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PAGE 4 THE SEATTLE STAR FRIDAY, JULY 3, 1925. CYNTHIA GREY — | —— 4 —|| CANNING TIME ~ Time for Husbands to to| OVE | Analyze Themselves ie shag W heh ou Can Pe , Be Sure Men Cause Much | ness, Then Blan BY CYN’ Tt HIS is not an editorial It is written for anc who are wrecking your own your wives! And there are th Marriage in America today out a strike. There are 100 married women this year who are either jobs or divorces, where, 50 years ago there was barely one, Amo! ose of halt his When his wite protests that these flirtations of his shame her, this s wh ‘Oh, what are you k ? You have every thing you want, haven't you? To him, “everything” means the clothes, the automobile, the spend- ng money with which he supplies He robs his wife of her dig ty h Appi Nes and tells her ¢ 1 he mean ' Som 1 going to get the surprise of his life Then, I know of another husband who won't permit the evening paper ut fe to touch lhe has read it! Ie he comes home late, or if it doesn't suit him to scan the day's news until bedtime, his spouse never opens that sacred paper to read it until she ts sure he fs thru with it! She's afraid to! It never occurs to that husband) doing your part in making your that he is a tyrant, I know. But} own domestio life happy. ! there is something about the set of| The most beautiful, clever, gentle hia jaw and his swagger that tells| woman in the world can't make a the world that he fs master In his/success of her marriage without own house! And proud of It! help from the other side of the An egotist of this sort makes the/| house! | Women Dress To Please Themselves Dear Miss Grey: Recently I read an article regarding woman's dress by the foremost fashion dictator In the world, M. Paul Poiret, of Paris. “Whom do women dress to please?" he asks And, without hesitating, he answers his own question: “Why, the men, of course! Let men vanish from the face of the earth and for how long would women bother about « s and complexions? For not a single second!" Paul Poiret is the fashion dictator for the whole world. If he says waistlines shall be normal, normal they become over night. If he decrees that lipstick red shall be the color of fashion today, lipstick red is seen in the world’s shop windows tomorrow “I have been asked why it {s that the most successful dredsmakers are men,” Paul Poiret ‘sald rece “Because women want to look as men want them to look. And who knows be thar n how men want their womenfolk to look?’ It sounds reasonable, does it not? And yet I think t M knows little about wonten. please men A great many of them dress to draw their admiration, There are many mothers wt eas to please their families mothers who wear the hats their daughters pick out for them, for example! And there are still more who like to “look nice” for themselves. There is an almost spiritual joy to be found in the sense of bodily cleanliness that a person has after a & woman such polse and assurance as the knowledge that her new hat is becoming. If you ask an average man what he thinks about short skirts for grown women the chances are that he will say and that they make a woman ldok that doesn't cause any woman to len, Women know that the majority of But short hair is comfortable, and larity of “shingles” grows daily. The type of girl who is attractive uffy ruffly” If Monsieur Paul Poiret were rig! please men that’s the only ty As it is, she's as rare as rocs’ eggs. Paul Poilret I am sure that Uttle thing, who wears frilla when they're not tn style, pink shoulder bows, and tiny high-heeled slippers. Jomestic Unhappi- ne It on Wives {IA GREY or women, i to men. To you husbands marriages and blaming it on rousands of you, begins to look like a walk- getting worst kind of husband. He is worse 1 think, than even a drunkard For he robs his wife of the things that elf h @, her pe om is a ma independence, he ty uline fault And egot Is one of yours? you are not satisfied with your marriage, take an inventory of yourself, before you blame your un happiness on your wife What do you do that ‘upsets’ your mate? Are you as square wit her as you could be with your part ner in b } Do y or sulk if din flirt, even mildly, with Do our wife as much rT e othes and amuse ments, as you spend on your suf and cigars? Is your marriage a 50-50. “break And do you ever remember to tell your wife that she's getting prettier all the time, and that she's still your “best girl"? Do you? Answer these questions, and a few | more along the same line, to your: self, and you'll know whether you're | who knows all not al about styles, women drean to startle their we ends, or to thoro grooming; and nothing gives “I think they're hideous, Ike a caricature of herself." But athen her skirt! men think bobbed hair unfeminine. Jong hair isn’t. And so the popu. to almost any type of male is the ht and women dressed to pe of femininity that we'd ever see A WOMAN. ————<—— $e More Work for | Good Fairies Dear Miss y: I have a little patient two years old, who {# suf-| fering from a bad case of rickets His parents came with him all the way from Rochester, N. Y., that he might have the advantages of | our wonderful climate the year| round. | He cies pitifully for hours at a| time because he has no soft. crib| in which to lie to rest his aching | body. He is in need of suitable clothing (diapers and dresses, etc.) and a| soft crib and warm bedding. | He needs a carri: to be able to! lie straight, so he can be in the open air as much as possible. I am nursing him free of charge, but must appeal to the kind and generous people of Seattle to assist in getting a crib and carriage. He in a lovable little fellow and writes that he loves our city and air and would be happy if he just had a soft bed. H Who will help us? A NURSE. I have this little chap’s name and address and will be glad to give it to Interested persons. eee Black . Cat Dear Miss Grey: I have a black female Persian cat about nine months old to give to someone who will give her a good home. Call at 4064 First ave. N. E. A READER. see Seattle Reader | Sends Hints ote | Dear Miss Grey: Instead of plas. tering the lawn and shrubbery with | poisonous paste, and endangering | the lives of little pet animals, why | not get a few ducks? Several white ducks look pretty on a lawn and} they are sure death to carwigs. ‘They look carefully over any bush and destroy insects, and at the same time, do not touch the flow. ers, Which it it, ducka or ear wigan? Another remedy to destroy mites on flowers, pansies or any flower with parasite infested foliage: ‘Take | moth balls, put them in water, and sprinkle the smelly water on the plants. Some one said, put the moth balls on, Not #0, put the water on when St is strong with the odor of moth balls, It will not in any way injure the plants, “An other remedy I have frequently used with sure results is as follows if your pet dog gets poisoned, give him a generous dose of Inrd, fol Jow it with as much milk as he will jake. Keop it up. When tlie pois on ia conquered, he will lie in a fever for a short time; but keep up If he geta distemper, open his mouth and put in a large table- spoonful of salt. A small dog re quires only a teaspoon Do not give too much, but according to size of animal. Just try table salt, |Press). ROSA aD SNe DINES. | vogue. Wants to Learn Switchboard Dear Miss Grey: Where can I Jearn switeh-board operating? SUBSCRIBER. I do not know of such a school in this city. If you know anyone operating an exchange, perhaps you could get her to teach, you. Right About Face! Z you draw a V from shoulder line to waistline, and then scoop | i worn down the front. It breaks up offers some @xplanation for the out of the frock, Really, {}'s a very | mmart thing to do these days, (ADVERTISEMENT) WATCH FOR THE | $100,000.00 || STORY MONDAY giving spoonfuls of melted lard ale ternating with milk. @ twithout the stara are shown In many | jusual frocks. | Not |pearing in our shops. out the material inside the V you} uncover quite an expanse of back If this bothers you at all, follow the plan of Carmel Myers and wear one of the new back necklaces of diamonds and pearls—just like the | pendant effects that were once the dead white of the shoulders and! Some of Our Country’ * if Foremost Women |. % What They ‘Wear, Whians They Go and What 7: hen Do| Countess de Frise, Mrs. BETSY SCHUYLER ! E la capital S, so I went out to Went a bury, I. 1, to the first match of the BY Man and the rest of the fashion lords that Is Polret, Randel ween the Lacey Sherwood Aldrich, Mrs. Polo alwayn bring ‘out society with |nhort white gloves that are the only {an tmpersonation of herself and her Itype a bids: rather than the ponies, Everyone| But WOMAN, that ts, the leaders iwas there who hadn't salled for of nociety, the stage and screen, al) furope. None were in rags and none waya decide what smart women DO/in tags, but I vow, they were all in year printed gowns, Every color, every The golf togw that actually appear design, But tho most of them man on the green of the Westchester-Bilt- |aged to look very similar, Mrs. Fran- more Country club, the frocks t™mt|cin 8. Whitten did atick out of the drift Into Pierre's at lunch, the even- |crowd. ing gowns that blossom out on the! No wander she won the title of be- Still, at the race track, I did see} the dashing Mra. Carter Laldy, for.| BY the way, you can’t help noticing merly Fifi Widener, who ts another | that the ban ts off gray hair. A wo- Ifashion leader among the amart net,|™&D Used to keep her hair touched wearing a er fox carelessly thrown |UP: 0 matter how fat and forty she about her shoulders In her casual|?tcame. Today sho lets hair become fashion gray and keeps her hips narrow and Her dress was a lovely one of (Der ankles thin. It's the figure, not white silk crepe embroidered ana/the hair, that shows the age these bound with nd her wrist bar. | O8¥* | bored at least half a dozen of the| 1 do believe Nora Bayen Is twice as narrow bracelets that are worn both | lovely looking with silver hair as she Ritz roof or at Ciro's after the thea-jing the best dressed woman in Amer ter, are the real answer to the que*-lica at Palm Beach this winter! She tion, “What's what in atyle? wore a very futuri« printed pat So there was real importance at-|tern with large disox of biack on color, tached to the fact that when Mra. [combined with black chiffon. Tho Vincent Astor came down the gang-|most of the women had fallen for the plank of o Mauretania the other/large picture hat, she stuck to the day, after several months abroad, jamall, close one, and looked infinitely her long-sleeved gown was just |smarter. 13 inches from the ground. That| She was with Mra. Sherwood Al stabilized the skirt question drich, who wore a rge pink lily on/ the shoulder of frock that just Mrs. Astor is one of the most ele ise 7 gantly gowned women of the New |matched the ones printed in her frock No costume is ¢ these days without {ts shoulder flower and the inevitable string of pearls de Fr in a blue York 400, and is outfitted by the most ymplete exclusive couturier of Paris, She's very vative, Always the aristocrat, mannequin, she exerts a tremendous Influence on the | very very excl co too. The Countess ine was looking picturesque ver a organdie sive net 2 Saat re apne For July Fourth|{ Rubber Fanos. ——_—_______~/ for Beach BY HEDDA HOYT (Women's Editor of the United Press) (Written for the United Press) NEW YORK, July 3.—(United Patriotic frocks are quite the | Red, white and blue frocks | with printed stars or the three colors of the smartest shops In New York. | And pecuifar to say, !t ts tho well} dressed women who are wearing un- | jong ago several women re-| turned from Paris wearing dresses that looked as tho made of the French flag, and berore long the |American frocks {ni tri-color were ap: | One window} displays a model of ailk crepe which has a navy blue skirt fulled Into a white bodice, whose full sleeves are |printed with frregularly sized stars jand caught in at the wrist with a fred cuff. Red piping ts used about) {hem border and rounded neck line. | At a smart restaurant In Central Park a young woman wore a tri-color USBER cssvols” are. the gown which attracted much atten. Hiteet Denon: neveltyouseck: tion, not because it resembled the| laces, bracelets, earrings and flag, but because the colors were| other trinkets, all of rubber, are appearing at the French combined in a stunning manner. The beaches. navy blue bodice was rather tigtt fitting, and extended slightly below the normal waist line, The skirt was \full, shirred onto the bodice, It be: lgan with an eight-inch deep layer of | lred; joined to this was a layer of white twice the depth of the red, land the deep border wan of dark blue, The red was slightly darker than the jred used in the flag. | Another tri-color frock worn at a country club on a recent Sunday was IE “cr asses mmm ES HINTS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE Nee tersetin JUST IN TIME If a custard cooks one moment too long, it will curdle, hence it is safer to take It from the fire before you think {t quite done as the heat of sports design, It hada little hip-jo¢ the boiler cooks it while it is length jacquette of bright red velvet: |bheing turned out. cen, which was worn open, displaying Pea fa white crepe sports blouse which SILVER: POLISH was attached to a blue crepe skirt.) pine whiting makes an excellent | Stil another model utilizing the ep ; silver polish, Moisten it with water |flag idea is made of navy georgette in |slender lines, ‘Tho sleeves aro very SPREAD IV mepe Seh |full balloon affairs of red and white i f \striped georgette, and they gather FOR MARKING CLOTHES Use adhesive tape for marking linto a navy wristband, ‘The under ee in white with a deep red border, | Coats, caps, rubbers and children's | belongings. SILHOUETTE IS NARROW | Many of the new cont dress see IT’S COARSE WHY 5 have belts in the back but the fronts are and the fullness If your cake 1s too coarse grained thie is usually the result of baking | atralght kept in} Pace Lan aEbaia GP Blane jin {69 slow an oven or insufficient poating | ee if MUST BE FIGURED | y | Printed silks come either in very eM AMS ale large floral designs or in smaller geo-| Urine the warm weather con: |metrical ones nerve your strength ~pegover pos | alble. Fold your tur) towels, shoe : |wash cloths and sheets neatly and | SCOTCH SHAWLS |you won't need to iron them Heotch #shawin are used to make arene topcoats of the very plain sort that | mis i are liked for sport and country wear REMOVING TRA STAINS \ ‘Tea stains should be removed from May WETS linen ax soon as the Hquld is spiited i rox BONNET Sprinkle borax over the stain and r hah bonnet with the match) mointen with water, Let stand a Ing scarf |x one of the combination | while before rinking with bolling outfits you nee frequently. water, | | i |Guinan's club the other evening all} jdone up in black without a vestige of jor much jfor both silk and cotton frocks. \conts that are so stylish now. Francia S. Whitten and Mrs. Carter Leidy. you ever nee with the sleeveless | husband, 1: frock f you nee gloves at all Generally gloves have been given the absent treatment—gioves and furs nne Fontaine wore flame-colored frock trimmed with os rich with a fringed shaw! of ivory crepe over alh that is, by day and by night ever was before, and Mrs. Raymond inden ke fan't. fashionable |Hitehcock, the former Flora Zabelle, any more, but Julia Hoyt, who is one |!% t00 fascinating with her iron-gray bobbed hair, of the most exotically dressed women much red and many diamonds. in New York, appeared at Texan olor except her very scarlet lips, and managed to be the most dashing per son thei and to make all the screen ars there look a bit too fluffy and ingenuiah. I wager a number of them have already placed orders for binck frocks, At the Grand Street Fallies, tion. ob’ jred lips, tone to the skin. where|baby doll is out of the picture en [frock that just matched her eyes and |she had & marvelous time watching |tirely. Fashion| Flashes FAVOR STEEL GRAY Steel gray is one of the favorite colors for coats and suits and it ix frequently trimmed with fox to} match. ERED RS TS TREC By Arbor Adds to | Garden Beauty | } FANTASTIC SLEEVES | ‘The new sleeves are very fantastic | with the bottoms heavily decorated | widened with cuffs and| flared effects, | see THEY ARE COOL, TOO Two lnyers of georgette crepe bound with ribbon and belted with a wider sash are used to make very attractive night gowns. one ‘OTHING enhances the beau- ty of your garden or back yard more than an arbor. Here's one that is very attrac. THEY ADD DASH Bands of brilliantly figured silk trim serviceable frocks of blue or tive and which you can build black flat crepe or crepe de chine. yourself tf you're handy with we 08 tools. Paint it white, and when HATS OF BELTING it is partly covered with roses Heavy silk ribbon known as belt-| or vines, you will be pleased ing is used to make some of the! with the effect. smartest new sport hats — eee AN OLD FASHION English eyelet embroidery collar nd cuff sets are returning to favor NEWEST FABRICS the vegus see Gold embroidery Is very much iked to trim chiffon and georgette crepe| wear are frequently black lace. trimmed Cooler Wives And cooler kitchens this way QUICK QUAKER cooks in $ to 5 minutes No hot kitchen, no muss, no bother LAVORY and delicious . . . the sum- mer breakfast your appetite calls for and your health demands, cooked in 3 to , 5 minutes! The kitchen stays cool. And so do you. No frying, no stewing, no morning’s fuss and trouble, Just get Quick Quaker at your grocer’s. It’s a new kind of Quaker Oats that's made to order for women who seek easier ways in housekeeping. All that rare Quaker flavor is there. All the richness that made Quaker Oats famous. Cooks faster, that’s the only dif- ference. which she sets off with Hair dressers tell me women are actually having thelr hair streaked with white to give a look of-distinc- The fashionables are all avolding| cayenne, grated cheese and melted us makeup, except for brilliant | tho most of them use the) dish sunburn powders to give the darker The pink and white|#Nd golden brown. Among the new fabrics are figured ottomans and failles and surahs, the ribbed type of silk being very much Black satin dresses for afternoon with oe They’re Fresh an ‘Tender 4 BY SISTER MAMY | Peas f grown t A - begins to t imp f nen One-half bushel! of pe c should make f elms ten f kly 2 a dark, of canned peas, The well-fille loft course et ree If © Bred sterilize op If pint cans used 1 ich the peas to fill one can into a wire bas. | "* i i ket or pquare of cheese Plung of boil ‘ OD nto « large kettle of rapidly boiling |“*" keer e re water, cover and boil five minutes, | ¥#'*" SS a 7 unt the time after water begins! to boll again PICKLE JELLY | Dip at once into a large pan of cold s, olive ate water, lifting the container up and or ( down into the water twice to be sure | and ‘ the cold water penetrates t cubes a kie \ter of the peas. solve tablespoontul of | Fill can with peas to within % | gelatine a little 1 water and inch from the top. Add % teaspoon | ac ¢ heated juice of the cher. salt and % teaspoon # Add | ries and pickles. Cool. Pou boiling water to cover peas. Pack t 1 add a it the peas closely in the can bi care not to crush or break them the skins are broken the cans wi i & cloudy appearance _Chees ore as the a plate ang e with jturke It’s Real a Jazz Costume | Cheese !s probably the oldest |manufactured food we have. It is |mentioned several times in the | Bible and it is certain that the art |of making it was known long before | the birth of Christ. While it is one of the oldest foods, it is also one of the most misunderstood, even jtho there are many people who think they know all about cheese. | People believe a great many fool, ish things about cheese, one of them being that it does not agree with them; that it is hard to digest. Gov- ernment tests and hundreds of doc- \tors. and dietitians have proved time and again that this is not the case. Cheese should be eaten with |other foods, the same as you eat meat, for it is a perfect alternate | for meat; the food properties are al- most the same | People overload their stomach top it off with a and then won- with a big meal, big plece of cheese, |der what's the matter with them. They do not know that in eating that plece of cheese they are vir tually consuming a piece of beef about three times its size. Yet that is just what they do. Eat plenty of cheese, but eat It 0 as you would any other highly nour. ishing food. Here is a recipe that 1 tried and found yery good: OMELET 1 cup stale bread crumbs. 1 teaspoon baking soda. 2 eggs beaten light 1 cup grated cheese 1 pint milk. 1 teaspoon hot water. | % teaspoon: salt. 1 tablespoon melted butter. Soak bread crumbs in milk’ to | which pas been added soda dissolved jin hot ‘water. Add eggs, salt, dash butter. Turn into greased baking | and place in very hot oven. | Serve immediately when it 1s puffed | | CREAM FILLING Mix three-fourths cup sugar, one- Jolghth teaspoonful salt and add two Here's a real jazz costume, wit the notes running abowt the hem jof the skirt, blouse and 3 The material-is navy dlue jeri exes, well beaten. Pour gradually : on two cups scalded milk. Cook in| loth. and the motes are so hits idouble boiler, stirring constantly, | *@*" lot until mixture coats the spoon, then add one tablespoonful gelatine that/ }has been soaked in one-fourth cup | cold milk, and. one teaspoonful \vanilla. When cold, spread on cake. | LARGER HANDBAGS | | Handbags are becoming larger and | more colorful. Those of bright red, emerald green or purple leather are | fashion readers. VELVET AND SATIN The black velvet wrap, lined with chiffon, frequently is part of the satin ensemble. YOU CAN HEAR THEM 4 Newest pajama suits are made of” plaid or printed silks bound with g plain colors. | METAL MESH CLEANER A cleaner of metal mesh is a go investment, because it cleans M and pans much more efficiently thai ry width about the! scraping with a knife. It also saves) the wear on a regular dishcloth, | | THREE INVERTED PLEATS | The sport skirt nearly always has | three inverted pleats in the front to |gwive the necess j hem. Want Some New Furniture? While you are going to the trouble of cleaning the house this spring, why not sell some of the sed furniture and buy new? Advertising in our Want Ad columns will bring quick buyers at good prices. Use the money to purchase new furniture. Just Phone MAin 0600 Classified Dept.