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WOMAN'S PAGE Colored Stockings Gain Favor BY MARY MARSHALL. . ‘The time has passed when & woman's stocking problem might simply by having & suffitiently generous supply of flesh-colored, sheer 8llk stock- ings, to be worn on every and any occa- sion. There I8 & steadily growihg in- terest in colored stoekings which should not be ignored. Your owh personal preferences may be for fleshi-colored or neutral-tomed stockings. tinted lavender, green, Blue match the frock may séem ln d taste to them as im) intolerance. Colored ngs been worn in thi v.n and are likely. to be worn again in the future. ESIGNS TY RNIT 3 CHIFFON STOCKING, WHICH MAY BE IN VARIOUS LIGHT TONES, HAS LONG LACE CLOCKS. STOCKING IN TONES TO HAR- MONIZE WITH SUIT. Stockings chosen to match pastel- tinted evening frocks are no longer cause for surprised comment. Very sheer silk stockings are as much admired as ever, but women who take pains with the detalls of dress do not wear them with sports clothes, nor con- sider them appropriate with substantial tweeds. Dull surfaced stockings—either silk or lisle—are preferred by many women for wear with woolens and sub- stantial linens. Various sunburned tones are still the usual choice for wear with daytime resort clothes—and these tones are also chosen for wear with street clothes in town when they harmonize with the costume. There is an increasing in- terest in dull, dark tones—gun metal and dusty tans. This week’s help for the home dress- maker gives & number of nautical de- signs of the sort that are embromend LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE be solved | D Spring. If you would like a copy of the éircular please send your stamped, self-addressed envelope 0 THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE on sleeves of middy jackets and m:m 4 louses this Ma arshall, éare of this paper, and | ; & v be forwarded to you. (Copyright, 1930.) MENU FOR A DAY. BRUAKFAST. Preserved Pears. . Bran with CreAm. Pish Hash, Cornmeéal Muffins. Coffee. LUNCHEON, Corp Chowder. ckers. Pinéapple Shortcake. Teh. DINNER. Mashed utt Russiin Dreulns nut cultlrd le. FISH HASH. Ohe quart cold bolled pot toes, two cu fréshened ult codfish, seasoning vhr le salt and pepper PI!(IAPPLS !HOI!TCAKE Sift together two cups flour, one-halt teaspoon salt and three teaspoons baking powder. Work in ‘one-third cup butter and molstéh with enough milk to inake a dough as soft as can be- handied. 1l out one-half inch it thickness, cut into 12 small round cakes, spread six with softened butter, place the remaining six on top, bake until delicately browned, split open, spreadl with butter shredded eooking and put and sweetened pine- apple between the layers and over the tops. COCOANUT CUSTARD PIE, Two ens one pint milk, one teas flour, one teaspoon vanilla, one-h-lf cup sugar, pinch of nutmeg, one cup cocoanut. Bake a shell first and put this mixture in, then let it stay in the even until it starts to puff up. 1t is very good. Household Methods BY BETSY CALLISTER. For Garden. Iron garden furniture or other meu\ arden furniture, suitably painted, is indeed ideal. For water doesn't hurt it. Of course, eventually such furniture would rust if it were not repainted, but | that is a contingency unnecessary to conslder, for it can be easily and cheap-| Nautical Theme. A vivaclous printed crepe silk in prmceu silhouette that will make you Iurmln&lly slender. t is fitted with seaming through uu bodice that is an excellent means of detracting from brndth thus adding helgm to the figu: 'he lating at elther side of the front o'l hipline also does much toward ad- ding to the effect of sienderness, and exg_ es smart nautical detail. 'he collar and cuffs of this jaunty model are plain crepe in blending light- est tone of the F ‘The lacing chooses the deepest wne and is gros- grain ribbon. It's a splendid model for street, for town, for country club and class room. Style No. 252 is designed in sizes 18, 13, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 43 in¢hes bust. Navy blue crepe silk with lacing in | tomato red is swagger with collar and cuffs of white pique. Feather welght woolen, covert cloth, wn jersey, canton crépe and wool repe ‘appropriate. Dzu uns DIX: Do yéu thirik a mar dares for & woman whom he persistently | hav ne This man is & fine,: clesn, intelligent cha; d he is enga to etses to love dearly, yet mmy’lo‘r“vmnn do'e:dnm She doésn't even know where eating her heart otit over this thiny expect, never knowing whetheér he will but her confluenee 18 repidly fading. wwld you advise aAwailt results? & Answer: To me this like a pl the final result of all the .m'. 'mm church, 80 to speak. Besides, no girl wants to bo vnnu w feel uu absence will b If he really loved her, this would be the which she wouldn't get some message from where he was, what he was doing. He would interests with her. He would want the assutae that she was missing him. And if a man is too indifferent and selfish. to his sweetheart, or too tight-mouthed to téll her where n after marriage he will be one of the careless husbands who ¢ to réeturn home at all. The number of wife-deserters is Every day we read in the newspapers it come back home after 10 or 30 years’ absence, 6ld'afd broken and sick, and who ts his wife and children o siay the fatted MI! support and nurse him the balance of his life. So my earnest advice to the lady with the nnee lfllchd wm) pen rrnlyl and who is shy of the telephone booth, is to give him the welcome the next time he comes huk out m silence lnd mu to také un their love affair where he dropped He has shown by his sctions that he doesn't really lnve her, that she is not necessary to his happiness, and he can get along perfectly well ‘without her. He has demonstrated over and over again Lhal he has no regard for her feelings, for the knowledge that her heart is torn with anxiety over him, and that his failure to write hurts and humiliates her, doesn't stir him up even to the exlem of send+ ing her a postal card. She will have no chance of happiness with such a man. He is M husband material. He should never marry any Wemtan, but remain free and untrammeled, ‘When we lp.lkdmh\uhnfl' the sort the law gives a wornan the right to divorce, we mean the men who are unfaithful to the! Tds, the wife-beaters, the men who commit crimes ful if these men are really worse husbands the good men who are just neglectful. These men do not mean to be unkind, but just never take the trouble to do anything to make their wives happy. There are so many men Who never even fiotice' whether mu wives are ';l:t % or well; whose wives might wear the same old dress for 10 years, or have oné every day, and would never see the difference; Who féver pay- their wives a compliment; dictate brief letters to them to hotel sten when they are away h«n home; who never make their wives personal show that they have studied their tastes, or even listen to the innumerable hints that hive been given them of things n:eh- wives want. These men may be models of lll the virtues. They may be really fond of their wives. They may be good providers, but they are bad husbands because they starve their wives for tenderness and love. ‘Therefore, a girl can promise herself no happiness if she ggrlu a ncclccmu man. (Copyright, cents in stamps or cdin directly to The Washington Star's New York Fashion Bureau, Fifth avenue and twenty-ninth street, New York. ‘We suggest that when you send for pattern, you inclose 10 cents additional Iar a copy of our Lw sprlnl Fashion Magagine, just off ti —_— 0 vocnuonll schools _mu__.,.m_,_._.._.._._. ——— A word to remember! Twem tvm Ne; ppi offer reforestdtion and to_celebrate his return, and | FEATURES homes-from which they had st ohe timéw been discarded because they were “out doubly useful, of parchment, with a|of date.” oolm. but, if preferreq, | These mica shade, ml‘hl be used. However, | o a shade which avolded with this comblnlnon of tile | and iron, and occupying prominent places - does not spatter Hassocks (Copyriaht. 'SPECIAL OFFER FOR LIMITED TIME 1 1b. Troco Nut Margarine and fine aluminum frying pan _ Use Troco for frying any food you wish. The re- sults will delight you. Troco gives you, at a distinct saving, the qualities of the finest frying medium. Enjoy in your fried food the same delicate flavor that makes Troco unexcelled for table use. Fry with Troco once and you will use it always. TROCO 49° are is. dainty should be | material, but in 8 contrasting color. nice for the po:lch“ln"t‘)jfe g&nfiffli o, Tt gy | o et aifactive - E A articles of early times, are coming !m:k | side of an open fire. 1y repainted whenever necessary. Sometimes this iron furniture is| Pop was smoking to himself in painted & most cool and attractive private chair and ma sed, Willyum, reen. Soretimes it is stained to & dropped in to see Gladdis and the batby | dark, almost bronze finish, as if it had this afternoon, and reely Gladdis I8 |weathered, without rusting, in some old quite worried about the baby not hav- | garden of "long-ago days. ing any name yet, and the more she | The smartest sort of garden cushion thinks about various names the more |is made of a heavy cotton fabric in Ro- unde:ided she becomes, because of {man stripes. These vivid colors are ef- course if vou once give a child the |fective in the bright outdoor light, and, wrong name you cant very well change | moreover, will stand fading without it without causing a lot of adverse T” losing their character entirely. sip: although I must admit 1 dont re ish the thawt of our g the grandpar- C1its. of & nameisss child PERCHORITY |, Verly Balf the forests i’ Finlnd munth old. 3 ‘Well, as I bleeve I suggested once or twice before, why not settie the matter once for all by naming the baby Will- yum? pop sed. Meenlng after him in his honor, and ma sed, Now dont bring that up again. you know very well that Gladadis duz- zent consider Willyum & foreible l!nou(h name for the baby, and neither do 1. It did rathér well for wmyum Shakesbeer, pop sed. Have you & fault to find with Bhakesbeer as a model for your dchild? he sed. ‘Well, if he was writing nowadays 1n- sted of in anclent times as he did, T dont bleeve he would maké such & iccess now that peeple lre o1 to better things, ma sed, pop sed, ts rite, for one thlnl thflr 80 used to Shakesbeer by this timé that SEaT S et vee dods WhaL ars . 8 to write, yee what an ideer. How about Willyum the Conkeror, “] wasent he forcible enough? pop Bea“fiful omen He was a fighter, wasent he? ma séd, and pop sed, Ill say he was, he was|) ® 1929, M.-G. Co. more than that, he was a winner, he ||| “Beauties who guard their complulons 'w!u one o( the founders of the Go Get- ||| use MELLO-GLO Face Powder only.” s C! says Dorothy Flood, 8o l Mppooe you wunt to start rlte her beauty. Pamous for purity—its-col- in by making a common tuff of y | oring is approved By the Government. grandchild, ma sed, and4pop sed, W!“ skin is never irritated—nor looks no, I dident have any such intention, ty or flaky. It spreads more smoothly but now that you suggest it, I think 1ii & youthful bIoem and bre- :mthe limit and make a mm amcuu- ents large Bores. Made by & new Prench M:::h?: Bl e 'Em"z- o ot ||| Process. MELLO-OLO Pace Powder ) (b ey m | on_longer.—Advertisement. biems"of this style send 15 e Prevendion 'nsiruction, Tropical Coconut NUT MARGARINE " 'ON2 OF DURKEE'S FAMOUS FOOD CHIIDRIN instinetively ask for this wholesome health Juicy. and Sweet food that builds them strong. MORE FLAVOR MORE JUICE MORE PLEASURE ....FLORIDA ORANGES AND GRAPEFRUlT 9 LEAI‘IN HO'JSF SOCIATISS For Health Drink Orange and Grapefruit Juie -4 9 “fresh roasted* Peanut Butter | e delicately Made For i colored” bs and these soft, white ‘WhiteHouse Coffee There i 1s No Finer Flavor! —-‘—-——‘—-—-——-fl ' Bic BARGAIN OFFER | | 1/3 more for your money ! | AT ALL STORES TODAY || CLicQuoT CLUB il <— Pale Dry Ginger Ale || '.Ep‘e"t_als of soap will help keep “them looking like new 0 leave streaks on your gloves... alldire goes outinthe rinsing watet. Small use in following the ways of fashion . . . when cateless in full pint bottles! RE'S a bargain in gine ger ale at your store. It’s Clicquot Club Pale Dry, the only nationally known dry gin= ger ale put up in full pint bet- tles. It offers you 4 éxtra ounces for your money. Little 12-ounc¢e bottles are A6t quite enough to go around s s « Ahd near §uarts often go flat before they ate used up. The full-size pint of Clicquet is the economieal way to buy. Clicquot Club Pale Dry, the famous aged ginger ale, comes t6 you in cleant néw bottles to protect its purity. Read the label on the bottle. it guarantees & full 16 ounces. Clicquot Club PALE DRY i | / ¥k -+ At a New Low Price 1=9USE COFFEE has behind it a history of over forty years of ovepwhelming popularity! Now you may buy this choice coffee at a new low pricé, because the hatural bean is obtained at a lowered cost. The makers of White House Coffée pass this saving on .hoynl. . vIts rich full flaver gives you more cups to the pound . . . the delicious aroma of White Houn Coffeé will delight you BUY A CAN OF WHITE HOUSE (‘OFFEL Am KNOW THE FINEST - DWINELLWRIGHT COMPANY': Booton, Mass. Ghlmo, 1l Portsmouth, Va. ‘snowy, bubbly suds faundeting takes all ‘the delicate eolot out of your Spring gloves! Yet it's so simple to keep them fresh and new-looking—when - you use these downy-soft petals of soap. § For Kirkman's Chips prevent dirt from re-déposiu'ng As each patticle of dire is floaced inco the .o A tiny globuie of soap surrounds it .. . and holds it . . " holds it firmly «+ o until all the washing is finishéd, No dirt cen be re-deposired Let your gloves tell pretty tales of care with thesé pure, fluffy soap- petals —so gentle to color and fabric! Ask your grocer for Kitkman's Soap Chips in Big Laundry, Medium and Bathroom packages. Kirkman & Son, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1. dislodge the dirt 2. keep the dirt from re-depositing Hear Maty Olds and Calliope in “Woman to Woman" every Tuesdry and Thursday at 12:13 P. M. waar, Wasl, WOR and WTAM. Soft, white petals-of purest soap KIRKMAN'’S SOAP CHIPS Betause there is no_wbnyl_j; for purity there ecan be no substitute for Kirkman Products