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WOMAN'S PAGE A WASHINGTON DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. RESENTING one of the United, States Senate's most eligible bach- | elors: DAVID IGNATIUS WALSH. When he was first elected Governor of Massachusetts. a well meaning and prominent lady said to him: \“Sir, a bachelor governor is un- thinkable You 3% 4 should marry at once. What you need is the in- fluence of a good ¥ influence of six good women - all of my life—my <, | mother and five sisters. His Washington home is in a local hotel in Massachusetts he makes his hpme with two unmarried sisters and a brother, who is his law par Of his family, he sa workers. It is an old n * fgmily maintains a ‘lady’ or a ‘gentle- an’ for whom the rest work. I am indeed thankful that the old saying cannot be proved true of us, for we support neither.” The first job he ever had was that of a newsboy. A well cultivated gift of oratory, a keen mind, personal charm and a large capacity for work have won for him a place of importance THE STAR’S DAILY PATTERN SERVICE Cute Apron Frock. t's amazing how happy kiddies are When they are comfortably attired. This eute apron frock, that is per- fectly plain and simple, has a fitted French yoke. It's sleeveless, too. The skirt is quite straight with ample Sullness at the hem to allow freedom for motivities of tiny maids. It's very gay as sketched in white eotton broadcloth with red motifs. The bias binding is in Prench blue shade. Style No. 671 comes in sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Orchid gingham check with white pique binding is very attractive. Nile green linen with yellow is ader- &bl smart. Sprigged dimity in pink tones with pink binding is a pretty idea. Pale blue pique with pink hinding ':;ud make any little girl appear at her “best.” For a pattern of this style, send 15 eents in stamps or eoin 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 this pattern, you inclose 10 cents addi- | from in his State as well as the Nation at the age of 58. He is proud of the fact that he was the first Democratic Representative in the Legislature from his home district; that he was the first Democratic lieu- tenant governor of Massachusetts; that he is the first son of immigrant E:- ents to be governor of that State; t he was the first Demoeratic United States Senator from Massachusetts since the days of reconstruction. When he goes out campaigning for office he styles himself “the people’s candidate.” And he succeeds in doing what no other Democrat in Massa- chusetts has been able to do con- sistently—capture the “silk stocking” vote. His opponents never have been able to understand how he can draw sup- port from the top to the bottom. In the Capital he moyes around with the diplomatic set. Some of his closest friends are Ambassadors, Ministers and attaches of foreign missions. Frequent- |ly he is entertained and entertains in this set. To a few close friends he is “Dave.” In the Senate he sits on the last row of the Democratic side, one seat the aisle, between Harris of Georgia and big Harry Hawes of Mis- souri. Directly in front of him sits Walsh of Montana, no relation. He is heavy set, growing bald and always well groomed. He is dignified | and shows unfailing courtesy in debate. His voice is strong, well modulated and easily heard. One of the Hill's most indefatigable workers, he likes to stroll around the Mall in the evening after a day’s work —about his only recreation. Milady Beautiful BY LOIS LEEDS. 0il Treatments for Hair. Dear Miss Leeds—I am troubled with dry dandruff. Would the hot-oil treat- ments help me? Please tell me if the hot ofl will turn the hair gray. Some one told me that it did. Th.lnkll\lgw kindly for your help. MRS. R. E. 8. Answer—Please watch my beauty col- umn for my talk on the hair, and in the meantime send me @ self-addressed stamped envelope, asking for my beauty leafiet on the treatment for dandruff. The hot-oil treatments are very good for both and oily hair, as they keep the hair lubricated and tend to ward off gray hair rather than cause it. You should brush your hair larly and use s scalp tonic and massage the scalp with your fingertips. Of course, the oil should not be lgpued hot enough to burn the scalp or the hair. Apply it warm, however. The leaflet mentioned above will give you this information in detail. I have not the space to reprint it in full at this time. If you will fol- low the directions given I feel sure that you will be pleased with the results. LOIS LEEDS. Colors and Weight. Dear Miss Leeds—(1) I weigh 136 pounds and am § feet 3 Inches tall. Is my weight correct? (2) I have dark brown hair, brown eyes and a dark com- plexion. What colors are becoming to me? READER. Answer—If you are between the ages of 24 and 30 your weight is correct. If under that you should weigh a few unds less; if older you should weigh a ittle more. (2) As you say your eyes, hair and complexion are dark, I judge that you belong to the Latin olive bru- nette type. You may wear deep cream, mahogany relieved with cream or ecru, warm browns, dark reds, brilliant yellow, bright red, fuchsia and apricot in sheer materials to good advantage. Other be- eoming colors for your- type are warm gray with touches of coral, terra-cotta, brick red, salmon &Ink in sheer fabric, dark silent tones green, ivory, egg- shell and lant and biack relieved with touches of bright colors. LOIS LEEDS. Lemon Jelly Eggs. For these, make sufficient lemon jelly | to fill as many eggshells as desired. Strain the liquid and divide it into several portions for different colorings. The colorings may be obtained by using chocolate for brown color, grapejuice or violet sirup for lilac shade, pink from strawberries and green with pistachio or spinach water. The contents of the eggs are emptied by making a tiny hole in the center of as many eggs as are needed, filling the emptied shells with cold water until the jelly is ready to be put into them. The cold water is tg keep the eggshells moist. Have a tray of corn meal ready, and as soon as the eggshells are filled with the jelly, place each one with the open end up on the corn meal to harden. At time of ing, the shells should be the eggs placed on a serving dish apd rrounded with a nestlike appearance of whipped cream, which is done by the prongs of s fork lightly tional for a copy of our new Spring Fashion Magazine. 80 YOU'RE GETTING A rough the eream. NEW WASHER, MRS. BATES. WHAT KIND? NEXT WASHDAY 1 DON'T KNOW YET. I'M GOING TO LOOK AT SOME THIS AFTERNOON THESE SHIRTS LOOK BRIGHTER THAN EVER, MABEL. YOUR NEW WASHER'S GREAT 178 NOT ONLY THE WASHER. IT'S THE NEW SOAP I'M USING IT GIVES THE RICHEST SUDS | EVER SAW THE GRANULATED SOAP for whiter washes , THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 193). Caramel Custard Pudding. ‘Two-thirds cup sugar, one-half cup water, four tablespoons flour, two egg yolks, two cups milk, two tablespoons butter, one teaspoon vanilla, two egg| hal whites, stiffiy beaten, and three table- spoons confectioner's sugar. Place sugar in frying pan, heat slowly and stir con- stantly with wooden spoon until light brown (caramel) colored sirup forms. Add water and boil two minutes. Be: 3 add sirup mixture and milk. Cook in double boiler until mixture thickens. Stir often. Add butter, vanilla and pour into puttered baking dish. white until stiff, add confectioner’s sugar and beat until creamy. Pile roughly on eustard mixture. slow oven. Cool, chill and serve. . Beat egg| Tomato Gelatin Salad, Serving six—Two cups tomatoes, bay leaves, four whole cioves, two onions, one-half teaspoon sugar, o f teaspoon salt, one cup water, one and one-half tablespoons granulated gelatin, four tablespoons cold water, two-thirds cup diced celery and one- quarter cup chopped green peppers. Boil g;u{-zo minutes in covered pan, tomatoes, bay leaves, cloves, onions, salt, sugar and cup of water. Strain thor- oughly and heat to boiling point and add gelatin soaked 4 minutes in the four tablespoons of cold water. Stir until gelatin has dissolved. Cool and add other ing lients. Pour into mold, rinsed out of cold water. Set in cold Bake 20 minutes in ’ place to stiffen. Unmold on lettuce and surround with salad dressing. DAILY ROUGHAGE IS AN ESSENTIAL IN ANY DIET Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN Is Effective Relief for Constipation. Also Adds Iron to the Blood Do you suffer from constipation? Are you one of these who have tried one “vest pocket cure” after another and still have no sense of pesmanent relief? If so, this is big news to you! Kellogg’s ALL- BRAN is natural, effective relief for both temporary and recurring constipation, It is the original— and today is included in the diets of millions of people whe formerly suffered from constipation, ‘When roughage is missing from food, constipation is the conse- quence, The soft foods we eat to. day seldom include enough rough. age, The simple necessity, then, is to see to it that sufficient roughage is included in our food. Kellogg's ALL-BRAN is the bulk that your system requires, In addition, it is rich in fron, Scientific research proves that nearly all this iron is absorbed by the system, building red blood and bringing the glorious color of bealth to the complexion, Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN {is posi- tively guaranteed. Your money will be returned if you are not satisfied. Be ‘sure to include it in reducing diets as a preventive for both con. stipation and anemia. There are so many ways you can eat Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN and en- Joy it. In any form, it is appetiz« ing. It is delicious with milk or cream, Sprinkle it over cereals and soups and notice the added flavor. Many people soak it in fruit juices. Excellent in cooked foods. Your grocer has Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN in the red-and-green package. It is served in hotels, restaurants and dining-cars. Ask for it! Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek, AL L Improved in Texture and Taste WELL, NO MATTER WHAT KIND YOU GET, BE SURE TO USE RINSO. THE BEST WASHING MACHINE MAKERS RECOMMEND IT YES, I'VE HEARD HOW SAFE RINSO IS ... AND HOW MUCH WHITER IT WASHES CLOTHES. | MUST TRY IT say M" 'S 1 r. “They told me aboy tried j¢ and 'm?s’"i“l soap. Ap 2 little 80¢s 50 fay, ing, too |” 3 MR LN, TUNE IN ,, & Thun. 0,30 4 r t Rinso when b d I think j¢ Tuseit for g, Py, ton, N.w. ought my '_eul F“l"“yf Ic'"’i"ly Was amazed, boili,,x. st h':nd snewy so never thoughe clo; quickly. Ang with':uur se such a safe, dire. 18 Very economieajem ishes and other cleans . %, . HEFTON, Wa.rhmgla,,‘ D.c. Millions use it in tub, was. and dishpans My Neighbor Says: ‘When polishing floors make & thick pad of felt or velvet and 'l fasten it over an old worn-out broom. This makes an excellent ghshe‘r and saves the trouble of eeling on the floor. If you wish for white clothes add cream of tartar to the water and bring them to a boil, a table- spoon to two quarts of water. Or slice a lemon, peel and all, very thin and add this to a gallon of water, then let them scald a ‘while. To prevent foods burning on the bottom when baked in & port- able oven, get a eommon brick and place on the very bottom of the oven On the grate next above the brick place the article to be baked. Let the gas or oil thoroughly heat the brick before you begin to bake. q Never leave egg whites after they have been beaten still. If let stand they will flatten and will not beat up again. Tomato Aspic. Cook together one can of tomatoes, one small chopped onion, one bay leaf, two stalks of chopped celery, one tes spoonful of salt, a dash of cayenne pepper, then strain. Add half a box of | gelatin which has been 'dissolved in a| little cold water and the juice of half | a lemon. Strain into molds and serve on lettuce with mayonnaise dressing. FEATURES, Straight Talks to Women About Money BY MARY ELIZABETH ALLEN. Puttin’ on the Ritz. We used to call it “showing off,” but the folks today say of tl.ose who bluff, “They're puttin’ on the Ritz.” We think at that there is a little more color to the modern expression. The very expression implies pretense. ‘The fact that some one is assuming airs. The trouble with showing off or ““put- tin’ on the Ritz” is not that it reveals a human frailty. It is that sooner or later we pay bills in the Ritz manner. One fact that seems to elude “Ritay” folks is that they fail to impress the very ones for whom they are assuming the lug ana airs. Their money is not only spent foolishly. It is spent in vain. Folks with money do not have to im- press their friends by spending it lav« ishly or overfreely. Folks without money can gain a great deal more respect by being thrifty. When buying an imitation gem or something or other we are often com- forted by the thought, “it looks like the real thing.” "Way down deep we know it does not. We like to think that it does because of the personal satisfaction it affords us. ‘The woman who steps out of a shabby dwelling wearing expensive clothes is seldom taken for the real thing, any THIS FINER FLAVOR HAS NEVER VARIED IN 40 v OR over 40 years, the finer EARS flavor of White House Coffes has been outstandingly superior and has net varied Juving this time. Coffee lovers know ths—flou, too, will realize its supreme quality when you taste it. Discriminating coffee makers keep White House Coffes as their faverite because of ifs ric h fragrance and delicious flaver. Ask your Grocer for White House Tea. It is Just as Fine. **i****t**t***** 00 Shields—in the same charming colors you are choesing for dresses and blouses. And when you dont want sew-in shields, there are Kleinert's Bandolairs— skilfully shaped Kleinert's Mode Dréss Shields 1l eolars uplift bandeaux with shields attached. Another discovery in comfort is Kleinert's Phantom—the narrowest possible sanitary belt. It's made of a wonderful new material=NUVO~— which cannot cut in nor slip down. Because of its construction, the greater holds—comfortably, securely. The Phantom is invisible beneath your most fitted frocks and folds into the tiniest space for traveling. Kleinert’s New Shaped Sanitary Apron if you After train and motor trips your skirts will be fresh and uawrinkled wear ene of these dainty Kleinert's Sanitary Aprons shaped to fitsmoothly under princesslines, And in emergencies, you feel ‘serene and confident of its adequate protection, because it is made by Kleinert's, famous more than.half a century for fine rubber goods. “C“PERFECT AS KELEINERT®S DRESS S-‘ILDS” Women kept asking us for shields that would really match : their frocks and here they are—Kleinert's Made Dress L the strain the more firmly it more than a diamond would be taken for the real thing if it were set it lead. We will save money and heart-aches when we learn to distinguish between self-respect and vanity. Why try to look C—7 than one can afford it is not easy to make graceful retrenchments.. ‘There is no more convincing proof of the hypothetical simian ancestry of our race than the way we occasionally ape others when we lack reason, means or other causes for doing so. Puttin’ on the Ritz keeps husband in pawn, mother in hysterics and the children in & quan- dary. Why? LR L Eggs a New Way. Boil the eggs hard. Cut in halves the part of a millionaire’s wife if you |and take out the yolks and rub them are not his wife? You can be as attrac- | tive as she, maybe more 5o, by spending good taste as well as money on your clothes. Extravaganccs become fixed habits, to a paste, mixing in a spoonful of cream, a little curry powder and salt and a tablespoonful of finely minced ham. Cut a little piece from the bot- | tom ‘of the white of the egg. Fill the and ruinous ones in the bargain. Once | whites with the mixture and stand on a started on a higher standard of living bed of salad greens. Strain Vegetab ed (\‘ MEDICAL | les ASSN. Specially Prepared-Unseasoned+ Ready-to-Serve « . Mothers . RiIcH in tooth and bone and body building vitamins—with maximum conservation of valuable mineral rber’s Strained Vegetable Products for babies meet the daily problem of the vegetable supple~ ment to baby’s milk diet in a convenient, wholesome, scientific manner. ‘Thevarietyof the prod« ucts gives baby the funda« mentals of a wholesomely balanced diet. Each product is completely and scientifically cooked and ready to serve as you buy it. Just’add a pinch of salt and warm, If your grocer can’t supply you with the Gerber Products—phone us for the name of the nearest grocer who can. At all Sawitary and Piggly-Wiggly Stores Gerber Products Division, Premont TIES OF Kleinert's Phantom NUVO Sanitary Belt Tested and Approved : @Q® e GERBER'S 434 o (Twe el sige, narme foading > Phone: National 3236 JNO. R. ERGOOD & CO. Washington, Representative « + Doctors . « THOUSANDS of ghsicians who have been prescrihing the Gerber Products for the daily vegetable supplement to the in- fant’s milk dict will be pleased to know each individual Gerber Preduct has re- ceived the appreval of the new Commit- tee on Foods of th, American Medical Association, The Gerber method of spe- cial preparation fi.cts maximum cone servation of Vitamin A—Vitamin B— Vitamin C—and mineral salt valueslost in openvessel cook~ ing in the home. Each product made of fresh-picked Michis gan jes —steam - pres- sure cooked awitheus waser and with asr excluded— and steam-sterilized for 60 at 240°. Each product is packed without . the addition of mlt, , ar other condiment, On. each can the mother is to consult the baby’s physician for complete dietinstructions, Any physician who has not yet examined the Products may secure samples by phoning: outlocai representative helows At Leading ¥ Service Grocers Frem, cans—Iise Canning _ Company, GOOD GROOMING, EVERY FROCK MUST HAVE ITS DRESS SHIELDS AND EVERY SKIRT ITS PROTECTIVE APRON OR STEP-IN. bland -;d smooth, effective general. and alsoa greataidin ing d TR our stylist says: TO BE SMART NOW YOU MUST BE FEMININE — WITH STRICT ATTENTION TO ALL THE NICE.