilling sense of death. Very sad are | the flower shrubs in Midwinter. | The roofs of the houses are now all white, save where the eddying wind has | kept them bare at the bleak corners. To discern the real intensity of the storm, we must fix up some distant objects—as vonder spire—and observe how the riot- snow throughout the intervening space. Sometimes the entire prospect is ob- scured; then, again, we have s distinct but transient glimpse of the tall steeple, like a glant’s ghost; and now the dense wreaths sweep between, as If demons were flinging snow-drifts at each other | in mid-air. | “Look next into the street, where we | have an amusing parallel to the com- bat of those fancied demons in the upper_regions. It is a snow-battle of schoolboys. What a pretty satire on war and military glory might be written, in Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZ |ous gust fights with the descending | give up his empire, old Winter rushes | flercely back, and hurls a snowdrift at the shrinking form of Spring: yet, step by step, he is compelled to retreat| | northward, and spends the Summer | months within the Arctic Cirele. | The storm has raged without abate- | ment, and now is tossing denser volumes to and fro about the atmosphere. On | the windowsill there is a layer of snow | reaching halfway up the lowest pane of | glass. The garden is one unbroken bed. Evening begins to spread its deepening veil over the comfortless scene; the fire- | light _gradually brightens, and. throws | my flickering shadow upon the walls and ceiling of the chamber: but still the storm rages and rattles against the windows! | Then—whence they ecome, nor why. I| do not know—my spirit is cheered by a | wandering flock of snowbirds skimming | lightsomely through the tempest, and | flitting from drift to drift as sportively 2s swallows in the delightful prime of Summer. | ABETH ALLEN. like this for breakfast: Orange juice. | two tablespoonfuls well cooked, strained cereal, crisp teast of zwieback. At 10 oclock he had same milk and | a piece of Zwieback. His main meal | consisted of the yolk of an egg, a small | Was that her husband could not support amount of baked potato; sifted vegetable ' her. It seems that he is a fine family puree, dry toast, warm milk and cooked | man., but simply lacks the. ability or and sifted fruit pulp. His evening meal | whatever it takes to make money. “Can't Support Me.” Yesterday we heard the troubles of a woman, and the gist of her complaint was a_cereal pulp or jelly, some simple, fruit-flavored gelatin, dry toast and milk. The foods were usually given in amounts of about two tablespoonfuls and tne milk, all told, equaled a quart. Write to Nancy Page. care of this paper, inclosing a stamped. self-addressed envelope, asking for her leafiet on Child Care. Made Wigh Apricots. Frozen Aprico™: Remove the skins from one quart of canned apricots and | cut “the pulp in quarters. Add the juice, one quart of water, d two cup- fuls of sugar which h; been made into a syrup. Cool and add the apri- cots. Frecze. Allow the mixture to stand for an hour before serving. Apricot Frappe: Mash one can of apricots and press them through a sieve, then add one pint of sugar and ane quart of water. Put into the freezer and turn until nearly frozen. Fold in half a pint of whipped cream, freeze, and pack. { More than one woman has found her- | self confronted with just that situa-| |tion, and it is not pleasant by any | means. There are two solutions after con- vincing one’s self definitely that a man lacks the earning capaciiy t) provide for a wife and family. It is futile to say that a man who cannot support a wife and family de- cently should not marry. and it is of | no avail to inform his wife she should never have married the man. In a few instances the husband can | actually support his wife in decent style, or even in the style in which she has lived formerly. The latter becomes | | socially ambitious and demands far| {more than her husband ean provide. | We hold no brief for such & woman. On the altar the “for better or worse” vow is made mutually. A woman who | cannot live up to & vow made under | such cireumstances deserves little eon- | sideration in any case. | Generally sentiment and affection, as| | well as respect and devotion, will help ‘ldecide the issue. If two persons are | truly in love, the wife will gladly pitch |in and help swell the family income. Candidly we believe that a truly capable, intelligent wife can do much to inspire and stimulate her husband | to increased earning capacity. By this we do not mean constant nagging. | scolding or threatening. But by talk- ing over his work and problems, rais- ,ing his hopes, relieving his mind of domestic worries and cares, and by radiating eonfidenc and courage. Pa- tient persistence has put many a third- rate man on top. Few men are so lack- ing in ability they eannot support their own, provided they have the proper | incentive. A woman failing to supply | the incentive has herself to blame. Britain’s oldest clergyman has been founfl in Rev. Denham Rowe Norman of Litchfield, England, who recently | eelebrated his 101st birthday anniver- | sary. Look LovelyTn-ght: New Skin Beauty in Five Minutes—It’s as Simple as Washing Your Face Sallow, Dingy Skin made Lovely —Ceoarse Pores become Fine— It corrects oily shin, h tions and dissolves blackheads This easy, quick way to new skin beauty is called the most amazing beauty miracle of modern seience. ‘Women are astonished! You will not believe it until you see other women suddenly get lovely complexions. Think of it! You can have a clear, lovely skin tonight. Any woman over twenty-five looks at least five years younger in five minutes! Dull, off- color skin is changed to bright, true- color; enlarged pores are refined to the smoothest. finest textur skin is corrected: kheads & solved: persistent skin eruptions are banished and the tell-tale signs of age vanish as if by magic! r com- as if akin plexions Tovely faults e ay with sponge. You will marvel at the lovaly face you see in your mirror tonight. Instant Skin, Beauty. It's no fairy wand that gives & mew skin so quickly, It's simply due to the’ amazing. reluvensting br | f magnes | dermatologists are getting amazing re- | sults in banishing complexion faults with cremed magnesia. All you do ‘ is anoint your skin with it. massage and ringe ‘with water. It's s simple | as washing your face! | Accidental Discovery. found 'it remove: make-up and ex- tracts impurities n the deep-set 1 pores hetter than any soap or gleansing cream. Fotia e discovery, science | ed ‘milk of msf mothers to | Afater the “skin n. bathe infan way that plain milk of ing to fine. sensitive sl | purifl stomach. This so easlly iritates and coarsems. Be- | se’ skin impurities are acid. ing sreaseless, 1t cannot faften the treat insid hody or srow hair. with milk of 11 And, now, usands of doctors now insist Until recently, cremed magnesia was Do not hesitaty to use this ma; e e Formata ot "5 Cvers skin _trestmgnt ot E cessful New York skin specialist. of deligl vomen Nave writien He prescribed it as a sure, they could not at first leve any- remedy to heal unsightly skin erup- thing _so simple could be so wonder- | . * But, women soon discovered ful. But, they were convinced when it also refines enlarged pores ihey eaw 50 many frie changes sallow off-color skin to ‘true- ORI Jomplax color clearness and makes the face look years youpger. They even the largest dru ' GUARANTEE! fm) i\ enesia y that milk || the stomach || priceless skin beautifier, better for your eomplexion than anything ever It takes the place better than a bushel of lemons. Doctors Recommend It. s0 use nothil ut cremed a0 gnesia_on their faces. . They say it keeps fine inn fine and uml skin lovely. [t is pure enous! 3 Don’t Hesitate, | | i | | | that thelr wives, patients and mirses ‘ | | | for not Denton's im- an iy eomigne. "3 soate’ almost ot ing to & now offers you a ry. WHO REMEMBERS? MY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered -t . When all roads led to the Gold Rush near Great Falls, Va., and Washington prospectors had visions of millions. A Sermon for Today BY REV. JOEN R. GUNN, Pepper vinegar may be made by | placing some small chill peppers in ::ne f' and allowing to stand FEATURES. 3 salt to one of water. over night. m the flmuhum‘ ‘-tnl: gpen and drain the onions. Pack peppers and onions in jars. Heat vinegar, adding as much fresh needed, and pour over. will be ready for use in Hot Pickled Onions. unulhck{h 1 be hot in a few days but will | be better by remaining longer. small onions, Select | Vinegar as and cover with | Seal. They using one cupful of WO days. HERES BLACK FLAG LIQUID, MADAM ABSOLUTELY — | USE BLACK FLAG Bracx Frao kills flies, mosqujtoes, ants, roaches, bedbugs, ete. Quickly! And surely! It is the deadliest insect-killer made. (Money back if mot satisfied) BLACK FLAG 35¢.... Soul's Light Is Darkened. ‘Text: “If the light that is in thee be | darkness, how great is that darkness.” | ~Matt., 6.23. | ‘The poet speaks of being led astray By which I understand him to mean that he was led astray by something heaven-like in his nature. And this is what I under- atand Christ to mean by the light months. We, likewise, shall lose :ight of | ungrateful even for the severities which | ¥ithin & man being darkness. He has in mind the man who permits himself to be led into evil by impulses which l.:x :me:'.:;:m and noble. He man who possesses brilliant qualities and who allows these vor{ qualities to lead him into deeds of darkness. But the point Christ specially makes concerning such a man is that, just, because his sin comes from something noble in his nature, it is all the more | difficult to detect it. “If the light that ' is In thee be darkness, how great is| that darkness.” How great is the dark- | ness when a man’s vices are cloaked in virtues, How great is the darkness that | veils & man’s sins when his sins origi- nate in brilllant qualities. Nothing 0 | veils sin and makes it so difficult of being seen and recognized, as when it | is cloaked in the lght of something really good in a man. One is never in greater peril than when he permits himself to be led into evil by something noble in his soul. How . noble is love. Yet into what peril men and women are often led by misplaced love. They deceive themselves, and ere aware of their da gser. they step over the precipice into darkness. And how great is that darkness! Great darkness always follows when the soul's light is darkened. Anchovy Toast. Put a tablespoonful of butter into a saucepan and place this in a larger dish of hot water. Add a tablespoon- ful of curry powder and a dash of cayenne pepper. As soon as the but- ter has melted and the water in the outer utensil is bolling, pour in two | well beaten eggs mixed with half a tablespoonful of anchevy paste. Keep stirring until the mixture thickens a | little. then remove at once from the hot water te prevent curdling. Spread | ! on toasted bread. | LIQUID ===rc. why pay more Black Flag also comes in Posder form. Equally deadly. 15¢ and wn LT COMPANY. INC, Fair days or foul days, this salt is free running LET "EM set the storm signals! Tssue all the weather warnings they waot, It will make no difference to International Salt! Dampness doesn’s affect it in the least. It flows as evenly and easily on hot, rainy August evenings as it did on clear, cold days in December. It will never clog your salt shaker or harden in your salt cellar. It's guaranteed. And it's the cleanest, purest, most savory salt that can be made. A l:::c. attractive carton costs only a nickel at your grocer’s. What a Splendid way | to start the day! I:; on the dot. Dressed in a iiffy. Down to your beaming breakfastof“'something good™ —really good—Heinz Rice Flakes. Crispy, crunchy flakes of nut-like flavor. Nestling in a bowl of cream and sugar. In goes your spoon. Up comes that first luscious mouthful to greet your eager appetite. Who wouldn't be happy? Especially so since the de- light of these breakfasts is followed by the delight of doing things with a new fresh- ness of vigor and a swirl of energy. For Heinz Rice Flakes are good to eat as well as good to taste! By a new, patented, Heinz process, these fniry-like flakes contain a pure, edible ce/lulose which comes from the natural roughage element of the rice itself. And sbis provides the health-giving qualities of a gentle, natural laxative. ‘What fun it is to be healthy and to keep healthy in this happy, natural way! EINZ | H Rice FLAKES OTHERS OF THE 57 HEINZ OVEN BAKED BEANS, HEINZ VINEGARS