SECTION
CAFE MAT comm TMM. FWDAY. rLlTE *4. 1M7.
Page One
FASHION SUGGESTIONS
FEATURES FOR WOMEN
HOUSEHOLD HINTS
f omen Know Little of Their Crowning Glory - - the Hair I Matter How They Miatreat It, It la Still the Telling Item of Their Appearance
. u'.on I (hi DC how imte know (boot tb«lr hair
. only
Jo( u»(tmM>t—«na*r which I b*ir itonwfcow aarTtvaa—that 1 MHM that the bMic I inwaty: Which »». that real beauty haa Ma foun- ■ In (beer htalth. ao beautir i> hair that la coaaalru iBorou*; ao rail of vitality ■eems to aoap. to (yrlnj: J.,( ibr scalp, thick, ablny. full V«M and IndlvMoal tone. really ia the crowolne r of a woman. It licht* up it. it frame* her face. iukn a bale around her. ■ how a he mangier 1 |treat( It. no matter if abe t of It off. her halt atlll the moat tellinc Item of | appearance. I all the Mippoeediy pertna.i adjuncu of a woman> perh*r eyea, b«r non*, her or hair—the laat la the oo r over which the pnaawamr I abaolute eoatrol. She can cnoior—taacreat eateLt— enpth. Ita ahape. She can treat an artlcie of dreaa. rhanit- - rbape and Ita atyle an a a> ahe pteaaee.
da/. It la better to end the annr»anee by cattlna off euch I loutdewine trvweea. For to be beautiful, hair and bead muat form one perfect, one hannoniou» alncle outline. One mnatn't look meaay. and no bead looks 1th etracKlinr
Severe. Smart Tucks Faabion la decidedly In favor
of the tucked frock. For nothin! make* one ao much a la mode aa a clever arramtament of fine tucklnca. Often the coelome, de at* ned for mom I ac or eporta wear nowadaya depend altogether for individuality on Jum thta trimming detail Tacked panels and Inarte. often on the bias, frequentl/ give a drees the required air id being decorated without further ornamentation Extremely trim and tailored ta the tucked model. It is one at those general uUilty (rocks, which every woman needs. Perhaps especially aultable ia It for the business woman who wishes
to wear something very severe
her office and yet something
enough for the luncheon
Printed Chiffon
&
hair
of womet
been the ch
Short halt
It Is also the symbol of freedom of women. But bob the hair won't make you It isn't so simple aa that, haring long hair won't make resetionarj' and atupld. < mixing spiritual causes to ■ aesthetic effects, and it ng (hair moans vartMy, and ny Is difficult to achieve bobbed hair. No matter t sort of dress you put on. tf hair la short your head nl- - looks the same. A severe > *‘th a bouffant period evei( dress ia a hideous eombtaan. yet we see many aoch Inicrulilea Frenchwomen who » short hair ars •car tramlormatlona with !r 'rmlng clothes, foi t the vlnuM of s bob. It £ m (0 With the grande manner. 1 your hair hi of the fine, hety sort that's always cornlow# you bob U. Neatness, nnem is the essential thing in * xln * the lhalr. If short blu hair Insist of escaping your 'pins. If you can't drees your and be sure It will stay put • i being forced to pin It and over again during the
dhange in the I engagement at club
in our times'
As an Integral part of the frock as well as trimming la sn Important note on many costumes. The two hata sketched use ferent widths of groagraln for crowns. The blouse ahows beige Jersey with brown ribbon trimming. A flannel coat with compose ribbon collar and facing Is another ribbon Idea.
IN CONFIDENCE BV FLO Mssdm dsrfrfsg • psiaaes/ fmfc css sdAw M>m Fla. Is cm V Niwpapw
»
' MU* Flo:— hen 1 was nineteen years old ^11 In love with s man who '•ded In convincing ms that «aa only worth while when *» (re* Before long 1 r sat I led rniitake and determined to live '' after that, and I have. No dae knows of my mistake— ■'•m my family. Now I am eum! lo a man whom I love r| y. I wonder if I should tell of my pbbjv o. E. ou| a i* a probkm whlcb no lf e of mine can help you aolve. ** far aa the woman U con'd in such raaea. It la a queabeing miserable if you do ' confeaaion. and miserable
ou don't.
'“hlilr. I fall to see the wladom ’filing the man you love of : P»at. if you dont confeaa. yast you will be the only one •HI be unhappy—aod that •I'pineas will not be laating. ■o- do confess, the man you ■HI suffer with you. for even :, h he will forgive you. and '> you anyway, he will never •i He will alwaya be haunted memories of what you have him. And he will have to be 'Mer man than moat men are 1 doesn't reproach you with Past and remind you of It 0 he la angry with you. inaoe May Mean Happutm reonally. I do not believe the ■'on of right should »■ mailer at all. for there ia no 'Id confess every detail of her than there la why a man 'Id tell her of e-cry time he ►'rayed off the straight and
°» path.
’■ men are foolish enough to U> - 'd" *h* pVetcra"'.^^^^
would only mean torture to It la only when the case ia versed, and It U the woman who has a dark stain on her past life that abe wonders If ahe should tell the man who wanu to marry her about it. The woman, of course, f-els that she must do so bee; of the double standard of morality and ahe nearly always telU everything to the man before marriage. Perhaps It U true that a couple who know the worst about each other start on their new life together with a firm foundation of honest understanding, but certainly that understanding will not bring them loser together In affection. Esther, it la an understanding that sweeps away the laat Illusion —and leaves them face to face with realistic facta. That little ghost of the past, once called Into being, will never be entirely b-'-'abed. the Put-Make the Future What you have done does not matter so much as what you are going to da If your past life had In It something that would reach out and r.-flect In some way on the man yon are going to marry, then you would be bound to tell him about it. But yours was nothing but a folly rnmmlned in your youthful Ignor-
btoasoma out for summer evening wear and blda fair to be the favored frock fabric of the season. Sketched la a printed chiffon frock made with wide circular skirt and back shoulder di Pink rones and blue p»pp>« a white ground ia the color
Do You Know How To Combine Reds? Lacquer red. ilpatlek. Chanel red. all the red that have came and gone, are Mill coming and going, present more of a make up problem than moat
other coIotk
If you wear red. yon simply have to choose make up of a coirn-ponding hue. Often a red drees will make your favortie lipstick look purplish. Ii it happens to be the wrong color. Rouge, too. muat be exceedingly Inconspicuous, or it m carefully chosen to be of a color that harmonises completely with the red of the dreoa. Don't make the mistake wearing pink rouge and lipstick with a rwd dreaa, If you do. you will look washed nut. An orange ‘ roug.. too. should be taboo. If the red border- toward pink. If there la eonatilerable yellow In It. r«>« ran ' get away” with the orange Ilpatlek. You can't go halfway in west Ing red. You should wear lota of make up or none at all. Some Women of striking brunette types wear red without any rouge or Hpsilck. which gives them a rather ewotlc quality. They carry off the brilliance of the with their own personalities, as it weia. However, a woman who hasn't this distinctive quality will appear ei xaggeratedly colorless If abe wears rod and dma not use make up with a rather bold hand to keep the flaming dieas from attracting too much attention away from her face. The coloring should ba centered on the lips, rather than the cheeks, the lipstick either mat (filing the drew or being J'-st a little more Intense. Under no circumstance, should it be a lipstick with any different tom than those contained in the
How Will Feminine Readers React to This A mere man writing from Idaho to the Philadelphia Public Ledger, takes delight in Jabbing at some phases of our modern life In this sarcastic fashion, and aa some of hi* thrusts are at foiblre of the fair aex. we reproduce his communication In the hope that it will draw «it feml nine comratnt. which we will be glad to print. The writer as 'The ancient Romans uoed confer the garment ceiled the toga upon young men as a sign that they had rrached :he age of manhood. Here In America our youths used to graduate from •'short pant*" Into "long pants' and cultivate their mustaches ai signs of their approaching man hood But nowaday* the little boy* wear ' long pants” and youth cultivates a mustache, mustache would offend the ladles, and. of course. It does nut do to offend the ruling power, young man. sedulously cultivate feminine Ideal* ao that in you may become that paragon of nature, a womanly man: and you. young woman. If it la not beneath you to Imitate a man In any way. cultivate such maoci Ideals as there may be left, and In rime you will become that lovely being, a manly woman. Ideal* and Idea* are a little mixed nowadays, aren't they? The boys wear long trousers and the old men short ones for golf. Little girls used to wear short dresses and bobbed hslr as signs of their childhood. Now women wear them as signs of their womanhood. Parents and elder* used to teach and govern children. Now the > hlldren teaeh and govern their parents and Success used to come with mare years. Now we see children leaping Into fame and worthy, capable old men unable to prowork. They used to call a spade a spade and a painted woa harlot; now Immoral acts are ''crudenesses" and "mistakes.” Once cigarettes were "coffin nails,” now noted men and woare praising their ■•vlrtuea" In the press. Why proceed? The list could be extended Indefinitely. Times have Indeed changed, but hare they changed for the better? Borne persons may find a hectic pleasure In the wild flurry of our modern, out-of-joint times, when 'all the foundations of the earth , are out of course." but there Is very lit true, deep-seated hap-1 plness .o be found li. our day. Nothing much can be said for an age whose teachers are children (of large or small growth) and whose rulers are women. In Isaiah’s words. "A* for my people, children are their oppressors and women rule over them.”
Woman, as Warden, Bring;
i and bread and butter
of pnii— —
Activities of Women ^ rrr> *""*
4 f __ j A **H-*o~rMng summ.-J Pineapple Pyramid*
“Mother-Touch to Prison --"V;:.'";L
OlMeraleeve say*, free of charge all which this work is
The
novel
■ally appealing in
Aucu»t 13. 11warm weather To on* can of ''•tumble ' nl-. crushed pineapple add an extra ''•liege." O wn I cup of pineapple Jniee. two table"wdl provide: spoonful* of lemon Juice, oneth* rooms Ini fourth cup of sugar, a few grains o be carried!of salt nad three tablespoons of ulining ihcj granuialsd gelatine, whlcb
school, paying the salaries and •"-en allowed to soak in water tor providing meal* will be roc by! fifteen minute*. Heat the mixgifts from donor* interested Injtur-* until gelatine has dissolved, this work. It is expected thatjRemove from the stove and set the total budget will be |70b0.'' In a pan »f cold watnr. W neu
• • • I mixture begin* to thicken, fold In
Miss Anna C. Maxwell called j-ne pint of cream b-aten until
the 'Vlorence Nightingale of! s,1 ff »“4 «
American Nursing." ha* been for! '*’ ,f * twenty-nine years superintendent ‘F 0 of nurses at the Presbytprlan I
lioapltal. New York.
Turn into a alight-
ed individual moald and
thoroughly.
The worn:
Waters, who
husband in When she
elghiy-l
French nurse. Mme. Jour- | dan-Cauehy. has been awarded
warden of her sex Pica: H’V Cro “ £ “ «»**•*'" »*•' be t'ntted Ktatos has brought' She organised nthli-ttr and. "■ s,on t “ Hon " r - Oman's touefi Inside the walla! dancing exhibition*. j * • • Granite R> ormatory. Okie ! She organized n library and There Is a miniature theatre In
‘an orchestra. Sunday Afternoons! an *P*rin»ent on the eighteenth "sings'' were inmltutcd. ' * ,o n r of * (’hlcago building, the Bhe bettered the i^Uoan' '' 0m ? « “**•»' ^ ^
equipment. The ten acr.e with- “ ^ tl,r
In the prtaon now have a base- • • • ball diamond, a football n il. Kathleen Hoiahan teaches volley hall and butae-ahor pitch- '“T 1 * ,llr ■ rl 01 t>o*l<>K and Ing courts. 1 ■'•'Mllng at the New York Y.
Her great**! achievement h|*' 1 A '
less tangible. That I* the in • • • fBtration of her own pemonalnr l ’ ,|rh f*» K!irl Theodor, of Ba Into the prison cystem. She hue ' " ‘ ■ t> ' "•"‘'UOl* the most reo kind word for every boy »he' 11 r f' < 'Hnfe In Munich, meets. Bhe loads thorn in stag i * * * ing at church service*. She kn-p. 4U ®° eompetiUors at the her evenings open .«> that her! annusl Inland Musical wards can bring their complaint* f’'***** 1 *Fde. England,
to her. She iece| i them atom —without the usual guard. She talks lo them as a friend, not ** a Jailer. Some have heard their first word* ol rootborly counsel for years from her lips. One boy. a* he was led away after a talk with her. asked hi*
guard:
•Bay. when will she let me
discovered that cent of her charbroken homes. In
light of the fact ahe saw her She tnrned what was then a "Jali house” lota what is now a "prison home " Kindness la ralngl-'d w<th discipline and the Golden Rule has replaced the
iron hand.
"But I do not let my sentient Interiere with my Judge►1*1." aay* Mr*. Water*. "I enforce a rigid dlecijllne. but R la
n one theory. U is
this: when the wrong-doer see* hi* fault and acknowledge* the Justice of hi* punishim ni. he is
Mr*.
| targe majority wer
About Your Health TW You Should Kaow ta •> i— v a Danger of Small Woondj
brought about her ‘'prisoo home"• talk to her again'"
Select Footwear j A Pleasant Smile With Great Carei Answeis For Words
Hospital
• London a Society Almoner*. An al-
woman who loora
r who has been In d who needs at ton-
In a poor home.
' «hy. i
t afraid
The typical American foo< is I u JOU si Wider, and Is longer than ' hi- talk, that
European foot. That 1.- why; need to appear stupid. If von Frenra shoe* are not generally | don't know what to say keen becoming or suitable for Amerl- silent. You can cover up your can women. The exaggerated 1 lack of entering Into a eonvursaheel* and elaborate cut* are not Hon by a bow Ing an animated inaa flattering to (be American tore*! in what is going on And foot as the plain, slim, molded to you can cover up your doubt of the I.«d type Of shoe that folia ; the proper thing tn **y. In tnoM attention to the foot, rather than. attuatlona. by an adequate, win-
to the Khoe itaelf ning smile
Fancy hone. too. should be Ia-| I don t know what in suy in dulgcd In cautiously. Certainly oompoRy." a girl wail*. "I always both fancy hooe and show should eiuttar ant am embaraw-i
Dressing the Children
as thi
! be worn at the s they ''kill" each oth* 1 ba*c and stitched e too much of a good thlr
saying goes.
Moreover, fancy hose ami shoes ire bad on both the very large f«>t. and the short fat foot. In the former case, too much .ittenaUrarted to the feet, which i&ould < ertalnly not be focus of consideration. In the latter case, the fancy design* cut the outline of the foot, and actually exaggerate its short-
have washed away your little *!n You will perhaps be s better wife • because of It. Ortainiy you will | I be a wiser mother and more careful in protecting your own daughter. because you know from blttet; experience ho" easy It ia for a young girl to make a blunder in her youth, when life and love are
ailing t
her.
is always weakness,
takes a strong man or woman refrain from vhating their bur-
suffera It* punishment
1 of t
Til A Convenience Money can't buy liapplnraa. That Is all there Is about It; Btlil, as thing* are now, 1 gun* We cannot quite do without It. All poultry house* need openIngr In the back aa well as front, so the chick* can get plenty of Mr during the summer and early faU.
Mr J. Borden Harriman Praises Modern Courtshi) Because modem girl* are "not afraid to use their eye* and smile” aud don't Just "ait and simper" as the girl* of pact generations were supposed to do. the flipper of today stand* a better chance of getting the man »he want* than her mother did. This Is the opinion of Mrs 1. Borden Harriman, author of an rrtlcle In a current magaxtne. Mm. Hirriwan I* the wife of the younger son of Olive. Hat tman. banker and 1* prominent In New York city's social life"In the old day*.” ahe writes, "men did all the hunting and many women wasted their lives waiting. Now some girls pursue
men quite openly.
"Glrta lost men they really wanted through the false shame which prevented an admiaalou ol their trucat feelings. For love was something then lo be ashamed of. I remembe. girl* who wer* in love and whose awumt-d frltrlty -o disheartened their suitors that they went away never to return. And the girls were left to devour their heart in dull despair." "In year* past." Mn> Harriman continues, "sex was a game
In which women l
I acknowledge Introductions Hit* case, our advice Is noi ■ay anything at all. It is considered quite sufficient nowadays to acknowledge an lntrodu.ii.in with a shake of the hand and a smile. In fact, this method Is in good taste, whereas a jerky ' please to meet you'' is decidedly
not good form.
Ukewlse. in parting from s!..-*ts It Is not necessary to *.i> anything When you are bidding icmdbye to several people a cordial •shake and a smile t» enough for each one. You do not have to acknowledge their perfunctory farewells in so many word; Wh-n you are introducing people to each other, and are nervous about keeping the bal sat ion rolling, do not assume
A short while ago. a grooar la
my town "er ranched" hi* hand while faking goods from a box. Within a »wk he wa» dead, la spite of the efforts of three good physician* to save him - Acut*
septicemia, the cause ol death. Small wound* are usually
either incised or punctured, that Is. either "cut" or "stab" wounds. The lormer ore easily treated—Ailed at once, with tincture of iodine, or other reliable antiseptic. A small bottle of "Mercurochrome" Is ■ good thing to keep In your nedlclneclosel; H Is one of the best germicides known and Is painless when applied. its brightred Main 1* Its only disadvantage so far as I know. I would even use kerosene or turpenttn*. In case nothing better was U hand—the main thing belay to act at once; Infections sol up
quickly In warm wrothei. Punctured wounds should not
be neg.ected; they do not drain readily, as cut wound* do. Good procedure la to moke a wider wound—« cm wound—out of the
... puncture, then ooak It In the
College. Columbia I'nlverrity, | antiseptic Nall and tack wound* 1 '• •• V yp sal < Utla clgaa Um
week I had an unumia) peraonal experience: Opening an unuoed door at a public building. I tore off a bH of akin of one knuckle on a brass projection of the lock; I had absolutely nothing with me tn the way of an era. rgency entleepric. not being on u professional call; I thought of the matchee in my pocket: drying the ooxtng blood. I quickly applied a biasing match! This stopped (he bleeding and sterUlxed this wound thoroughly with a flame. Painful, but a pertoct result. I might have done wore* under the circumstanoee. Never forget that time is Important in treating small wound* and as little of It
to be wasted a* powlble
More than 26.000 women now use the gymnasiums, court* and natatoriurns of the Y. M. C\ A. Ml* Mary Ruth Biennan. a 22-year-old blind girl. 1* among
graduates from Teach-
of science.
Here Are Two Moat
Appetizing Dishes
The children will need no urg-
prune* for their
Prune Trifle
Soak prunes In cold water till In j soft, cut In halves and remove in j atones. Put a g.md layer In a baking diah. sprinkle with sugar, lay nicely cut slicra of bread and
me*, pour
tard over all and bake J-4 of an hour In alow oven. Two layers
Has It Ever Occured To You
consider the col-j What color do you wear well? ign of the dross you In-j Are you young, middle-aged or
— en j elderly?
The first step toward Improvement In dreee la lu determining Just where the need for Improve-
ment lies.
purchase—before
start thinking about
must know more about yourself? Many women ask If they may or may not wear this cr that or the other thing and when question.-.! as to hip measurement, heigh:, or even how much they
played quite fairly, but r
r there la
Special attention given to Hair Cutting by Miaa Edith D. Bullock »t the .. EOITMA PARLOR 12* Ht e h Street. Millville " >od Floor
Hnyc Your Work Done Right in Your Own Home Marcel Wave Water Wave Shampoo (Med. Lemon) Facial Manage B Facial Plaatlque and Bleach 2 Scalp Maaaage. Violet Ray j) and Vibrator Treatments Mr*. Mattie Berry (Formerly with Mrs. R. B. » Beckett. Millville) V POET JIOERIS Call 128J-U for appoint-

