Evening Star Newspaper, September 10, 1929, Page 29

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ite ‘WOMAN'’S PAGE. Theory and Practice in Kitchen BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. Cooking s ‘an exact science, It can be calculated with absolute eor- tainty just how long it will take to bake @ cake of a certain mixture and a definite quantity and size provided the oven registers the tempersture needed, Vo s ey oy BKILL IS REQUIRED TO MAKE AND BAKE A GOOD CAKE. and the heat is kept even, diminishcd or increased correctly. There are few foods that cannot be as trecisely plen- ned for in the cooking, whether it is f | from heat regulation. In exact scien- [ | tific_calculations there is no lattitude | | instance, it is known that a certain {as the done by steam-pressure, boiling, baking, A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER The name of Senator Borah of Idaho ‘will be on the front page a great deal for a few weeks. The bitter fight in the United States Senate on the Hawley- Smoot tariff bill is in the offing. Borah has very decided views as to just what should and should not be done in this busi- ness of fixing tar- Here is a story about the “lone lion of Idaho.” Keep it in mind as you read what Bo- rah says and does from time to time in the Senate. It'll probably give you & slant on him that will be worth while. Borah’s one form of recreation in ‘Washington is to ride. Scarcely a day passes but what he may be seen astride his horse early in the morning jogging through the bridle paths in Rock Creek park. Up until a few years ago the Senator's favorite mount was a big sorrel named Jester. There was almost a human friendship between man and animal. Jester was always rewarded at the end of the morning’s ride with two lumps of sugar from his master’s hand. One morning in the park Jester be- came unruly. The Senator was forced to hake use of his riding crop, an un- hnrgaol thing as far as Jester was con- cerned. Back at the stables the horse refused to make peace. Borah's repeated offers of two lumps of sugar were declined. Finally the Senator left the stables, zughtk- street car and rode to his office work. But he found that he couldn't work. Try as he could, he was unabie to concentrate. After an hour or more he clcsed his desk, put on his hat, and told his secretary that he would be out of the office for a while. He didn't say where he was going. ter in the morning he returned and plunged into the day's work. It was not learned until later that he had gone back to the stables, sought out. Jester, made peace with him, and given him two lumps of sugar. Bits of gossip picked up here and there: Representgtive Norton of Wisconsin has his owil horseshoe pitching grounds in the rear of the House Office Building on_Capitol Hill. Eduardo de Medina, minister to the United States from Bolivia, has been in Washington only 17 months, yet has bought 13 automobilies. Four of these, purchased in four months, were of the #ame make, and in the smart class. the States in the etc., and whether the fuel is coal, wood, gas or electricity. In bakeries and other places where cooking is done in large quantities, calculations are made #nd adhered to. In homes, however, ibere are many, times when experiencs is the guide, rather than scientific calculations. Sometimes this is best. The home- maker must decide when to use the exact sclentific method and when to let her practiced judgment be the guide. In baking cake and bread, the scientific method is estimated best. In baking meats that require long cooking, experience is a good thing to rely upon, since the shape of the cut, as well as its weight, is a determining factor apart for these things. In baking cake, for weight will result from prescribed quan- tities, and if these quantities are com- d as dirécted and baked in a pan of the size given inaccuracies are so slight as to be negligible. The manage- ment of the oven can be equally well estimated. ‘When baking potatoes, if done with absolute science, the sizes must be the same and the shapes almost identical. Also the heat in the oven must be the same in all parts, for some of the pota- toes will be closer to the back or the sides of ‘the oven than others. This vegetable is but one of many that could be used to illustrate the point that ex- perience should be combined with scien- tific methods to insure best results. The young housewife has to rely upon calculations as noted in her cook book. She should not, however, expect to be- come & perfect cook by following them blindly and explicitly. She will gradu- ally become aware that what she learns by experience will be as valuable to her scientific cal woman who is determined to become a competent cook can become so through the school of experience. She will find a knowledge of domestic science speeds up the accomplishment. The two things —sclence and experience—should go hand in hand. (Copyright, 1920.) My Neighbor Says: If you wish to cool a hot dish quickly place it in a vessel of cold water to which a half cup of salt has been added. Never dry a fur coat which has been worn in a rainstorm, near a register. Intense heat injures the skin. First remove the moisture with a dry cloth, then hang the coat in a cool place where it wili dry. Before repapering a room over the plaster to see if lt'l: firm. If loose places are found cover them with' white cotton cloth before papering. ‘When baking custard pies have the oven hot for the first 8 or 10 ations. The | good minutes to bake the pastry quick- 1y so that the liquid will not soak through. grub stake. The result was that Oddie cleaned up about $10,000,000, picked on another site, and drew a couple of millions more from that. ‘Then came the panic of 1907 and it left him with nothing. Twice in his life has he gone broke. Without wealth he started out to be elected Governor of Nevada. It was pretty much of a lone fight. He got a battered old au- tomobile and a few dollars and toured the State. Through deserts and over mountains he went, secured the nomi- nation and later election. Republican Sen- ator from Demo- cratic Nevada and ;11: elecuonb’wu iidan, looked upon many as an a lent. In 1926, however, he was re-elected, | de{elfln’ Ray Baker, then husband of Mrs. Alfred G. Vanderbilt. It was a hard fight. Oddie again toured the State—this time in & limousine—and won out. ";-:I’-_ will hold his seat until March, LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. Me and Puds Simkins was wawking | o, along just wawking -along and some man was wawking in front of us with his s\vaw hat so big for him it was all a ways down to his ears, and different peeple was looking at him and laffing to theirselfs and then terning around to get another look when they got past, “ gra es] rls wawking together on pecially ge: account of them g a lot of things are funny even when their not, and I sed, G wisz, that poor guy proberly thinks that hat fits him all rite and here he is wawking along ignorant with everybody lafing at him, thé poor guy. Somebody awt to go up and tell him, Puds sed. G wizz if it was me Id wunt some to tell me, Id think they was doing me a favor, thats & way Id feel, he a:d. and I sed, Me wizz, we'd , | we hear few birds at all. E £y E i g w fl%ifiz i e B ] 3 i SONNYSAYINGS, BY PANNY ¥, CORY. Me an’ Baby been playin’ birdy, an' it was good fun till herp'mted und!yeedln' me a nangle worm, A Sermon for Today BY REV. JORN R. GUNN. Good Salesmanship. “We will buy and sell, snd get gain."—Jas., iv.13, Buying and selling and getting gain is perfectly legitimate. It 7: necessary to the world’s going along. The world needs -god traders, good merchants, salesmen. This little talk is for the salesman. Show me a good salesman, one who is selling someth! worth while, some- thing ple need, and I will show you one who is making no small contribu- tion to the world’s good and happiness. There is no more honorable calling among men than that of being a sales- man. 1 have read a good many talks on successful salesmanship. I have just come across one &mong my newspaper clippings, filed three years ago. It is a talk made by an old man 94 years of age and with 75 years’ experience in the selling game. He spoke as follows: “Success as a salesman depends upon how you_appre & prospect. Then, too, you have to be cheerful and get a man in a good humor before you sell him. You can't sell a grouchy man or ‘woman. “The poets wrote that all the world loves a lover, I say they are wrong. ‘They should have said a ‘cheerful man.’ + “You must know how to size up your prospect and then appear frivolous or austere, as the occasion demands. “Never insist on a customer buying. Be fair and honest, represent a good | firm, sell something worth the money and you don't have to half try in mak- ing a sale.” No matter what one is selling, he will do well to heed the suggestions of ?hu veteran salesman. He speaks out of 75 years of successful experience. What he says points the way to good sales- manship. * SUMMERTIME ¢ BY D. C. PEATTIE. ‘The time of year to see an old Mary- land garden is in Summer, when the ancient trees cast a shade like the depths of an old painting by Constable and the light lies long on pensive lawns and house and pool and flower plot. are held in a trance-like m ¢ even by the songs of birds; sinee J I never saw an old-fashiched Mary- land .garden that was worthy of the name that did not have a crepe myrtle bush by the door. Crepe myrtle and our Summer days are not to be thought of separately. ‘The landscape architect today eschews crepe myrtle. ‘The flowers of crepe myrtle are a shameless rosy purple, and they arrogantly refuse to blend with our timid mod~rn taste in color combina- tions. Bu. in the lusty days of Good King George (a very pindling sort of king, if the truth wince when a pale pink begonia was bedded with a sulphurous ld. And I, for one, will continue to delight in the old-fashioned crepe myrtle wherever I meet it. It belongs to the loose strife family, and by a bit of looking you will find the little purple loose strife in the wayside ditches. I often wonder what form of strife so meek a flower could loose that it should earn that name. - | Gray Hair. | ‘When one beholds his first gray hair his heart within grows cold; he feels a he pulls the gray hair out, or dyes it, in & n‘e. determined other scout shall see that sign of age. It is a melancholy day, and sorrow hourly walks, when man beholds that thread of gray am his raven locks. He sees himself a slippered wight be- fore a smoking fire, too stiff to run or jump_or fight or change a flattened tire. He sees himself on halting feet about the village green, too old to talk or smoke or eat or hit a slot machine. Oh, visions dark and dire confound the man upon the chair, forebodings and bledk fears abound —he’s grown his first gray hair. But man gets used to any- thing: the gray comes, day and night: the hair once like a raven’s wing is frosted now with white. He looks p;n his withered hair, and cries aloud. “By ered o ir 4 jay since ol white; Dame Nature's is the wiest way, ’ e and everything's all H&T . Southern Rice Cake. is in doing it at Lunch on milk and atsworth is told) we did not |_ DOROTHY DIX’S LETTER BOX Why Woman Ought Not Live With Married Children—Promise to the Dead. Dunnommmx: I was left a widow three months ago and am making WHO REMEMBERS? -~ BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. my home with one of my sons and his wife and baby. They are very kind | to me and want me to stay, but I feel that I would be happler if I were making my own living and had a home to myself. Would you advise me to stay, or go and make my own living while I am able? I am 49 years old, strong and well. MRS, M. M. W, Answer: I advise you, with all the earnestness of which I am capable, to strike out for yourself and make your own way. You be a million times happler if you do so, and so will your son and wite, Ites. Nearly all parents quit work 15 or 20 years oo soon and become parasif u) their children long, long before it is neeeunx for them to do so, All of us know dozens of households in which able-bodied men and women, scarcely past middle age, sit about in idleness, forving their children to support them when they should be at work making their own livings. This works a great injustice on the children because it lays a crushing burden on them at the very time of their lives when they are least able to bear it. The son and daughter are just getting a start in business. Their income is small. They are living in cramped '?nlflm and pinching every cent, and to have father or mother come to live with them means mox.gzr mouth to feed where every chop is counted. It means more crowding in an already overcrowded flat or bungalow. It often means depriving little children of needed medical attention and proper food. Of course, if the parents are old and feeble and helpless, or if they are ill, the children’s duty is plain. They must take them in, no matter how great the sacrifice it entails; but in a very large percentage of the cases father and mother are not old, or sick, or helpless. ‘They are selfish. They've got tired of work, and they think it would be easier to graft a living off their children than it is to labor themselves. So father gives up his job and mother breaks up her home, and they wish them- selves on John or Mary, and poor John or Mary cannot shut the door in their parents’ faces. They have to endure the imposition. - ing to live with their children secured father’s and mother's bll]rphull ‘The result is all-round It there m'l:ht be some justification in it, but it doesn't. For father and mother are not ready to sit h; tfiz ault- misery for all concerned. chimney corner. They are restless and dissatisfied, and peevish nng finding because they are unoccupied, and, having nothing else to do, they put in their time interfering in their children’s affairs. No woman who has ever run her own house is ever satisfied in another woman’s house, not even if it is her own daughter’s. No man who has followed a regular occupation all his life is contented with nothing to do but kill time. Nobody who has ever been financially independent has any appetite for the bitter spread of dependence. And so, Mrs. M. M. W., follow your own instinct and set up your own home and earn your own living. You have probably 20 years of good working life before you. - Fill them with your own interests and your own ambitions, | and they will be full years instead of the empty, barren years they would be it you sponged on your children and knew yourself an unwelcome guest, and that they were all secretly :Fecm-ung on what a relief it will bg when mother passes on, and they won't always have to have her under foot. AN DOROTHY DIX. EAR MISS DIX: What must I do? I promised my mother before she died that I would take care of my father and grandmother, who live with us. That was seven years ago. 1 have since married and have two children and we still all live together—if you can call the mess we live in living. I never have a minute with my husband. I never had a meal with just my own little family. My grandmother is old, pouty and meddlesome. My father has no patience with my children. There is always something unpleasant hap- pening and we are always in a family row. My husband and I are very unhappy and feel that we are wasting the years that we could be enjoying if we could only be together alone. My father is able to hire a housekeeper to take care of them if it was necessary, but there is my promise to my mother. Must I keeB it at the expense of my happiness? - A WO WIFE. Answer: Certainly not. Such a promise is better broken than t. The d have no right to rule the living, and if your mother could see how life worked out for you, she would be anxious to absolve you from your vow. It is & cruel thing for parents to seek to bind their children to any par- ticular line of conduct, use circumstances may arise that make the very thing that seemed the best and wisest at one time a disastrous thing to do at another. When you were a young girl with no other claims upon you, your mother felt justified in making you promise to take care of your father and grandmother; but since you are married your responsibilities have altered, and now your first duty is to your husband and children, and you have no right to sacrifice them to keep a pledge to your dead mother. So set up your own independent home where your husband will be happy and satisfied, and where you can rear your children without their being nagged at, and where no one will interfere with your plan of managing them. And you can have this for your comfort—that your father and grand- mother will be just as much relieved to get rid of you and the children as you are to get away from them. Family friction works both ways, you know. If your ther fusses at the children, it is because they irritate him and get on his nerves. Not all old people love to have the little darlings around and enjoy their inno- cent prattle and artless shouts. Oftener than not they would like to choke them. Bringing up one family is about all anybody has the strength to stand, and for that reason every household should be to itself. i Besdles, old people yearn for freedom as much as boys and girls do, and mesent being taken care of and told what to eat, and what to wear, and all the balance of the family nagging. - A great neurols told me not long ago that his whole reputation for curing nervous jers rested on his separating families. He said it would cure almost any case of nervous prostration. So try it. DOROTHY DIX. (Copyright, 1929.) DIET AND HEALTH BY LULU HUNT PETERS. dea has then every afternoon, and sometimes in the forenoons, too, it hangs from 99 3-5 to 100. It is not often 100, but usually 99 3-5. “I will feel so relieved to have you laugh at me, if you like, and tell me the temperature is so slight as to be unimportant.—] D ‘The normal temperature of adults varies from 98 to 99 degrees, and the highest period is betweeen 4 and 6 in the afternoon. The lowest is 3 o'clock in the morning, e e s Rm et and worl Your temperature goes slightly above this, Mrs. D., and in connection with your weakness and nervousness it may indicate that you are suffering from some of toxemia (this literally means poison in the blood). A toxemia may be produced by ab- sorption from intestinal putrefaction, carious teeth, diseased tonsils, etc. One of the first things we think of in va- riation of the temperature with symp- o Droportion o, the. phySical cause for of pi e pl cause for it, vague intestinal disturbances, and loss in weight—is early tuberculosis. I think it would be a good plan for you to have a check-up by a lung spe. clalist, Mrs. D. Tuberculosis is curable, 50 don’t be frightened by this warning. “Is there any objection to one's sleep- ping face downward, without a pillow— lying on the stomach? I am a young woman of 25, nervous and anemic, have art, and not at all strong I find that in this position relax gll_l'ckly, both mentally and for position in sleeping is one that you are most com- Temperatures. “Dear doctor: I am 41 years old and have several small children. I haven't much strength, and oftentimes am ter- ribly weak. Haven't the money to go to a doctor unless it is necessary, so will you please tell me if I have any cwuwlurpuum? the Winter I discovered I was a slight temperature and it still continues. It is so slight that it probably does mot mean & ; however, I am not so sure. This is the way it is: In the mornings it is slightly below norm.:l, MOTHERS tain wrinkles may become by always being dented in the same lace. The Japanese women are noted for their wrinkleless swins, and I have Wisdom'is knowing the right thing to. do; judgment . the right time. For bathing or stocl *“Oriental Sun-Tan"” gives an excep- “« tionally realistic effect. Swimm! mo_effect, as it wi and does pot rub off or streak. in White Flesh and Rachel. Dancing or Vigorous Sports When the Social Oyster , near Twelfth street and Rhode Isiind ave- nue northeast, was a grand place for a good time. v Everyday Psychology BY DR. JESSE W. SPROWLS. Physiological Types. Some psychologists are not content to believe that the brain is the one and only seat of mind. For them the brain is more or less of an accident. They get their cue from the biological fact that some animals do not have that organ which is called a brain proper. So they hold. that the whole body with its several sorts of tissues is involved. In other words, what we ordinarily call mind is scattered all over and all through the body. The number of psychologists who sympathize with this theory is on the increase. It compares favorably with the common sense notions that any one gets when he looks at human nature in the rough. First of all, there is the so-called ali- mentative type of person. There are the folk who from all appearances ‘live to eat. Their bodies are characterized by an all-round rotundity. Their heads are small in proportion to the rest of the body. They spend the better part and how to get it. Next_comes the thoracic or chesty type. High chest, long waist, bridged nose, high insteps, long hands and fingers. ‘Their minds seem to run to exploration, fighting, athletics, etc. Ac- tion is the key to their thoughts. is the muscular type. The muscular folk are a little below the average in height, but their arms are longer than the average. Their thoughts turn to mechanical activities and a gen- | eral interest in power of all sorts. Fourth is the osseous or bony type. ‘Taller than the average, long, promin- ent bones, small head girth, long, nar- row face. They think in terms of en- durance. Plucky sort of fellows, no matter what they set out to do. Lastly, the mental or brainy type. 1 Smaller than the average in most ways. Delicate features, high forehead, head larger in proportion to the rest of the body on the average. Their minds turn to philosophy. They ponder over ab- stractions. From their ranks the artists and inventors and scholars are recruited. (Copyright, 1929.) o American machinery is being used in 70 countries throughout the world. of their time speculating about food | FEATUR ES MILADY BEAUTIFUL . BY LOIS LEEDS. Coiffure for Wavy Hair. Dear Miss Leeds—(1) My hair reaches to my shoulders and is wa on the sides, but not at the back; the ends are very curly. How shall I dress it? (2) I have a medium complexion, blue eyes and blond hair. What colors are most becoming? (3) How can I remed{ split ends of hair? (4) I take size 45 shoes and have rather large ankles. What style shoe should I and should I have spike heels? I amn slender, 5 feet 5 inches tall. SWEET SIXTEEN. Answer.—(1) A center-part coiffure with curl ‘on the forehead would be Fretty. Draw the hair back, showing he lobes of the ears. Make the ends of hair into round curls and either pin them flat as sculpture curls at the back of your head or let them hang in short ringlets about your neck. For a change you might push the hair behind your ears, letting the ends curl up below the ears and around the back of the neck. (2) A medium-blue printed figure on a white or eggshell ground would be be- coming. You may also wear powder blue with or without peach color trim- ming. Navy with bright blue, almond green, tan, yellow-green or henna or rose trimming is pretty. Choose creamy flesh, peach, blue-violet, pale yellow, bronze, blue-gray, fig, cameo, beige, B indy and black. (3) The ends should be clipped two or three times a year. Too much splitting in- dicates drynes sof the hair. Have a warm oil treatment before your sham- poos. (4) You are tall enough without spike heels, which are unhygienic as well as ungraceful. One cannot walk gracefully with very high heels on. Choose a medium heel. Your feet are small for your height and you may wear pretty style of uppers. Have ox- fords for walking shoes and strap slip- pers or pumps for other occasions. The low-cut oxford with one or two sets of eyelets is popular and quite dressy in suede, reptile or kid. LOIS LEEDS. Curling Fluid Recipe. Dear Miss Leeds: (1) Please give a simple recipe for a curling fluid. (2) I am 16 years old, 5 feet 6 inches tall, and weigh 115 pounds. I have always been thin. My measurements are: Bust, 32; walst, 2412; hips, 32; thigh, 18; calf, 12%,; ankle, 8';; wrist, 6, and neck, 12}2. Are these right? (3) I have blue eyes, light brown hair and a fair skin, ‘What colors are most becglng‘? Ed CKLES. Answer.—(1) Boil a tablespoonful of flaxseed in a pint of water until the liquid is reduced to half its original volume. Strain and add one ounce of cologne water and one and a half ounces bay rum. Thin with rose-water if de- sired. (2) Try to gain 10 pounds, as you are underweight. Your thinness shows mostly at thigh and calf, but the Willie Willis BY ROBERT QUILLEN. “Me an’ was goin® to from home, t ever’ time he gfi: licked we have layer cake or somet i like that for supper.” run away VY | never reach other measurements are also too small in proportion to your height. You are of a naturally slender build and may the average weight for your age and height, but you should try not to be skinny. (3) Blues in medium and light tones are, of course, the obvious cHoice for your clothes. Golden brown, bronze, tan, sand and beige are excellent, especially with touches of bright blue, orange-yellow, or jade. You may wear pastel pinks, pale yellow, blue-violet, gray, navy, black, blue green and dark green. Off- shades of white, fig and eggshell are charming. Bluish reds may be used as trimmings. LOIS LEEDS. Halr Color. Undecided—The sample of hair you |sent is a golden blond shade. | LOIS LEEDS. KE SUFFERED FOR TEN YEARS Then ALL-BRAN BroughtRe- lief in 2 Months — Doctor Recommended It Constipation is dreaded not only for its own insidious self, but be- cause of the many serious conditions and diseases it causes. Mr. Lind was a sufferer—but read how he found relief. “For the past 10 years T have suffered from piles. At times I have been unable to work. I have tried suppositories, ointe ments, etc., but to no avail. “Two months ago my grocer ealled my at- tention to Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN. I began taking it regularly. Immediately the pain and annoyance from the piles was relieved. 1 found that it requires very little ALL-BRAN to give nature s fair chance to effect & cure."—WaLzs J. LiNd, B. 2, Box 137, Appleton, Wis. Don’t neglect constipation. At any time its poisons may take terri- ble toll from your health and well- being. Protect yourself. Eat Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN regularly— two tablespoonfuls daily, or in chronic_ cases, with every meal. ALL-BRAN brindgs sure, natural relief. It is what doctors call a bulk food. It sweeps the intestine clean and stimulates normal action. Ready-to-eat with milk or cream. Also try the recipes on the package. Results guaranteed. Doctors recom- mend it because it is 100% bran. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. Served in hotels, restaurants, and dining cars. Sold by all grocers, [ ALL-BRAN 5.y “Miracle Cream Gives New Beauty OVERNIGHT" » And now from France, comes the most startling beauty dis- covcg of the century. It was found by the famous Felix Laroche, world-known Parisian Cosmetician. A single amazing cream which replaces all other beauty aids. It is called Cream of ams. Nothing has ever been found which so quickly yields new beauty. You will see results over- night. New charm. A finer skin. , more refined hapds. For this astonishing discovery, at one application cleanses the skin; leaves it velvet smooth; heals; ol et ind; feeds tissues E combats blemishes and dry skin, and provides a perfect founda= tion for your favorite make up. Itis n:omnlm skin and beauty treatment. Now in this one cream —the exquisite triumph of France —you will find all that is required for quick and amazing beauty,” Only One Cream Now Needed { The Secret of Cream of Creams is thet it actually penetrates to ! the depths of each tiny Wfi i Dead skin, hardened oil, dirt an grime your eyes can not see, all are removed by simple rubbing or massaging the cream into the skin of face, neck, shoulders, arms and hands, and then gently wip !:;z séxin wit? .le glofllv. tlantly you feel gloriously re reshed. The dry skin becomes soft and pliant. You will look and feel years younger. Use this treat- ment, recommended by leadi beauty experts, for a week er * you will agree that the secret of quick beauty has been found. Youw ‘i see charm multiplied. You will see your skin grow younger day by day, as its vitalize iing oils give new ife to hunary, thirsty, starving tissues. Youe friends will note your is epPearance. 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